Post Carbon Institute


Post Carbon Institute is a think tank which provides information and analysis on climate change, energy scarcity, and other issues related to sustainability and long term community resilience. Its Fellows specialize in various fields related to the organization's mission, such as fossil fuels, renewable energy, food, water, and population. Post Carbon is incorporated as a 5013 non-profit organization and is based in Corvallis, Oregon, United States.
Post Carbon Institute largely publishes and promotes the work of its Fellows and allies. It maintains two major websites, for material from its staff and Fellows, and for material from allies. Since 2009 it has focused on: publishing articles, reports, and books; running issue-oriented promotional campaigns; and serving as a speakers' bureau for some of its Fellows.

History

2003–2008

Post Carbon Institute was founded by Julian Darley and Celine Rich in 2003. Its initial purpose was to implement programs to educate the public on issues surrounding global fossil fuel depletion and climate change, as well as on possible responses to these challenges. A key tool for this was a film called "The End of Suburbia," which featured Richard Heinberg and James Howard Kunstler among others. Post Carbon promoted the concept of "relocalization," a strategy to build community resilience based on the local production of food, energy, and goods, and the development of more localized governance, economy, and culture.
Post Carbon Institute was one of the few organizations in this period actively promoting the concept of peak oil, along with groups such as the Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas, the International Forum on Globalization, and the Transition Towns movement, and websites such as EnergyBulletin.net and The Oil Drum. It ran the predominant online social network focused on community responses to peak oil and climate change, the . Richard Heinberg joined as a Senior Fellow-in-Residence in 2008. Major activities included:
became Executive Director in 2009, and Post Carbon restructured to concentrate its program activities on research and publishing. It broadened its topical focus to include natural resource depletion, climate change, the limits to economic growth, human overpopulation, food, and other issues - partly in response to the changed U.S. political landscape following the 2008 oil crisis, the financial crisis of 2007–2008, and the election of President Barack Obama. Most of its earlier programs were consolidated or discontinued. It entered into partnerships with and Energy Bulletin.net, a clearinghouse website on issues surrounding global energy resource depletion. Its roster of was significantly expanded to include notable figures such as Bill McKibben, Wes Jackson, David Orr, and Majora Carter.

Activities

Resilience.org

is a resource platform for communities building local self-reliance, emphasizing community-based responses to the rapidly emerging fallout from the end of cheap fossil fuels. It was launched in 2012 as the successor to the popular peak oil website EnergyBulletin.net.

Think Resilience

is an online course on "how to make sense of the complex challenges society now faces" and "how to build community resilience."

Publications

Since 2012, publications have focused primarily on energy and/or community resilience:

Energy

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