Category:Thermodynamic Efficiencies: Difference between revisions
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* [[World History as a Thermodynamic Process]] | * [[World History as a Thermodynamic Process]] | ||
* Richard Heinberg: [[Ecological Backgrounds of the Deep Infrastructural Shifts in the History of Human Civilization]] | |||
==Key Books== | ==Key Books== | ||
Revision as of 14:04, 19 December 2016
Research project to calculate the potential reduction in the use of materials and energy for our production systems, if the peer production stack would be applied integratively.
This project fully takes into account the Jevons Paradox, i.e. without structural reforms, thermodynamic gains are useless. What we aim for therefore, is Perma-Circularity, i.e. a systemic approach of the circular economy to the system as a whole.
Provisional documentation via [1].
This is a joint research project by the P2P Foundation and the Blaqswans Collective, coordinated by Xavier Rizos and Celine Trefle.
Introduction
The aim of this project is to calculate the 'savings' that could be obtained through a full use of peer production as the mode of production and exchange, and to quantify some of the following effects:
1) moving artificial scarcity driven design (generalized planned obsolescence) to global open design communities and their sustainability driven motives saves x percent of matter and energy
2) moving towards more shared physical infrastructures saves x percent of matter and energy
3) moving to open supply chains and open book accounting and its speed up effect on circular economy integration saves x percent of matter and energy
4) moving to a cosmo-localized production (4a) for on demand (4b) distributed production saves x percent of matter and energy
Jason Moore's work on World-Ecology
Potential background documentation of interest
- P2P Accounting http://p2pfoundation.net/Category:P2P_Accounting
- Open Source Circular Economy: "from the current linear system (we take resources out of the ground, and transform them into (often hazardous) waste. We consume and destroy our own planet faster than it can possibly recover) to a circular economy in tune with the cycles in the natural world.
- Sustainable Manufacturing section on the P2P Foundation wiki, at http://p2pfoundation.net/Category:Sustainable_Manufacturing
- Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR): “regulatory principle based on the life-cycle approach, and aims to implement ownership patterns that encourage stewardship and conservation of resources.” [4]
Citations
Without Structural Reforms, Increased Efficiencies are Useless
"Gains in resource and energy efficiency have never led to a sustained decrease in humanity’s raw materials and raw fuels consumption with a stationary level of GDP. Invariably, in waves, the engineers’ contribution to shop-floor efficiency in production processes have been used by the businesses that employ these engineers to save on costs so as to be able to produce and sell more. In fact, what we call economic growth is the long history of the diversion of efficiency gains into production increases. And quite often, this also ends up leading to more, rather than less, raw material extraction and consumption. If any engineer ever had the illusion that they would be working to improve the world through efficiency, he or she should think again — and take a good, hard look at how businesses and industries are, by the very logic of single-minded profit-seeking that moves them, hijacking the efficiency gains and transforming them (when 'successful') into gains in sales and in profits, and usually also into increases in global resource consumption. More fuel-efficient automobiles or airplanes, for instance, are a total scam — not in themselves or as feats of cutting-edge engineering, but because they make driving or flying cheaper per kilometer, so that all of us car or airline users can do more kilometers than before with a 'clean conscience', all the while helping companies reap profits from diverting their engineers’ well-meaning micro-level efforts into ecologically deleterious impacts at the macro level."
- Christian Arnsperger [5], 22/06/16
Key Resources
Key Articles
- Christian Arnsperger: The Circular Economy Effects Only Work Under One Percent Growth
- Richard Heinberg: Ecological Backgrounds of the Deep Infrastructural Shifts in the History of Human Civilization
Key Books
* A Prosperous Way Down: Principles and Policies. By Howard T. Odum and Elisabeth C. Odum. University Press of Colorado, 2001.
"Consider the future with less fossil fuel and no new natural or technological energy sources. How can it be peaceful and prosperous? More and more leaders concerned with the global future are warning of the impending crisis as the surge of unsustainable growth exceeds the capability of the earth's resources to support our civilisation. But while history records the collapse of countless civilisations, some societies and ecosystems have managed to descend in orderly stages, reducing demands and selecting and saving what is most important. Although some scientists predict disaster, this book shows how our world can still thrive and prosper in a future where we live with less and charts a way for our modern civilisation to descend to sustainable levels. The authors make recommendations for a more equitable and co-operative world society, with specific suggestions based upon their evaluations of trends in global population, wealth distribution, energy sources, conservation, urban development, capitalism and international trade, information technology, and education. This thoughtful and provocative book will force us to confront our assumptions and beliefs about our world's future, which is all too often taken for granted." (publisher)
* Environment, Power, and Society for the Twenty-First Century: The Hierarchy of Energy. By Howard Odum. Columbia University Press, 2007.
"Howard T. Odum possessed one of the most innovative minds of the twentieth century. He pioneered the fields of ecological engineering, ecological economics, and environmental accounting, working throughout his life to better understand the interrelationships of energy, environment, and society and their importance to the well-being of humanity and the planet.
This volume is a major modernization of Odum's classic work on the significance of power and its role in society, bringing his approach and insight to a whole new generation of students and scholars. For this edition Odum refines his original theories and introduces two new measures: emergy and transformity. These concepts can be used to evaluate and compare systems and their transformation and use of resources by accounting for all the energies and materials that flow in and out and expressing them in equivalent ability to do work. Natural energies such as solar radiation and the cycling of water, carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen are diagrammed in terms of energy and emergy flow. Through this method Odum reveals the similarities between human economic and social systems and the ecosystems of the natural world. In the process, we discover that our survival and prosperity are regulated as much by the laws of energetics as are systems of the physical and chemical world." (publisher)
History
- Thomas Homer-Dixon. The Upside of Down: Catastrophe, Creativity and the Renewal of Civilization. [6]]: explains the decline of the Roman Empire through its energy overshoot, then examines the current crises of China, Europe and Pakistan as current examples.
Key People
Biophysical Economics
- Podolinsky
- Frederick Soddy
- ? Alfred Lotka
- W. Fred Cottrell
- ? M. King Hubbert
- Howard T. Odum
- Robert Costanza
- Earl Cook
- Robert Ayres
- Herman E. Daly
- Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen
?
Pages in category "Thermodynamic Efficiencies"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 678 total.
(previous page) (next page)A
- Absolute Decoupling
- Abundance Within Planetary Boundaries
- Adoption of New Technologies Is Accompanied by an Increase in Energy Use which Trigger Social Transformations
- Advancing Environmental Disclosure in Sustainability Reporting
- Agricultural Sustainability for Bioregionalism in the San Francisco Bay Watershed
- Albert Bartlett on the Exponential Function in Climate and Energy
- Allan Savory’s Holistic Management and Holistic Planned Grazing
- Alternative Energy Matrix
- Amsterdam Is Pivoting to Doughnut Economics as Policy Framework
- Andrew McAfee About the Modern Uncoupling of Our Prosperity from Resource Consumption
- Andrew McAfee about the Modern Uncoupling of Our Prosperity from Resource Consumption
- Anthromes
- Anthropo-Technogenesis
- Anthropocene
- Anthropocene Transition Project
- Anthropogaia
- Artificial Intelligence for Environment and Sustainability - ARIES
- Atmospheric Commons
- Austin Wade Smith on Real Ecological Accounting with the Earth as the Ledger
- Australian Stocks and Flows Framework
- Austro-German Social Energetics
- Automating Environmental Interventions
B
- Bernard Lietaer on the Window of Viability Between Resilience and Efficiency
- Bibliography on Post-Colonialism and the Ecological Crisis in the Anthropocene
- Bio-Physical Triggers of Political Violence
- Biocapacity
- Biochar
- Biodiversity Banking
- Biophysical Constraints and Realities and the Energetic Metabolism of Societies
- Biophysical Economic Theory
- Biophysical Economics
- Biophysical Foundation of Socio-Economic Systems
- Biophysical-Based Paradigm in Economics
- Bioregion
- Bioregional State
- Birth of Systems Economics for the Earth System
- Blaqswan's Collective
- Blockchain and Its Problems With Externalities
- Blueprint Towards Accounting for the Management of Ecosystems
- Boundary Risk for Humanity and Nature
- Breakdown of the Bio-Cultural Interfaces in the European Renaissance
- Breaking Together
- Brittleness
- Business for the Environment
C
- Calculating the Value of the Commons
- Can Economic Growth Last
- Can Reducing Income Inequality Decouple Economic Growth from CO 2 Emissions
- Cap on Annual Material Use
- Capitalism in the Web of Life
- Carbon Bubbles
- Carbon Offset Markets
- Carbon Pulse
- Carbon Quantitative Easing
- Carbon Sequestration-Based Cryptocurrency
- Cargobike Energy Cycle Is 98 Percent Cheaper Than Motorized Vehicles
- Carrying Capacity
- Carrying Capacity Assessment
- Carrying Capacity Assessment Model for the Australian Socio-Environmental Context
- Carrying Capacity-Led Population Dynamic
- Catabolic Collapse
- Catagenesis
- Catastrophe, Creativity and the Renewal of Civilization
- Centre for the Understanding of Sustainable Prosperity
- Charles Hall on Biophysical Economics and the Key Resource Metric of Energy Returned On Energy Invested
- Cheap Nature
- Chinese Ecological Civilization Construction Indexes
- CHON Theory of Materials Usage for Sustainable Manufacturing
- Circular Economy
- Circular Economy Effects Only Work Under One Percent Growth
- Circular Economy Within Ecological Limits
- Circular Finance
- Circular Humansphere
- Circular Makespaces in Redistributed Manufacturing
- Circular Metabolism
- Circularity Gap
- Cities Approach to Sustainability
- Classical Econophysics
- Climate Adaptation Plans
- Climate Change, Capitalism and Sustainable Wellbeing
- Climate Change, War and Population Decline in Human History
- Climate Economics Index
- Climate Equity Reference Project
- Climate Trends and Global Crop Production Since 1980
- Co-Viability Analysis
- Collapse
- Collapsology
- Commission on Ecosystem Management
- Commodities Sorted by Regional Ecology
- Commodity Ecology
- Commodity Ecology Mobile Platform
- Commodity Ecology Model for Achieving All Sustainable Development Goals
- Commodity Ecology Model for Achieving SDGs
- Common Asset Trusts for Integrated Natural Capital Stewardship
- Common but Differentiated Responsibilities and Respective Capabilities
- Common Good Units
- Common Good, the Climate and the Market
- Commoning as Adaptive Reuse in the Context of a Failing Civilization
- Commons as an Ecological Imperative
- Complexity in Human Society and Cultural Regimes
- Compression
- Conceptual Framework for Ecological Economics Based on Systemic Principles of Life
- Connections between Energy Use and Societal Leadership Transitions
- Connections Between the Green Economy and Biomimicry
- Consequences of Continued Overshoot
- Consolidating a Climate Accounting System
- Constructive Metabolic Processes for Material Flows
- Consumption Corridor
- Contribution of Energy to Economic Growth
- Convivial Ecological Institutions
- Cosmic Evolution as the Rise of Complexity in Nature
- Cosmo-Technics
- Cost of Transportation vs Cost of Manufacturing
- Coupled Evolution of the Economy and the Atmosphere
- Cowboy Economy vs Spacemen Economy
- Cradle to Cradle
- Critical Materials for the Energy Transition
- Critical Raw Materials
- Crypto Climate Accord
- Crypto-Economic Systems To Address Sustainability
- Cryptocurrency’s Energy Consumption Problem
- Cybernetic vs the Ecological Vision of Life
D
- Daniel Schmachtenberger on the Evolution of the Organizational Structures of Civilization and the Role of Hyper-Agents
- David Holmgren's Four Scenarios for Coping with Climate Change and Resource Depletion
- David Wolpert on the Thermodynamics of Meaning
- Dawe Global Food Security Model
- DEAL City Portraits - Doughnut Economics Methodology
- Decarbonizing the Crypto Industry
- Decent Living Standards Approach
- Decline of EROI Directly Impacts on Economic Prosperity
- Declining Net Energy in Society
- Decoupling
- Decoupling Debunked
- Dematerialization
- Dematerialization of Production
- Democratic Economic Planning and the Environment
- Depletion Quotas
- Designing for Integrated Local Production with the Food-Energy-Water Nexus in Mind
- Development of a Carrying Capacity Assessment Model for the Australian Socio-Environmental Context
- Digital Ecosystem for the Environment
- Disaster Geoarchaeology and Natural Cataclysms in World Cultural Evolution
- Doughnut Economics
- Doughnut Economics as Policy Framework
- Dual Nature of Money
E
- E-Waste
- Earth as a Material Process
- Earth Ledger
- Earth's Carrying Capacity
- Eco-Digital Platforms
- Eco-Efficiency
- Ecological Aspects of Surplus in Production
- Ecological Backgrounds of the Deep Infrastructural Shifts in the History of Human Civilization
- Ecological Basis of Revolutionary Change
- Ecological Civilization
- Ecological Civilization - Chinese Policy
- Ecological Degradation Past and Present
- Ecological Distributional Conflict
- Ecological Economics
- Ecological Explanation for the Origin of Civilization
- Ecological Futures
- Ecological Imperialism
- Ecological Law and Governance Association
- Ecological Limits of Work
- Ecological Marxism
- Ecological Production in a Post-Growth Society
- Ecological State Protocols
- Ecological Transition in China
- Ecologically Oriented Research of the P2P Foundation
- Ecologically Unequal Exchange Theory
- Ecology-Friendly Credit Guidance Frameworks
- Economic Growth Remains Ultimately Dependent on Growth in Material and Energy Use
- Economic History of Nature
- Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity
- Economics of Land Degradation
- Economies Are Completely Dependent on Energy
- Economies of Scale
- Effective Abundance Platforms
- Embodied Energy of Digital Technology
- Embodied Human Appropriation of Net Primary Production
- Emergy Accounting
- Emergy Theory
- Empty Planet and the Shock of Global Population Decline
- Energetics
- Energy and Equity in World Fisheries
- Energy and the Evolution of Culture
- Energy as a Measure for the Rise and Fall of Civilizations
- Energy as the Currency of Power and its Necessary Evolutionary Self-Limitation
- Energy Capture
- Energy Cost of Energy
- Energy Flows and the Self-Organization of Societies as Dissipative Structures
- Energy Return On Investment
- Energy Return Ratios
- Energy Slave
- Energy Theory of Value
- Energy, Ecology and Economics
- Energy-Capture Per-Capita Index
- Enterprise Resource Planning for the People
- Entropology
- Entropy
- Entropy vs Negentropy