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Creating a Global Renewable Energy Commons

Part of the 2023 series Schumacher Conversations: Envisioning the Next 50 Years


As the 50th anniversary of Small is Beautiful, 2023 is our opportunity to advance solutions to today’s social, economic, and environmental challenges that build on Schumacher’s original vision.

To do so, the Schumacher Center is convening a monthly series featuring New Economic thinkers, builders and activists from a range of fields. “Schumacher Conversations: Envisioning the Next 50 Years” brings together change-makers whose work today is actively shaping a ‘small is beautiful’ future, organized around 12 key themes and fields of activism.

The theme for June is Creating a Global Renewable Energy Commons. This online Conversation took place Thursday, June 15th at 2PM (EST).

Featuring:
– Stuart Cowan, Buckminster Fuller Institute
– Naomi Davis, Blacks In Green and Friends of Wind
– David Sturmes Verbeek, Fair Cobalt Alliance
– Moderated by Greg Watson, Schumacher Center for New Economics

“What matters, as I said, is the direction of research, that the direction should be towards non-violence rather than violence; towards an harmonious cooperation with nature rather than a warfare against nature; towards the noiseless, low-energy, elegant and economical solutions normally applied in nature rather than the noisy, high-energy, brutal, wasteful, and clumsy solutions of our present-day” — E.F. Schumacher, Small is Beautiful

Small is Beautiful  advocated a reorientation of economic means toward the proper ends of health and flourishing for humans as well as ecology. Today, with the climate and biodiversity crises reaching new levels of urgency, the need to transition out of an unsustainable energy system is clearer than ever. Yet simple, top-down approaches to a green energy transition have serious risks: of perpetuating old harms, leaving current energy communities and workforces behind, transferring zones of extraction from fossil fuels to critical earth minerals, and further ratcheting existing geopolitical tensions.

Beyond the zero-sum paradigm pitting decarbonization and prosperity against one another, creative approaches emerge for a transition away from fossil fuels which affirm fairness and promise to unlock human potential. June’s panelists are those uncovering such novel solutions to renewable energy in our tumultuous present. Unifying “thinking globally” and “acting locally,” these diverse approaches affirm community interdependence, global cooperation and right livelihood. Together, they point toward a phase-shift from humanity’s market-competitive approach to energy generation toward a global commons approach rooted in biospheric stewardship and  mutual interdependence.

Each panelist was invited to reflect on themes in Small Is Beautiful  that connect with their own thinking and activism. These reflections then opened up a broader conversation on the topics of renewable energy and a global energy commons. An audience Q&A follows moderated by our host, Greg Watson, Schumacher Center Director of Policy and Systems Design.

For added background, read Greg’s recent essay, The World Grid and New Geographies of Cooperation, and revisit our Co-Founder Robert Swann’s foundational  1977 essay, “World Resources Trusteeship.”

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Event Panelists

Naomi Davis

Naomi Davis is Founder and C.E.O. of Blacks in Green (BIG) and the visionary behind BIG’s Sustainable Square Mile initiative. She is the proud granddaughter of Mississippi sharecroppers who – like 7 million others – voted with their feet and moved “UpSouth” for freedom and economic opportunity during the Great Migration. Naomi believes Black communities … Continued

David Sturmes-Verbeek

Director of Fundraising & Innovation at The Impact Facility, David Sturmes-Verbeek applies his background in value chain development and resource governance to mobilize investment into artisanal and small-scale gold and cobalt mining across East and Central Africa. David has been involved in the development and launch of the Fair Cobalt Alliance (FCA), a multi-stakeholder platform … Continued

Stuart Cowan

Dr. Stuart Cowan is Executive Director of the Buckminster Fuller Institute, drawing on 25 years of experience in regenerative design, finance, and systems and is a skilled systems thinker, transition designer, researcher, and leader of transdisciplinary initiatives. He is the Co-Founder of Autopoiesis LLC, which works to regenerate communities, ecosystems, and organizations. He was the … Continued

Greg Watson

Greg Watson is Curator of the World Game Workshop and World Grid Project at the Schumacher Center for a New Economics. His work currently focuses on community food systems and the dynamics between local and geo-economic systems. Watson has spent nearly 40 years learning to understand systems thinking as inspired by Buckminster Fuller and to … Continued