“Civilization Critical – Energy,
Food, Nature and the Future,” by Darrin Qualman, 2019
This is a systems’
analysis of how the natural world works and how present capitalist civilization
is breaking every logical natural link, leading to disaster. Without a theory any understanding is
limited and flawed and Qualman has a theory.
Qualman’s background as a farmer in Alberta,
Canada
gives him a real-world understanding of how nature functions. He also delves into the past to understand
how pre-industrial society existed. Qualman has
massive data backing up his ideas and pounds them into the readers head. Basically, Qualman makes the familiar point
that a closed circular system like earth cannot afford open-ended and unending linear
growth.
Politically,
Qualman is not a socialist and carefully couches solutions in vague reformist
political terms, as his real focus is on natural laws. He doesn’t brand capitalism as the enemy but
instead calls it ‘eCivilization.’ Because
of this he seems to be a technological determinist, divorcing technology from
economics, but denies that. He does not
mention global warming’s ‘Great Acceleration’ right after World War II around
1946, as he identifies human interference in nature with the beginnings of the
industrial age, citing 1850 as a crucial year.
In the process his tiny chart lines muddy the dates. The book ‘seems’ to come off as deep nature
ecology, harking back to a romantic time before machines, before coal,
railroads, steam engines, shafts and tractors.
At the end he does not recommend returning to a hunter-gatherer
lifestyle at all. The book’s
understanding of soil is incomplete, not mentioning agroecology or soil
fertility except in passing. He cites Marxists
Fred Magdoff and J.B. Foster in his Acknowledgements, but also uses the term
‘communist dictators’ like some cold-war scribe.
Biological Systems Analysis:
I’m going bullet-point
some of his excellent insights, as they can be of great value in constructing
an actually sustainable socialism.
1.
The
natural world is a circular system, not a linear one. eCivilization runs as a linear system. Everything that comes in and goes out must
also return in a biogeochemical cyclic system.
In other words recycling is not just a ‘nice thing to do’ but essential
to natural functioning. Human shit (as
Marx noted) and all natural products have to find their way back into
nature, while things that cannot be recycled or only pretend to be recycled
(plastics, cell phones, etc.) break the cycle. Putting things in landfills short-circuits
recycling.
2.
eCivilization
actually ‘decycles’ not recycles.
3. The
world runs on sunlight. Photosynthesis
is the basis for nearly all processes, primarily food production but also gas,
oil and coal.
4.
An
extensive carbon-energy eCivilization ruins the future and reaches into the far
past to literally fuel the present.
5.
Externalities
are ignored and un-priced in a linear system. They are ‘free’ - out of sight, out of mind,
until no longer able to be ignored.
6.
Artificial
fertilizers deplete the soil and ruin water, creating dead zones, ocean
acidification and toxic tides, releasing global warming nitrogen, while made using natural gas and emitting methane.
7.
eCivilization
speeds up time in one direction, while the biosphere operates at a certain slow
pace.
8. Species
destruction is a direct result of habitat destruction. Habitats are being destroyed on a daily basis
in the interests of growth.
9. GDP
is a false way of understanding progress.
It combines desirable and undesirable / useless economic inputs while
ignoring externalities. Yet capitalist governments
and markets all worship GDP and growth.
10. Negative
feedback loops that balance functioning have been removed and only positive
feedback loops are preferred, leading to non-stop acceleration.
11. Unelected
capitalists and bureaucrats are actually in charge of nature, not ‘democratic governance.’
12. Any
economy is a subset of the biosphere.
13. Social
and economic complexity requires more energy.
14. Most
biologic processes are local and many solutions can be local.
15. Human
capital ultimately over-exploits natural capital, as trawler fishing in the Atlantic depleted the cod stock.
16. The
building blocks of any society are bio-chemical – nitrogen, phosphorus, carbon,
sulfur and water.
17.
eCivilization
is structurally unsustainable, no matter its advertising. It is also structurally unjust.
18. Consumerism
is unsustainable.
19. Modern
efficiency actually leads to more consumption. (The Jevons paradox.)
20. In
eCivilization simplifying natural webs results in natures’ poverty, aka
monocultures, while technologic complexity increases at the same time.
21.
Energy
flows through but materials recycle.
Some quotes:
“Industrial
agriculture is a black box to convert fossil fuel energy into edible fuel
energy.” Alternatively the process is: “fossil fuel
calories into fertilizer into food calories.”
“8 units of
grain production are required to make 1 unit of pork production.”
“In its
current form, mass production depends almost as much on the garbage truck as on
the assembly line.”
Unending
growth and sustainability together are “merely nonsense on stilts.”
“Today
machines do 99% of the work and humans do perhaps 1%.”
“To save
minutes, we consume eons.”
“Progress,
our secular quasi-religion, encourages magical thinking that licenses
non-rational activities.”
“The rising
tide that has lifted our boats now threatens to submerge our cities.”
Solutions:
Qualman’s
vague solutions are to ‘limit growth,’ ‘limit sprawl,’ ‘limit extractions and
emissions,’ ‘limit interventions into natural cycles’ and instead manage ‘biosphere
and business.’ He quite rightly wants any society to function along the lines
of science. His
eco-solutions are found in immediate sun-based technologies – solar and
wind – wind being created by sun-based heat differences. Energy-conscious and health conscious
agriculture and diets are part of his solution, though he is also vague on
this.
On the
issue of theory, Qualman ignores the fact that seemingly stable ‘circular’
flows actually change over time too, so circularity is only an
approximation. Dialectical flow is more
accurate, combining different values of circular and linear in opposition to
each other.
Qualman
paints a dire and apocalyptic portrait of the present and the future. The disconnect between his solutions and his
analysis is somewhat ridiculous and represents a huge failure of political
understanding. This may reflect
Qualman’s time as a small businessman and independent farmer, which allows him to
coddle the profit motive. What is required is quite literally a revolution in
society – in theory, in technology, in power and class relations, in economics,
in our grasp of nature. It will not come
by half-means, quarter-means or compromise.
Other prior reviews on this topic, use blog search box upper left: “This Changes Everything” (Klein); “Anthropocene or Capitalocene?,” “Marx and the Earth” and “Ecological Revolution” (both by J.B. Foster); “The Sixth Extinction,” “Ecology & Marxism,” “History of the World in 7 Cheap Things,” “A Redder Shade of Green,” “Stop Tar Sands Oil,” “Tar Sands,” “Climate Emergency,” “Planning Green Growth,” “The Collapse of Western Civilization,” “The Vanishing Face of Gaia,” “The Party’s Over.”
And I bought it at May Day Books, which has a huge selection of discounted books on the environment from a left-wing point of view.
Red Frog
January 7,
2020
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