more:

Ours is a gluttonous society predicated on cheap, plentiful and 
dependable fossil fuels. But analysis of world oil reserves 
(particularly those in the Middle East) raises the specter that 
production has peaked and, in the years ahead, supply will decline. 
Some predict the drop will be precipitous and could well plunge the 
world into chaos. We don't have a "Plan B" to replace the lost oil 
production, the documentary notes. 

Made by Toronto filmmakers Gregory Greene and Barry Silverthorn, "The 
End of Suburbia" challenges the notions that the oil won't run out 
and we can continue to drive our SUVs and live in far-flung 
neighborhoods without concern. 

SUBURBAN WAY OF LIFE EMBEDDED IN OUR CONSCIOUSNESS 

The documentary lays out its arguments provocatively, noting that 
since World War II, North Americans have invested much of their 
newfound wealth in suburbia, with its abundant promise of wide open 
space, affordability, family life and upward mobility. As the 
population of suburban sprawl has exploded in the past 50 years, so 
too the suburban way of life has become embedded in the North 
American consciousness. 

WE'RE SLAVES TO PETROLEUM 

Our North American dependence on petroleum makes us utterly slave to 
it. We heat our homes with fossil fuels, we eat food grown and 
transported with the assistance of fossil fuels, we watch televisions 
and use computers powered with electricity generated by fossil fuels. 

Worldwide, there are now 600 million internal combustion engine 
vehicles on the roads, and a third of them are operating in the 
United States. Americans who live in suburbs typically drive 50 to 
100 miles round trip each day to get to work, to shop and to play. 

North Americans use a highly disproportionate amount of the world's 
resources. The United States contains just 4 percent of the world's 
population, but gobbles up 25 percent of its oil. It doesn't take a 
genius to figure out that such massive use of non-renewable resources 
is just not sustainable. 

"It's in everybody's interest to maintain the façade that this way of 
life is normal… and we should continue buying and consuming like 
there is no tomorrow." Says author Richard Heinberg. The issue of 
energy resource depletion has been largely ignored by the mainstream 
media because, as he puts it, "there's no upside for them. If they 
decide to tell the people of North America that in fact we are 
running out of the very resources that fuel economic growth, does 
that make anybody's stock price go up, except for a few tiny niche 
companies that make solar panels and wind turbines?" 


Finding other solutions won't be easy because we've yet to find an 
energy source as efficient as oil. Hydrogen and ethanol, touted as 
potential replacements for oil, take more energy to create than they 
deliver. Hydrogen, after all, isn't even a form of energy, but a form 
of energy storage, created with electricity and water. The 
electricity has to be generated using some form of energy-typically 
fossil fuels. 

"SLUMS OF THE FUTURE" 

As less oil is pumped from the ground and prices surge ever upward, 
driven by the forces of supply and demand, the documentary predicts 
the property values of suburban homes will plummet. There will be a 
great scramble to flee what Kunstler calls "the slums of the future." 

The documentary postulates that the answer to the coming oil shortage 
and the imminent collapse of industrial civilization, at least 
partly, resides in "new urbanism." It is the re-establishment of the 
sorts of elements that comprised great cities in the days before the 
internal combustion engine. Local retail clusters, walkable 
neighborhoods, work and living spaces in closer proximity and local 
energy generation are all ingredients for sustainable urban living 
for the age after fossil fuels. 

The Canadian film has been making the rounds on the festival circuit 
and has already sold nearly 5,000 copies on DVD and video. Nearly 10 
percent of the sales have gone to California, where urban sprawl, air 
pollution from the state's millions of vehicles and a fragile 
electrical energy grid are hot button issues. 

The success and popularity of recent documentaries (like "Fahrenheit 
9/11") have opened the door a little wider for alternative media, 
producer Silverthorn says. "People are not getting what they need 
from the corporate media, which sadly lacks balance and challenge and 
we've been delighted at the response to our film." 

For more information and to order copies of the documentary, visit 
http://www.endofsuburbia.com/. If you'd like to offer your thoughts, 
please drop me an email at [EMAIL PROTECTED] For 
information on reprints of previously published articles, check out 
my Web site at http://www.lawrenceherzog.com. 






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