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Post Carbon Cities

Energy Uncertainty and Community Resilience

To build the resilience of communities against coming changes in global oil supply, urban planners and policymakers will need to turn to more systems-informed approaches to community governance and development.

Post Carbon Cities
Published 1 December 2008 by Planning magazine (original article)

Oil production could peak by 2010. What does that mean for your community? An article by Daniel Lerch, featured in the December 2008 issue of Planning magazine.

Report/Paper: Hamilton, Ont. report and recommendation regarding Peak Oil study
Published 18 November 2008 by City of Hamilton Planning and Economic Development Department (original article)

This report and recommendation were submitted to the City Council of Hamilton, Ontario on November 18, 2008. It details the steps Hamilton has taken to date on the issue of peak oil, and recommends the creation of a volunteer peak oil task force based on the model of Portland, Oregon. The council approved funding for the task force on December 8, 2008.

Post Carbon Cities 2008 Year in Review

2008 saw a flurry of new government responses to peak oil, plus groundbreaking legislation in California. Also, the oil price spike, the intensifying global recession, and the historic US presidential election have all helped create a sea change in our thinking about energy and what it means for the economy.

Q&A about the Bellingham/Whatcom County Task Force
Published 3 August 2008 by Relocalize.net (original article)

An interview with David MacLeod of Sustainable Bellingham about the formation and goals of the joint Bellingham / Whatcom County Energy Resource Scarcity / Peak Oil task force.

A radical concept: Distance matters again

Rutgers University planning school Dean James W. Hughes recently imparted two essential lessons about planning and the economy in the 21st century. First, resource constraints and reduced consumption are the future. And second, distance matters again.

Alaskans beginning to look at alternative energy solutions
Published 8 August 2008 by Alaska Public Radio Network (original article)

In this interview with Steve Heimel of Alaska Public Radio Network, Post Carbon Institute's Daniel Lerch says that places like Alaska will be among the first to make the changes needed to face an era of great energy uncertainty. With transcript.

What have we learned from the 1970s?

By 1970 it was safe to say that a major shift was underway in our thinking about our relationship with each other and the planet. Then the oil crisis of 1973-1974 hit -- the first big test of this new-found awareness. What was our response, and what can we learn from it?

Moving goods by electricity

Electrifying the U.S. freight rail system makes economic and national security sense, and may be more feasible than you think. A new proposal explores just what it would mean --and what it would take-- to shift the bulk of the U.S. freight system from oil to electricity in a relatively short amount of time.

Citizens making it happen: action in New Mexico and North Carolina
Published 3 July 2008 by Mountain News | News and Record

Citizen groups have led efforts to address the issue of peak oil in Santa Fe, where a citizen's energy board is forming, and in Greensboro, N.C., where city government is starting to listen. Both articles quote Daniel Lerch and Post Carbon Cities.



© 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Post Carbon Institute

Post Carbon Cities: Helping local governments understand and respond to the challenges of peak oil and global warming.
Post Carbon Cities is a program of Post Carbon Institute, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization incorporated in the United States.