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Posts Tagged ‘Cuba’


Two years ago this blog suggested that Cuba offered a great case study for Cities Under Peak Oil conditions.

Subsequent to that blog Jim Garrison interviewed me for Integral Life about my book Integral City.  We talked about The New Cuban Revolution: how the fairly surprising case study of Havana, Cuba offered insights to the sustainability discussion. After the fall of the iron curtain, Cuba was forced by a variety of geo-political realities to change their approach to energy policy, transportation, food production, education, and much else about their whole island eco-region.

This Cuban-focused part of the interview did not stand me in much good stead with opportunities to speak to American city associations about my views of the relationship of cities and their eco-regions.  Of course, given the history of the USA and Cuba this was a hard lesson, but not too surprising in retrospect.

So it is with genuine delight that I read in Slate today that they are now revisiting the lessons from Cuba and its experience with agro-ecology. Not only that but the author recognizes the importance that mindset plays in making decisions that change governance, relationship to the land and the wellbeing of people.  The Slate article finishes with this caution:

Climate change has already reduced global wheat harvests by 5 percent, and food prices are predicted to double by 2030. Cuba’s example is both instructive and frustrating. Technical innovations in Cuban agriculture point to the kinds of thinking needed to address the future: moving away from monoculture and understanding the value of complex, integrated systems. The trouble is that this also means a change in the mindset of governments and scientists schooled in last century’s agriculture. If that’s a lesson the rest of the world is ready for, Cuban peasant organizing could well light the way to the future, even if their automobiles are stuck in the past.

You can read the whole article with a click here.

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cuba-community2

The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil is an intriguing film of an unintended case study. It chronicles the radical life condition change that was triggered in Cuba by the break up of the Soviet empire and Cuba’s loss of Soviet support, markets and imports in 1990-92. This was further exacerbated by the tightening of the American import embargo into Cuba – thus depriving it not only of oil, but also food and medicine.

From a relatively highly industrialized, auto-based culture, Cuba became overnight the poster child for what is happening now world-wide under peak oil conditions. Except that while the rest of us are going through slow withdrawal, Cuba was plunged virtually into a cold turkey severance from its oil energy “fix”.

 

This story is intriguing merely as a human interest story, but I found it an object lesson in integration and the integral interconnections of human systems compressed into a relatively small bounded (island) space. (I have previously considered the value of studying islands as prototypes of city/eco-region situations.)  Cuba’s story is the modern day equivalent of a city/state being put under siege. The drastic loss of their most common energy source, changed totally all four quadrants of Cuban’s bio-psycho-cultural-social lives.

 

In the upper right quadrant – Bio – the average Cuban lost 20 pounds in the two years of 1990-1992. The loss of food sources, forced the Cubans to change their whole meat/rice/oil based diet to one that is now much more healthily based on organically grown vegetables and fruit, and less home grown meat sources (chickens, rabbits, fish).

 

In the upper left quadrant – Psycho – they had to change their whole attitude to identities and roles in the community. Because of the importance of growing food for survival and health, farmers became (and remain) respected members of society. Interestingly, Cuba had a strong education sector and remains the Latin American country with the highest number of (medical) graduates. Now they even produce more doctors than Cuba needs and “trade” medical services with Venezuela for oil imports.

 

In the lower left quadrant – Cultural – Cuba moved from a standard 1960’s modernist world, with scant appreciation for interpersonal values, to a society where relationships became vital for the very survival of families, businesses, farms, transportation – the whole web of life returned to an era where personal relationships became paramount.

 

In the lower right quadrant – Social – Cuba’s loss of oil, meant that her transportation system was forced to replace the supremacy of the gas-guzzling car with the necessity of the public bus (actually conversions of tractor/trailers). They imported hundreds of thousands of bicycles from China and people had to completely re-organize their lives to move from home to work, suburb to down town, family to friends. Many moved back to the land, and set up self-supporting homesteads. It would appear that many became landowners and small business operators (in stark contrast to the state-owned farms and businesses before the Soviet demise) who were allowed to create a thriving economy, that exceeds production capacities of state-owned operations. According to the film now, 80% of the Cuban vegetable food consumption is sourced from organic farms. That is probably the highest percentage in the developed world.

 

The story of Cuba and the Power of Community illustrates the extreme integration that we tend to take for granted in our lives. If one element (or quadrant) of the whole/holon changes – then everything is changed.

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Thank goodness for youth and student activists. I had the pleasure of enjoying this week, the UFV Film Festival sponsored by the International Development Club and the Students for Sustainability Club.

 

Here was their movie line up:

 

The Story of Stuff

The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil

Flow – the story of the tensions around water rights

 

These were a powerful trio, that when viewed through the lenses of Evolutionary Intelligences for the Human Hive, reveal why we need to pay attention to their messages. I’ve written up my impressions of each movie under separate posts.

 

Taken together, Flow, The Story of Stuff and Cuba: The Power of Community remind us of the necessities of life, the power of human intervention and the integration of human systems. They also remind me of the resilient character of the human species and re-affirm that we have the intelligence to adapt and evolve. When the life conditions demand it, we can change fast. And maybe we should demand the changes before life conditions give us no choice?

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