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Transition in Action: Totnes and District 2030, an Energy Descent Action Plan 1st [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 300 pages, height x width x depth: 297x210x20 mm, full colour throughout
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-May-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Transition Town Totnes
  • ISBN-10: 1900322854
  • ISBN-13: 9781900322850
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  • Cena: 35,63 €*
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 300 pages, height x width x depth: 297x210x20 mm, full colour throughout
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-May-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Transition Town Totnes
  • ISBN-10: 1900322854
  • ISBN-13: 9781900322850
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This is a lively and colourful community-based guide to reducing local dependence on fossil fuels and reducing the local carbon footprint over the next 20 years, a period during which they anticipate changes associated with declining oil supplies and the impacts of climate change to become more apparent. The Energy Descent Action Plan has been developed by and for the community of Totnes and District, a busy market town and its fifteen encircling parishes, by engaging the community in a creative process of preparing for resilience based on localization with understanding, skills and inner preparation for the anticipated changes and some of the biggest challenges civilisation has ever faced. At the heart of the EDAP are 15 sections covering key sustainability topics from food production to governance; within each are scenarios of business as usual versus willingness to change proposed with a vision of 2030. It offers a new story of the future, based on a scenario of positive visions and proposes practical pathways of ideas, activities and policy changes across a series of themed timelines to 2030.

Recenzijas

There's a great awakening going on today, driven by accelerating climate change and by the era of cheap oil coming to an end. Very few communities are as yet properly prepared for such changes, but this Action Plan for Totnes demonstrates exactly what can now be done and how all of us can get involved. * Jonathon Porritt * 'By planning for a world in which fossil fuels are no longer cheap and abundant, Totnes has set an example that every town and city in the world should follow. The post-carbon transition can be a creative opportunity for societal renewal, but only if we plan for it. And given the realities of climate change and oil depletion, we are all starting very late in the game. Kudos to this brave community for stepping up to the challenge and producing a thorough, far-sighted document!' * Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow of the Post Carbon Institute and author of The Party's Over and Peak * 'The Energy Descent Action plan is a solid piece of work that tells you how to assess what resources a community has - we're talking skills, ecology, potential for food production, social and creative resources - and clearly sets out ways to utilise them properly. It should give millions of us direction - a critically the confidence - to believe that a sustainable life is within our grasp' * Lucy Siegle, ethical living columnist in the Observer, and author of Green Living in the Urban Jungl *

Acknowledgements 4(1)
Dedication 5(8)
Introduction
8(2)
How to use this document
10(3)
1 Where We Start From
13(8)
Telling a New Story About Our Future
14(1)
Introducing the Wonder of the Oil Age
14(1)
The Assumptions that Underpin this Plan
14(2)
The Context of this Plan
16(1)
Resilience
17(1)
Localisation
18(1)
Introducing our Survey
19(2)
2 Creating a New Story
21(22)
Why We Need New Stories
22(2)
Home: Where We Start From
24(2)
Stories of our Recent Past
26(10)
The Story of Transition Town Totnes
36(2)
Creating an Energy Descent Action Plan
38(2)
Implementing the EDAP
40(3)
3 A Timeline to 2030
43(246)
Totnes: Past, Present and Future - a visual journey
44(5)
Joined up Thinking
49(18)
Transition in Action Transition Streets
65(2)
Working with Nature
67(1)
Food Security Can Totnes and District Feed Itself?
68(18)
Food Production and Farming
86(18)
Transition in Action
102(2)
TTT's Garden Share Scheme
Totnes and District Local Food Guide
The Nut Tree Planting Project
Health and Wellbeing
104(11)
Transition in Action
114(1)
Totnes Healthy Futures
Water Matters
115(1)
Supporting Biodiversity - the web of life
116(3)
Creative Energy Systems
119(1)
Energy Security
120(20)
Transition in Action
139(1)
The Totnes Renewable Energy
Supply Company (TRESOC)
Totnes & District Renewable
Energy Budget
140(28)
Transportation
168(20)
Transition in Action
187(1)
Totnes Rickshaw Company
Building and Housing
188(21)
Transition in Action
204(5)
Transition Homes
Totnes Sustainable Construction Company
The ATMOS Project
Resourcing Localisation
209(1)
Economics and Livelihoods
210(18)
Transition in Action
226(2)
The Totnes Pound
Landscope at Dartington
Engaging the Totnes Business
Community - Some Emerging Thoughts
Consumption and Waste
228(3)
Nurturing Transition
231(1)
Arts, Culture, Media & Innovation
232(12)
Inner Transition
244(12)
Education, Awareness & Skills for Transition
256(19)
Transition in Action
272(3)
Transition Together
Transition Tales
Empowering People
275(1)
Local Governance
276(4)
Community Matters
280(4)
Youth Issues in Brief
284(5)
4 Appendices
289(7)
Appendix A Assumptions behind themed pathways
Appendix B Baseline Information and Statistics
Appendix C Calculations
Appendix E The Earth Charter
Appendix G Groups and Contacts page
Appendix I Inspiration
Appendix M Methodology and Meetings
Appendix Q Questionnaire
Appendix R Review and feedback Form
Appendix V 2030 Visions
Appendix W Wondermentalist Cabaret
References 296(6)
Glossary of Key Terms 302(2)
Credits 304
Jacqi Hodgson coordinates the Energy Descent Pathways project for Transition Town Totnes that has overseen the production of this EDAP. She is also a local Town Councillor and is very involved in local community activities and projects with a particular interest in planning and land-use. Rob Hopkins is co-founder of the growing Transition Network and author of the best-selling The Transition Handbook. In June 2009 he won the Observer Ethical Award for Grassroots Campaigner. Rob Hopkins is the co-founder of Transition Town Totnes and of the Transition Network. He has many years' experience in education, teaching permaculture and natural building, and set up the first two-year full-time permaculture course in the world, at Kinsale Further Education College in Ireland, as well as coordinating  the first eco-village development in Ireland to be granted planning permission.

He is author of The Transition Handbook: from oil dependence to local resilience and The Transition Companion: making your community more resilient in uncertain times, and co-author of Local Food: how to make it happen in your community (all published by Green Books / Transition Books); also Transition in Action: Totnes and District 2030: an Energy Descent Plan (co-author), Woodlands for West Cork! and Energy Descent Pathways.

The Transition Handbook has been published in seven other languages to date, and was voted the fifth most popular book taken on holiday by MPs during the summer of 2008. Rob publishes www.transitionculture.org, which has been voted the fourth best green blog in the UK. He is the winner of the 2008 Schumacher Award, is an Ashoka Fellow and a Fellow of the Post Carbon Institute, served as a Soil Association Trustee for three years, and was named by the Independent as one of the UKs top 100 environmentalists. He is the winner of the 2009 Observer Ethical Award in the Grassroots Campaigner category, and in December 2009 was voted the Energy Saving Trust / Guardians Green Community Hero. He lectures and writes widely on peak oil and Transition, and has recently completed a PhD on Transition and Resilience at Plymouth University.

Central to The Transition Handbook and The Transition Companion is the concept of resilience, which refers to the ability of a community to withstand external shocks and stresses. Rob argues that just cutting carbon emissions is insufficient: we need to rebuild the ability of our communities to provide for their core needs, and doing so will create huge opportunities for local economic regeneration. His books are about hope and optimism, and their untapped potential for engaging people in repairing their communities, their towns and cities, and, ultimately, their planet. The Transition Companion expands on the ideas in the Handbook, combining practical advice on starting and maintaining a Transition initiative with inspiring stories about groups across the world who are putting these ideas into practice.



Rob regularly features as a keynote speaker, and has participated at the following events: Community Land Trust Conference; WWF (talk to the various teams); Sustainable Consumption and Production Conference; Dorset Schools Eco-Summit; Eco-Build Summit; Princes Foundation Annual Conference at St Jamess Palace; Skype presentation to the Nova Scotia Planning Directors Association (NSPDA) Conference; Skype presentation for the Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions (PICS) conference.

He lives in Devon with his wife and four children. He has particular passions for cob building and walnut trees, and is staggered by the rate at which the Transition concept has spread.