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Sprats and mackerels

  • Posted by Jonathan Dawson
  • 30 August 2007

Are poverty alleviation and human rights work worth the carbon cost?

Just back from a return visit to Sierra Leone. I was working once again with MAPCO, the indigenous organisation engaged in poverty alleviation and human rights work that I spent time with in March. This time, I was helping them develop efficient monitoring and evaluation systems, to better enable them to track the impact of their work.

This feels like good and valuable work. And yet, how does this kind of activity sit with the whole carbon crisis? I pondered this on the flight out, while pouring over Mark Lynas’ excellent piece on the protest camp at Heathrow (In fact, when I had first seen the dates of my trip to Sierra Leone, I had been excited at the prospect of spending time at the camp. However, the more I read about the camp, the more difficult I realised it could be to move freely in and out – so, having signed a contract for the work, I prioritised the trip).

I have far more questions than answers on this whole question. Work like that I was up to in Sierra Leone is about building the capacity of pro-poor organisations and helping them develop tools for promoting the economic wellbeing and resilience of the poor through small enterprise development. I am one of many to have made a career out of this kind of work.

In addition, I am one of a number of people from within the global ecovillage family to have created a sustainability curriculum drawn from ecovillage experience – what we have called the Ecovillage Design Education (EDE). This training programme, that has been embraced by UNESCO as part of the UN Decade of Education for Sustainable Development, transfers life skills that will be of the essence as we head down the energy descent curve.

At present, the core EDE faculty finds itself doing a fair amount of international travel as we build the capacity of trainers in different places to deliver this educational programme. ‘Using a sprat to catch a mackerel’ is the analogy I have heard used to justify the use of carbon in this way to leverage a greater long-term benefit.

The issue of air travel poses a major dilemma to the ecovillage movement as a whole – certainly to the Findhorn ecovillage. On the one hand, a significant portion of our income derives from participants coming on our courses. The proportion of those coming from the UK has risen steadily over the years and now stands at about 50 percent. Sill, a good number of those continue to come through Inverness airport.

The sprat-mackerel analogy, however, still holds good here; many leave transformed, refreshed and better equipped to get stuck into good community development work of many shades and varieties when they get back home.

On the other hand, we are a highly international community. At any one time, between 15 and 25 nationalities are represented in our resident community. This generates a lot of what George Monbiot has memorably called ‘love miles’ – travel to meet up with friends and family on other continents. My wife is a New Yorker – I understand the dilemma.

The Findhorn community’s ecological footprint analysis gave us record low scores on most consumption categories (food 32 percent of the national average, home and heating 21 percent, car mileage six percent and so on). In one category alone, air travel, did we exceed the national average – by a factor of two and a half.

It is clear that government policy needs to change: a halt to new airport development; removal of taxes on aviation fuel and other externalities associated with flying; inclusion of air travel emissions in greenhouse gas emissions targets. Our top priority needs to be campaigns towards these ends. The time is rapidly approaching for us to decide where we want to call home and to sink our roots there.

In the meantime, as we effectively use our sprats to catch mackerels, is there not a case for continuing to undertake strategic international work – made possible by air travel – to strengthen the capacity, spread the skills and build the networks we will all need in the low-carbon world that is opening up before us?

The world of business shows little inclination to restrain its appetite for air travel. In this context, should those of us engaged in sustainability and global justice work unilaterally forgo the many advantages that continuing (at least in the short-term) access to air travel provides?

As I said at the beginning, more questions than answers.

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6 comments from readers

John Ackers
30 August 2007 at 19:16

That is a great article but my feeling is that Jonathan Dawson didn't really explain what measures they were taking to reduce their air travel, simply that they travelled a lot. I don't understand why the education cannot be delivered locally or at least from regional centres around the world. Also no mention of computer/internet based training or video conferencing.

Access to air travel is not going to go away. It's just that it's going to be carbon rationed hopefully (or taxed). Individuals will still be able to make that special trip. But we do need to reduce our emissions now and not wait for the government.

If you want to look at it very brutally, under a Contraction and Convergence type framework, Sierra Leone will get its own carbon quotas. If Sierra Leonians value Ecovillage Design Education then they might want to provide the necessary carbon credits for the flights.

filip
31 August 2007 at 12:34

hello

filip
31 August 2007 at 12:40

hello, what is a "sprat"? I'm assuming its a little fish. Until we look at the mind boggling use of what I would consider WASTED fuel by the military of the world, this debate of carbon footprints is at best ridiculous and illogical by the academics who needs to find something better to occupy their minds for the greater good.

gnuneo
02 September 2007 at 20:43

jonathon: perhaps it is not the flying itself, but the method chosen?

http://www.ecogeek.org/content/view/858/

certainly, this doesnt help here and now, but as something to be campaigned for, and supported once in place, is there another environmental opportunity with so much potential?

jonathandawson
07 September 2007 at 12:13

Hi there, John Ackers. What is Findhorn doing to reduce its dependence on air-miles, you ask? The first response that comes to me is that for Findhorn and the many other international training centres like it, this is far more than simply a moral question – rather, it goes to the heart of how we define our role in the world and how we make that work economically.

On a practical level, the great majority of the Findhorn Foundation’s promotional activities are now focused on the UK – and this is reflected in the growing proportion of Brits among our paying guests. In addition, over the next six months or so, we will be experimenting with video-conferencing two events, making them available on a paying basis via the Internet. We are also exploring the possibility of offering discounts to folk arriving by terrestrial public transport.

You ask why it is not possible to deliver the training outside of Findhorn. This is possible – over the last couple of years, I have been teaching in Senegal, Brazil and London and will be teaching in Hereford and Leeds in the next couple of months. Others here are also travelling far and wide on teaching assignments.

And yet, it is just not the same as doing this work in Findhorn – which is precisely why so many people have been – and continue to be – prepared to travel long distances at considerable financial expense for a taste of the ‘Findhorn experience.’ (We are not unique in this – there are of course many other highly distinctive training and tourist centres that have their own devotees.)

However, Findhorn is a highly distinctive experiment in creating a full-featured, holistic, sustainable community with a strong spiritual flavour. There are all kinds of synergies at work – that you would not get in more single sector-focused initiatives – that make the whole greater than the sum of the parts. This is a strong part of the appeal. (You may get something of a flavour of this from the new blog that I have just posted today.)

As for ‘love miles’ – people travelling to meet up with friends and family in their countries of origin – I am afraid that is likely to continue as long as it is affordable. I suspect that it will not be before the shrinking carbon cap begins to squeeze prices sharply upwards that we will see this significantly reduce.

I used to be friends with an Irish priest, Father Jo McIleese, when we worked together in northern Ghana in the 1980s. When he left home for Africa in the late 30s, he said goodbye to his family for good. Only the advent of cheap air travel made return visits possible. But when he left initially, it was for keeps.

We in the transition generations will suffer from finding ourselves or our loved ones far from family on the other side of the world and much less accessible than now. (Though Gnuneo does hold out interesting possibilities in terms of Zeppelin travel – thanks for that – most interesting!) In the (not-so) long-term, things will settle down again and we will return to marrying local lads and lasses or, like Fr Joe, learning to say goodbye for keeps.

Thanks for the dialogue.

Jonathan

Creamer
02 December 2007 at 08:53

Maybe it all has to do with the price of Tickets If it hadn't been for the high prices, people wouldn't care about mileage

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About the writer

Jonathan Dawson

Jonathan Dawson is a sustainability educator based at the Findhorn Foundation in Scotland. He is seeking to weave some of the wisdom accrued in 20 years of working in Africa into more sustainable and joyful ways of living here in Europe. Jonathan is also a gardener and a story-teller and is President of the Global Ecovillage Network.

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