Filed under: transition towns

Canadians hold People's Assemblies on Climate Justice

The Council of Canadians has announced that during the 2010 Cancun climate summit, over a dozen communities in Canada will hold People's Assemblies on Climate Justice.

"People's Assemblies on Climate Justice emerged during the failing Copenhagen negotiations as a vehicle for people to come together and talk about real and false solutions to the climate crisis," says Andrea Harden-Donahue, Energy and Climate Justice Campaigner with the Council of Canadians. "The assemblies taking place across Canada are in keeping, bringing people together on a community basis to have a dialogue on climate justice and how to transform this into local action."

With predictions that a deal coming out of Cancun is unlikely and the recent killing of the Climate Change Accountability Act by the Senate, local actions that address the climate crisis and advance equity are increasingly being seen as critical to advancing climate justice.

According to the release, these local actions include discussions on topics including:

climate debt, human and ecological rights and how unsustainable and inequitable production, consumption and trade patterns contribute to the climate crisis... Campaigning for public and community ownership of renewable energy, challenging a proposed polluting project and supporting a "transition town" are potential areas of action.

Hopefully a disastrous year for government and business action on climate change can conclude with concerete announcements from communities across the country. 

Will this produce actual, new community energy projects or transitions towns? Or boost countermovements to the expanding fossil and business advocacy by government?

Read the full Council of Canadians press release.

Georgia Straight on community organizing for peak oil in Vancouver

The Georgia Straight interviews local peak oil organizers and a board member from Village Vancouver, the city's primary Transition Town body:

42-year-old [Brennan Wauters] is not the type to hunker in a bunker. He isn’t storing food, buying gold, or stocking up on weapons to survive in a post-oil world.

“I’m more a survivalist in the sense that I think we have to be psychologically prepared,” Wauters said. “I concentrate on being able to do things with as little as possible. It’s also an exercise to me, like there’s many things that I could just go to the store for. But I deliberately take a harder route just to test my own capabilities, to give me confidence that whatever happens, everything will be fine...”

For Wauters, incidents like the massive oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico—the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history, which was triggered by an explosion at a British Petroleum rig on April 20 of this year—are an indication that the world has reached peak oil production.

“Nations understand the strategic importance of energy, and the push to get that oil as deep as it is, where it is normally inaccessible by conventional means…is a direct result of oil companies and governments realizing that there is less and less oil out there,” he said.

More at straight.com