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Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon World Paperback – September 1, 2004
| Richard Heinberg (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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If the US continues with its current policies, the next decades will be marked by war, economic collapse, and environmental catastrophe. Resource depletion and population pressures are about to catch up with us, and no one is prepared. The political elites, especially in the US, are incapable of dealing with the situation and have in mind a punishing game of “Last One Standing.”
The alternative is “Powerdown,” a strategy that will require tremendous effort and economic sacrifice in order to reduce per-capita resource usage in wealthy countries, develop alternative energy sources, distribute resources more equitably, and reduce the human population humanely but systematically over time. While civil society organizations push for a mild version of this, the vast majority of the world’s people are in the dark, not understanding the challenges ahead, nor the options realistically available.
Powerdown speaks frankly to these dilemmas. Avoiding cynicism and despair, it begins with an overview of the likely impacts of oil and natural gas depletion and then outlines four options for industrial societies during the next decades:
Last One Standing: the path of competition for remaining resources;
Powerdown: the path of cooperation, conservation and sharing;
Waiting for a Magic Elixir: wishful thinking, false hopes, and denial;
Building Lifeboats: the path of community solidarity and preservation.
Finally, the book explores how three important groups within global society—the power elites, the opposition to the elites (the antiwar and antiglobalization movements, et al: the “Other Superpower”), and ordinary people—are likely to respond to these four options. Timely, accessible and eloquent, Powerdown is crucial reading for our times.
Richard Heinberg is an award-winning author of five previous books, including The Party’s Over: Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies. A member of the Core Faculty of New College of California, he lives in Santa Rosa, California.
- Print length288 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherNew Society Publishers
- Publication dateSeptember 1, 2004
- Dimensions6 x 0.6 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100865715106
- ISBN-13978-0865715103
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Review
If the US continues with current policies, the next decades will be marked by war, economic collapse, and environmental catastrophe. Resource depletion and population pressures are about to catch up with us, and no one is prepared. The political élites, especially in the US, are incapable of dealing with the situation, and have in mind a punishing game of "Last One Standing."
The alternative is "Powerdown," a strategy that will require tremendous effort and economic sacrifice in order to reduce per-capita resource usage in wealthy countries, develop alternative energy sources, distribute resources more equitably, and reduce the human population humanely but systematically over time. While civil society organizations push for a mild version of this, the vast majority of the world's people are in the dark, not understanding the challenges ahead, nor the options realistically available.
Powerdown speaks frankly to these dilemmas. Avoiding cynicism and despair, it begins with an overview of the likely impacts of oil and natural gas depletion and then outlines four options for industrial societies during the next decades:
- Last One Standing: the path of competition for remaining resources;
- Powerdown: the path of cooperation, conservation, and sharing;
- Waiting for a Magic Elixir: wishful thinking, false hopes, and denial;
- Building Lifeboats: the path of community solidarity and preservation.
Finally, the book explores how three important groups within global society-the power élites, the opposition to the élites (the antiwar and anti-globalization movements, et al: the "Other Superpower"), and ordinary people-are likely to respond to these four options. Timely, accessible and eloquent, Powerdown is crucial reading for our times.
About the Author
Richard Heinberg is widely acknowledged as one of the world's foremost Peak Oil educators. A journalist, educator, editor, lecturer, and a Core Faculty member of New College of California where he teaches a program on "Culture, Ecology and Sustainable Community, he is the author of six previous books including The Party's Over and Powerdown.
Product details
- Publisher : New Society Publishers; 1st Edition (September 1, 2004)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 288 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0865715106
- ISBN-13 : 978-0865715103
- Item Weight : 12 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.6 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,795,660 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,066 in Oil & Energy Industry (Books)
- #1,450 in Canadian Politics
- #2,599 in Environmental Policy
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

Richard Heinberg is the author of fourteen books including most recently "Power: Limits and Prospects for Human Survival" (2021, New Society). He is Senior Fellow of the Post Carbon Institute and is widely regarded as one of the world's most effective communicators of the urgent need to transition away from fossil fuels. Heinberg has given hundreds of lectures on our energy future to audiences around the world. He has been published in Nature and other journals and has been featured in many television and theatrical documentaries. He lives in California.
More information about Richard can be found on his website: richardheinberg.com
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The magnitude of the impending disaster is a function of population buildup (6.4 billion, well beyond the carrying capacity of the earth), resource depletion, declining per-capita food production, global climate change, and economic and political instability. "Taken together, they constitute the most severe challenge our species has ever faced. They represent not merely a likely culmination of human history; in their ongoing and potential environmental impacts, they also may collectively signal one of the most momentous events in all of geological time."
Alarmist nonsense? The sky is falling? Some say so. The energy well is bottomless, some say. For Heinberg the writing is on the wall and it is past time to respond. He lays out four possible responses: 1) Resource wars, 2) Global self-limitation, 3) Denial, 4) Small-scale sustainable communities. Option one is the destructive path our current political leaders are pursuing. Option two will simply marginalize self-limiters unless there is global cooperation (tragedy of the commons). Option three is a non-starter. "Our real problem is that we are trapped in a perpetual growth machine." We are degrading the long-term carrying capacity of the environment, so more cheap energy (if it could be found) would only delay, and exacerbate the inevitable. Option four is the prudent choice those who have the will to work toward a local community that can preserve our highest human values and ideals.
Heinberg is not the only one sounding the alarm, but his account is compelling, his tone is human and his writing is fluid. Powerdown is an excellent introduction to the topic of peak oil.
He thinks and believes that policy makers and politicians are not paying attention, however; that is, by not paying attention, they are behaving irrationally. Well, duh. Then what is the importance of "rational" "powerdown" "life-boat" strategies?
The result? I thought this book was watered down and apocalyptic political science, with some power data interspersed. His other book, The Party's Over, was better.
Heinberg deals with many issues that are not quite so confronting in this wonderful book and no, I do not think these topics have all been dealt with in other earlier books by other authors. Of course, if a person chooses to educate themselves particularly in this area of planetary collapse then perhaps much of Heinberg's writing is treading over old material. However, if a general reader has only recently begun reading in this area of planetary collapse then Heinberg's information and interpretations are eye opening.
Perhaps I am poorly read in the field of Peak Oil and its comcomitant inenevitable desatruction of capitalism as an engine of continued indusatrial progress. I have lived through a number of years of last century and nothing that Heinberg says struck a poor note with this collection of information. Everything he wrote is totally in keeping with my previous information. I do not believe that capitalism with its market economy or technology or prayer is going to stop the train that has been set in motion. How we deal with the outcome is the only question and democracy will not provide the answers we need for the same reason that The Movement will not deal with overpopulation. So yes-we are doomed to something far away from the life we are now leading.
Heinberg writes that twenty years ago the Club of Rome said the world has fifty years before the life systems of the planet are damaged beyond repair. I see nothing on the horizone to give me any hope that this prediction won't happen.





