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Journal of Environmental Accounting and Management
António Mendes Lopes (editor), Jiazhong Zhang(editor)
António Mendes Lopes (editor)

University of Porto, Portugal

Email: aml@fe.up.pt

Jiazhong Zhang (editor)

School of Energy and Power Engineering, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, Shaanxi Province 710049, China

Fax: +86 29 82668723 Email: jzzhang@mail.xjtu.edu.cn


Energy and Existential Sustainability: The Role of Reserve Capacity

Journal of Environmental Accounting and Management 1(3) (2013) 213--228 | DOI:10.5890/JEAM.2013.08.001

Joseph A. Tainter

Department of Environment and Society, Utah State University, 5215 Old Main Hill, Logan, Utah, 84322, USA

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Abstract

Sustainability emerges from successfully solving the problems that confront a society. Problem solving leads to increasing complexity and imposes costs. Sustainability is therefore a benefit/cost function subject to diminishing returns. Problem solving and sustainability ultimately depend on having supplies of energy and other resources of high quality, quantity, and productivity. When confronted with existential problems–threats to the existence of a society or way of life a sustainable society must be able to draw upon reserve re- sources that are readily available. Lack of such reserves can make a society unable to solve problems and vulnerable to collapse. This is illustrated by two periods in Roman history, the Second Punic War (218-201 B.C.) and the Battle of Adrianople (A.D. 378). Rome’s ability to recover from these crises illustrates the importance for sus- tainability of reserve capacity to solve problems. This finding is ap- plied to a discussion of problem-solving capacity under declining petroleum supplies, and in a future dependent on renewable energy.

Acknowledgments

I am pleased to express my appreciation to Sergio Ulgiati and an anonymous reviewer for comments on this paper. An earlier version of this paper was presented at the John E. Sawyer Seminars on the Comparative Study of Cultures, Energy Transitions and Society, Boston University, 25 February 2011.

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