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Permaculture for a self-sustaining landscape
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Johan Ehrenberg

Johan Ehrenberg is CEO ETC Utveckling (production company), editor of the magazine ETC, CEO Egen El- alternative (electricity for domestic use, author etc...


Name: Johan Ehrenberg
Milk: Organic milk
Unknown page: Eating a bag of chips a day
Motto: Sure, you can save the world. Who else would do that?
Passion: People who live as they learn, not just talking
Pets: None

ETC (political magazine) has been with us since childhood. It was to the (political) left, radical and courageous. Johan Ehrenberg is now the driving force behind the magazine, online edition, the Forum, a wealth of books, the speeches, columns, political speeches, and the CEO for Egen El AB (Egen El AB offers wind power and solar cells for home use that are suitable for balconies in apartments, houses and cottages;  the small power plants are easily connected to standard electrical outlets. In a convincing way, Egen El covers all the usual arguments to be found against the alternative power sources; too expensive, high initial costs, complicated, too little of both sun and wind.

Then the sales pitches; "you can rent! Payment by installment! Cancel when you wish! No bond required. Installation assistance supplied! Lack of sun or wind; complement power supply from green power companies. "

It is easy to capitulate...

Johan sees himself as more businessman than idealist. To him, the issues and commitment are the driving force. He uses the magazine and the company to get the message across.

Carbon Credits

Previously eco milk was a pretty good measure of environmental commitment, but now organic milk has become a standard and the measure it once illustrated, has become diluted. The issue of emissions is a measure that is more in time, most have heard of it, some have dug deeper into the questions involved and those directly involved have taken a position of for or against. It is a complex issue and requires that one is knowledgeable of the links between fossil fuels and the greenhouse effect. You must be familiar with national economics and politics; if of course you are not just going with the gut feeling.

Johan is well informed and has taken his stance and on ETC’s website you can even find an alternative climate policy program. He does not like emission trading at all and considers it is an attempt to create an imaginary market around the environmental issue and that it is too serious a matter to be manipulated via some kind of untried trading; a method that is of uncertain workability in the long term. Moreover, he finds it is an unfair trade that reveals a cynical way of the western world, to look at their environment. “Wealthy countries give carbon allowances to poorer nations which in turn sell them back to the richer economies enabling them to slowly be able to switch their sources of energy. If the rich world would seriously let every person’s entitlement to the same amount of air, water and food, well, then we can talk about an allowance being a choice for the seller. Now it is a constraint."

"We are purchasing the worlds demise;

one Carbon Emission Right, at a time”

Moreover, it is not logical, according to Johan. He mentions the fact that we in the western world already produce more greenhouse gases than the earth can assimilate. Therefore it does not matter how much we pay for other areas of the Earth’s carbon rights, to continue a little longer, when it is already too much. With this reasoning, it means that we would need a number of “Earths” if carbon emission rights would work for real. "The problem is very simple: each day we cause TOO MUCH damage. It is therefore not suitable to try to create a market that will make the damage more expensive by using emission rights. The rich world's economy is so superior that we can purchase the end of the world, one Right at a time.”  There is no time to make mistakes and Johan believes that it will require a completely different economic approach than through allowances for there to be any possibility of being able to replace the use of fossil fuels.

The art of making wise choices

At present we regulate emissions with money. Profitability steers production. Industries are not driven by the solar panels and wind craft because they are too expensive. You do not choose organic products that are more expensive than standard produce. Only when the congestion tax was introduced in Stockholm was there a reduction in driving in the city. Gasoline tax is raised unilaterally across the country regardless of where the problem is the greatest. Money is a practical tool, easy to understand; useful for politicians who want to appear as purposeful.

What about the less tangible instruments? What about the measures addressed more to human values and way of life? Labour market policy measures that reduce working hours enabling the use of public transport to compensate for longer journey time. Choice; spare time as opposed to product purchases. Time to bake one’s own bread; it doesn’t get any closer to the principle of “locally produced” than that,  nor better tasting. Maybe even time to read up on alternative electricity sources.

Johan agrees that stress is a common cause of poor environmental choices. He criticizes the way the climate issues are discussed today, as if it is only a  question of machines and energy sources, when it basically is about how we live. It is not new technology that can save the world, it's the people of the world. People prioritize correctly. He believes that we will see major economic changes caused by the lack of energy. He argues that the ways we choose to tackle the problem will be this generations greatest challenge and we need to invest collectively if we are to change the energy system. What is called the public sector will have a much greater role to begin with. He takes as an example, pension savings, that if, as an example, we are focusing our pension investments in solar energy cells, we may have less money in 2040, but we will have clean energy for a better quality of life; we can distribute it free between us and we will not to be poorer, not measured in real wealth.

"We must learn to be what we want to be

and not what we have become"

He argues that in order for us to make wiser choices, we must abandon our fear of aging, our obsession with pension funds and security in the form of smart investment and instead try to build environments and security in the community such as  mutual accommodation; community projects that have a role for all well into old age.

"I have no respect for people in the media or for politicians who claim to work with

climate change, unless they themselves use wind craft, use an environment friendly

car , mount the solar cells, etc., etc.. that they live as they preach"

Clear views and public positioning run like a thread through Johan Ehrenberg life. He tries to live as he teaches; he drives a green car, does not fly, produces his own electricity and tries to live as environmentally friendly as is possible.

With his commitment to environmental issues, he shows the feebleminded that it is possible to take responsibility for our own sources of energy in relatively simple ways. Perhaps it is more than a simple choice of energy source, it is perhaps a step towards being able to be what we want to be which is definitely good. Even ETC sells more issues now that green has become trendy!

Link to: Egen El AB

 

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Johan Ehrenberg is CEO ETC Utveckling (production company), editor of the magazine ETC, CEO Egen El- alternative (electricity for domestic use, author etc...


Name: Johan Ehrenberg
Milk: Organic milk
Unkn...
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# Article Title Author
1 Live Green, Die Green – Note on Greener Funerals Purva Bhandari
2 Greener transportation Purva Bhandari
3 Environmental Vegetarianism Anubhav Kapoor
4 The world’s Greenest Notebooks Purva Bhandari
5 Sustainability Goes Yummy: Greener Chocolates Herald Green Consumerism Anubhav Kapoor
6 Reducing carbon paw prints for pets Purva Bhandari
7 Happy Green Babies Purva Bhandari
8 Permaculture for a self-sustaining landscape Chelsea Hoffman
9 Cell Phones: One of the largest causes of e-waste Purva Bhandari
10 Eco-Friendly Computing at Organizations Anubhav Kapoor
11 Solar energy panels for your home Purva Bhandari
12 Top 10 Green Living Tips Sonya
13 How Green is your Town? Sonya

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