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The Buddhist Peace Fellowship is connected with several initiatives which address environmental issues from a dharmic perspective:
- Article: "Buddhist Energy Reform: Alternate Responses to an Oil War," by BPF board member Chris Wilson. See below.
We also recommend Earth Sangha, based in Virginia.
Buddhist Energy
Reform: Alternate Responses to an Oil War
Chris Wilson, August 2002
American
Buddhists are 'natural' environmentalists who automatically
protect the environment to the extent they practice Buddhist
mindfulness. So intrinsic is this 'environmentalism' to the
practice of Buddhism in their personal lives, that American
Buddhists often feel no great need to become politically active
on environmental issues. Unfortunately, environmental waste
and harm are currently so institutionalized in our economy
that the small but growing number of Americans who are living
lives of individual restraint and mindfulness are insufficient
to prevent great harm in the near term solely by their example.
Nowhere is this clearer than in the case
of America's economic dependence on oil, gas, and coal. This
dependence is causing two forms of great harm that require
a collective and political, rather than a purely personal,
response. The first is the near-term threat of harm posed
by the announced policy of our government to use troops to
secure its sources of oil supply in the Middle East. The second
is the long-term harm caused by the burning of fossil fuels,
which is already resulting in the devastation of temperate
forests by acid rain, the dying of the Australia's Great Barrier
Reef, and the submersion of villages and farmlands in islandnations.
Both of these great causes of suffering are the effects of
well- established economic institutions and the well-funded
ideological and political superstructures that have been erected
to protect them.
Of these two forms of great harm, the one
that will inevitably lead to political engagement and group
action by Buddhists is the imminent threat of war. It has
been made abundantly clear that the U.S. will use military
force to protect our sources of oil in the Middle East. (For
a background piece on these questions, see the companion piece,
"Oil is Not to Die For").
The current U.S. administration, while openly
citing the national security issues involved in our dependence
on Middle Eastern oil, refuses to recognize that the national
security issues could be addressed non-violently and effectively
by lowering our dependence on oil imports. This dependence
can be decreased significantly - enough to make the military
occupation of foreign oil fields unnecessary for economic
reasons - through better conservation and increased use of
renewable local energy sources.
Widely respected commentators, including
Thomas Friedman of the New York Times, and the environmentalist
writer Bill McKibben have commented that our current President
deliberately blew an irreplaceable opportunity to call on
the American people, in the aftermath of 9/11, to make modest
life-style sacrifices to protect our nation and our people
from further threats. Instead, they noted, he called on them
to show their patriotism by not by sacrificing anything at
all, but by in fact stepping up their purchases of goods and
services that in many cases increase our worsening dependence
on Middle Eastern oil.
In the face of government policies that are
worsening our dependence on the Middle East and thus increasing
the possibility of war, it is incumbent on Buddhists to support
efforts for an overall reform of our national energy policies.
To that end, the Buddhist Peace Fellowship
seeks to identify the best non-violent alternatives to our
country's current energy policies. Eventually, this information may be collected and disseminated through an initiative called "Buddhist Energy Reform" (BER). BER is meant to provide
a resource clearing-house, discussion forum, and master activity
calendar for all potential Buddhist activists on matters of
national energy policy. This is not a sectarian program but one that will elicit widespread
popular support. In keeping with that requirement, Buddhist
Energy Reform will propose an initial list of priorities for
consideration by BPF members and friends. In most cases, these
preliminary priorities represent the 'best of breed' approaches
to various aspects of our energy dependence, popular initiatives
that already show the potential for broad support.
The initial list of priorities includes:
Municipalization of renewable
energy. This involves support for The Vote Solar Initiative,
a city-by-city campaign by the organizers behind the recent
victory of a renewable energy ballot initiative in San Francisco.
That ballot measure called for the construction of solar and
wind resources to provide 25% of the energy consumption of
San Francisco City and County agencies. The construction will
be funded by bonds that will be repaid out of monies already
budgeted under the City's existing long-term energy contracts,
and will require no tax increases. Built over public spaces,
the solar panels will in some cases yield additional benefits
such as providing shade for cars in parking lots, thus saving
some energy that would otherwise be spent running car air-conditioners.
Although 25% seems a modest goal, it is enough to make the
project the largest solar installation in the U.S. and to
lower the costs of solar panels by 10% nationwide. The organizers
of the Solar Initiative are next targeting San Diego, where
there has been substantial interest in the San Francisco approach.
More broadly, the organizers think that ballot initiatives
for renewable municipal energy sources can be successful throughout
the Southwest and the Sun Belt, as ordinary citizens are very
keen to be less dependent on oil from the Middle East, and
also to being less vulnerable to price manipulations by non-local
corporations. The local initiative approach has the advantage
of being an exercise in grass-roots democracy that can reach
a critical mass for national energy reform from below, rather
than depending on top-down change from a Congress that is
itself dependent on energy lobby campaign contributions. The
BER would help interested local BPF chapters organize around
this issue and reach out to the broader sangha in their region.
Anyone who believes that his or her city or county would be
an appropriate venue for such an initiative, please contact
BER.
Raising State car fleet milage
standards. This approach calls for replicating the recent
success of California legislation that constituted a rebuke
to the current federal administration's actions on car milage
standards and global warming. Those federal actions have not
only done nothing to improve the situation, but have actually
relaxed existing guidelines, leading to higher energy use
and greenhouse gas emissions. The victory in California made
clear that a significant number of state legislatures may
be open to increasing milage requirements for new cars sold
in their states. As Bill McKibben points out, the waiting
lists for high mileage hybrid cars, those with batteries recharged
by a small gas engine while driving, prove that the American
people know that higher mileage alternatives are not only
potentially available, but are available right now. A significant
increase in the number of hybrids, which generally offer twice
the mileage of conventional passenger cars, could by itself
result in a significant decrease in our strategic dependence
on the Middle East. The Buddhist Energy Reform could help
interested BPF members coordinate their efforts with groups
already working to influence State legislators on this point.
Greater Subsidies for Consumer
Conservation and Renewable Energy Investments. This program
calls for lobbying corporations, public utilities, and all
levels of government, to provide more generous subsidies for
the purchase and installation of more efficient electrical
and gas appliances and of solar panels and other renewable
energy generation devices for homes and businesses. The expected
reversal by the current administration of an existing requirement
for more efficient air conditioners is exactly the opposite
of what is needed. Manufacturers complained of resulting higher
prices and lower sales for more efficient units. Subsidies
could raise sale volumes to a point where manufacturing costs
declined and vendor profits increased to attractive levels.
The same would be true for refrigerators, dishwashers, washing
machines and driers. Unlike the other programs listed above,
this initiative would likely require a significant outlay
of public funds. And unlike the other programs, there is no
recent successful public initiative that can be used as a
pattern for a national campaign. Nevertheless, it is believed
that this is one area in which the general public can be persuaded
to consider such subsidies as a valid response to national
security concerns, one that might justify transferring funds
from the swollen defense budget to these purposes.Again, Buddhist
Energy Reform can help support efforts by interested BPF members
and friends to get such initiatives off the ground. (Action
alert: There is currently a move by California's utilities
to put a low ceiling on the buyback of home-generated solar
electricity. That buyback is currently one of the largest
incentives to home investments in solar panels. Please contact
your local representatives to oppose the new ceilings. For
further info, contact The
Vote Solar Initiative.)
Chris Wilson is a BPF Board Member and stakeholder.
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