Anishinaabe economist and writer Winona LaDuke identifies two types of economies, grounded in different ways of seeing.
Speaking in Vancouver recently, she characterized one as an “extreme extractive economy” fed by exploitation of people and nature. The second is a “regenerative economy” based on an understanding of the land and our relationship to it.
We now go to extremes to access fossil fuels.
Hydraulic fracturing shatters bedrock to release previously inaccessible gas, requiring large amounts of water made so toxic through the process that it must be disposed of in deep wells. We extract bitumen from Alberta’s oilsands using techniques that emit more than twice as many greenhouse gases as average North American crudes. The Pembina Institute reports that
1.3 trillion litres of fluid tailings have accumulated in open ponds in Northern Alberta
since oilsands operations started in 1967.
Human innovation has made it possible to extract less-accessible fossil fuels, and that’s provided jobs. But environmentally, socially and economically, this extreme behaviour can’t continue. We need new options. We must innovate and create jobs in a regenerative economy.
In her talk, LaDuke said, “The reality is that the next economy requires re-localization of food and energy systems, because it's more efficient, it's more responsible, it employs your people and you eat better.”
Re-localization is happening in communities across Canada.
The David Suzuki Foundation’s new, nationwide
Charged Up program is collecting stories to help inspire people to take on renewable energy projects in their communities.
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