March 02 2013 |
How can we link monetary systems to the natural world?
But back in the real, natural world, there are limits to growth. The ultimate limit is energy, something all production requires. Humans require food to survive and re-produce. To create this food we need energy, energy that comes, ultimately, from the sun. Part of the reason our economies have grown so fast in the last two-hundred years is that we have discovered a very rich source of concentrated solar energy in the form of fossil fuels, built up over thousands of years underneath the earth’s surface and in the sea beds. We’ve become increasingly efficient at getting this stuff out of the ground, enabling us to maintain the illusion that interest-bearing bank debt money corresponds somehow with natural laws, although not without repeated financial crises and debt cancellations. It’s increasingly clear, however, that the cheap energy party is now over. We need to create a better feedback mechanism between money – our universal unit of account, store of value and means of exchange – and energy, the universal source of life. We’ve released a new report today on energy currencies - the first attempt to review existing proposals and projects that link money to energy, or vice versa. We present a typology to help understand the different functions that these energy currencies can fulfil, in terms of both anchoring money in the natural world and encouraging more sustainable economic activity. We include case studies of a variety of different approaches to the problem:
The report includes many examples of local communities setting up small projects out of frustration with a lack of progress at national level. Now is the time for academics, activists, government and NGOs to work together to further develop and scale-up the most successful of these schemes and to provide seed-funding to test out many of the concepts that so far remain at an ideas stage. The idea of linking energy to money is not a new one, but perhaps it is an idea whose time has come. |
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