Posts Tagged permaculture courses

Energy descent – a new challenge for permaculture

My first interest in permaculture came from managing a well designed, 8-acre permaculture small holding in Chimanimani, Zimbabwe. It had been designed and developed by Graham Metlercamp and was simply the most productive and diverse piece of land I have ever seen. It was a no brainer, as they say, I was instantly converted, without ever hearing the word permaculture, or knowing about the principles of ecological design, Bill Mollison or anything, all of that came later. The beauty, productivity and obvious room for nature, a garden plot in surplus with veg, grains, pasture for cattle, milk and cheese, fruit, fish, honey, wine and all with minimal external inputs. It seemed obvious to me that this was the way forward for agriculture: the foundation stone for building sustainable economies is a secure local food supply.

Ok so I was in Africa, and maybe looking at things through a slightly different perspective, an insecure food supply is more commonplace over there and labour much more plentiful. Small scale production without machines and without economies of scale might make sense in rural Africa but not in the over developed West. We fly in our kumquats in from Israel and Brazil, our grain from America our beef from Australia – the global supermarket is ours for the choosing, whilst poor underdeveloped nations have to produce their own food locally and seasonally, the whole world is our supermarket.

us oil peak

US Oil production peak

My first encounters with permaculture were also back in the day when Climate Change was not on the radar as a pressing concern and fears over the energy supply were consigned to the 1970′s; A time when US oil production had just peaked as predicted, in 1971 and was followed by that period when the Arabs got difficult and we experienced a dip in our energy supply for the first time and prices rocketed. Concerns about energy in the late 70′s we so strong even then US President  Jimmy Carter put solar panels on the roof of the White House, and the family friend who used to run us to school in Wolverhampton every morning in his flash Jaguar went out and bought a Cintroen 2CV energy efficient car. Extreme times and a distant memory.

It was shortly after that moment that North Sea Oil first came on supply, as did Alaskan oil, there was growth in the big Mexican oil fields and Canada got going on production as well. The world fell asleep, in came Ronald Reagan to the White House who promptly removed the solar panaels, calling them ‘un-American’ and Britiain went on a consumer spending spree and road building programme funded by North Sea oil and gas. From that day we started travelling in the wrong direction, at an accelerating pace and we forgot all our concerms over energy and sustainability.

energy supply model

Fossil fuel energy supply model

Right now, all our economic models for consumer led capitalism rely on an expanding energy frontier. All the evidence suggests that we are now entering a new phase in the world’s history, one of a diminishing energy supply,  we have passed the peak. I have written a lot about Peak Oil already, anyone needing more evidence needs to go to the Oil Drum or check out some of the resources at Die Off or a visit to the Post Carbon Institute in California.  There is an Association for the Study of Peak Oil and numerous other resources out there if you still need convincing.

A quick note here… a friend told me off yesterday, in the context of my making a negative remark about her stopping by a McDonalds food outlet.  ‘Your lot are so judgemental/ critical/ smug etc..’ it left me wondering what ‘your lot’ meant. When it comes to the study of Peak Oil it is the senior oil geologists who are sounding the alarm bells. Some of the least radical people around, people who have spent their lives studying geological formations rather than engaging with the global media. What they are all quick to point out is that oil discoveries worldwide peaked in 1961. With the advent of computer modelling, satellite imaging, all the 21st century technology and the amount of oil they are finding is only going down, not only that but the finds are smaller and smaller and further and further afield, under the sea, the ice at the poles and a long long way from market. This means that the net energy yield is also declining, in other words we are using more energy to find less… that is why the curve in the graph falls so sharply. It is this energy descent that we have to prepare for, and the first part of our economy to suffer from the shortage of energy will be farming. Food producion has become a global business, consuming vast amounts of energy to bring produce to market – infact the stat is 10 calories of oil is consumed for each calory of food produced. (Read eating oil)

This new reality is the biggest challenge humanity has yet had to face… many commentators are saying this, maybe climate change or nucelar proliferation may be as bad, but who is keeping score? the point is our food supply has never been more precarious, and this is why I am concentrating on relocalising food production as  a key focus for my work this decade. A key focus for Permaculture design work currently has to be centred around relocalising food production.

I apologise to my friend for critiscising her visit to the Golden Arches, we are all caught up in the globalized food supply chain, every time we enter a supermarket or a fast food outlet we are feeding the global oil addiction, its going to be a hard habit to break.

The community garden at Cwm Harry in Newtown is a small part of that work towards relocalising food supply as well as devising and running Permaculture Design Courses, which i do with my project partners Ian and Leslie et al at Sector39. I also have a long involvement in housing co-operatives and fairtrade and development education.

New Project at Pen Y Garnedd.

Its only at proposal stage but I see our next key step is to establish what I am calling the Pen Y Garnedd Permaculture Research Institute, where we are aiming to take on a 24 acre plot where we can scale up some of our ideas and develop a working model for permaculture food production for our area, here in Wales. It is a couple of miles from  the village where myself and key colleagues live and we intend it to become a hub for food production and permaculture teaching in our own local food economy.

I will be writing a lot more about this project soon and am keen to hear from anyone who is interested in finding out more or even investing in the loanstock issue. We need to create an many working examples that we can, working with the permaculture principles to build the case studies and examples to tackle the key issue of regional food security.

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Farm for the Future?

If you have not seen the Farm for a Future documentary then I strongly suggest you take the time to see it. It is a great introduction to Permaculture thinking and maps out the dilemma that all farms are having to face up to. As the cost of oil and diesel rises the ever smaller profit margins in agriculture are eroded away, exposing the absolute reliance our food production systems have on cheap energy.

So what is the way forward? Many farms are being pushed into ever more capital intensive systems, bigger fields, more inputs, bigger machines and fewer workers, less room for nature and wildlife and much more debt. The movie, FOOD INC, which came out last year paints a pretty terrifying picture of corporate large scale agriculture – its impacts on landscapes, soil, animals and the farmers themselves. It is not surprising that so few people want to be involved in agriculture – and a surprising stat that comes out of farm for a future is that the average age of a British farmer is 60!. So the average farmer is 4 years from retirement age, a great many carry on into their 70′s not least becasue the next generation is not keen to take on the mantel.

So what is the future for farming? Large scale industrial agriculture is not very interested in marginal hilly small farms like the one we will be studying on. You can’t fit a 80 foot wide combine in one of their fields anyway. I cant but help think that the smaller marginal farms are the edge from which a new 21st century type of agriculture will emerge from, and one that will give us all new ideas and new approaches to managing the landscape and the natural environment. If we cant have big machines in the post peak oil world, then the only choice is going to be to reintegrate people back into the system. Without having to use big machines having smaller plots with much greater diversity of production is going to make more sense. Chris Dixon, the permaculture pioneer in Dolgellau, also featured on Farm for the Future, thinks that really the garden is the most productive farm of land use, small scale, diverse and allowing a great attention to detail. Having spent 20+ years on his 7 acre small holding he is now convinced even that is too big to properly manage responsibly.

Of course there are no simple answers, and I suspect that farms in the future, the near future, will start performing and being valued for performing a much wider set of functions. Wildlife habitat protection, re-instating wetlands and improving upland water storage, carbon sequestration via no plough systems, bio char, coppice and timber production will also become key functions for farming as well as food production.

Our market driven econmy is very ready to make use of ‘free’ assets like soil air and water, and I suspect that the only way to get these fundamentals valued is to put a price on them, in some way or other. Take bees and other insects for example, treated at best as a minor annoyance, and more widely as pests and are killed in great numbers by toxins and habitat destruction yet they perform vital functions like pollination, disease control and ecosystem regulation. They dont charge and we dont value them, in fact we wage a chemical war on them, then wonder why bird numbers have plummeted over the last few decades.

It is going to be a fascinating couple of weeks and I will certainly be writing lots more about it. There are still places on the 2 week course available so I hope anyone reading this will pass on the word about to any potentially interested parties.

There is a more detailed leaflet about the course available here (Hi res 4mb, Low res 1mb), as well as a web page on my main site

permaculture design course

Permaculture Design Course advert

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Where next? Permaculture roadshow

Churnet Valley, North Staffs moorlands

Back home after a weekend away teaching an introduction to permaculture course in North Staffs.  It can be pretty exhausting travelling around, sleeping in a tent or on a couch, and I feel it a bit this morning. However, it was another uplifiting and inspiring weekend for me too, met some lovely people and took some time to think deeply about the subject of permaculture, sustainability and energy descent.

My friend Ian Watt was along to help, having cycling a lot of the way down from Scotland. Ian is on his own Eco adventure, and has finally shed the car to move to the next stage of his low impact existence. Follow his adventures on Ian’s Eco blog.com.

It was frustrating not have had more takers on the course, but it was still very much worthwhile, not least for the feeling of having sown some seeds which hopefully will lead on to more connections being made, more projects starting.

A growing feeling of restlessness is taking hold, I have been based at the Llanfyllin Workhouse for the last 2 years and am very involved with a new housing co-operative group, Permanent Housing and we are seeking a more permanent and permaculture focussed hub to live at and work from. The Workhouse has been a great staging point, but it is finally time to be moving on to pastures new and I have handed in my notice there and will be moving out at the end of the month.

It is fantastically exciting to be contemplating the next move and what could be a huges tep forward for all of us in the group, but also unsettling to be considering up rooting and finding a new base to work from. Putting my life in storage while we wait for the next opportunities to present themselves.

The fact that increasingly we are getting requests to run courses at other people’s venues has contributed to the decision to move. I cant really justify the expense of keeping on a large studio at the Workhouse, to basically store a few books, tools and plants, so the idea is to get a caravan and go mobile- so I can turn up at a course with my little caravan in tow and everything I need in it, ready to rock.

Our next course is in Stoke again, at Farm2Grow and it is yurt making and an introduction to green wood working with the fantastic team from Pikea.org. There are places still available, to make a full Yurt wheel, or to come along and help and learn some skills at a reduced rate. Please get in tocuh if you are interested .. it is Friday, Sat, Sun on the first weekend of August on a small holding in the stunning Churnet valley, North Staffordshire Moorlands.

Peak Oil, keeps hitting the headlines and there was a Radio 4 spot on it on Sunday. Trivialised by a jokey format and undermined by a random interviewee claiming that there is plenty of oil left and eveyone should go back to sleep. The show is about getting an investigative journalist  to look at a contemporary issue, and report back th efollowing week, so before I criticise the show I should wait and see what they come up with in the report.

I found this snippett on David Stahan’s site> “…And the fact that BP was drilling for Macondo, a tiny field containing less than 12 hours’ global consumption, under a mile of water tells us all we need to know about the state of oil depletion.”

For more Peak Oil related fun check out the interactive Oil Depletion map

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