The Power Of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil (2006) | Official Full Documentary
Summary
TLDRThe video examines Cuba's response to the peak oil crisis following the Soviet Union's collapse, showcasing the country's transition to sustainable agriculture and community-oriented solutions. With a sharp decline in oil imports leading to significant economic hardship, Cubans adapted by cultivating urban gardens and embracing organic farming practices. These efforts not only aided food security but also fostered community cooperation and resilience. As Cuba navigated through challenges—such as blackouts, food scarcity, and the tightening U.S. embargo—its local initiatives provide vital lessons for addressing energy and economic crises globally.
Takeaways
- 🌍 Cuba as a model for local solutions to global challenges
- 🚜 Shift from industrial to organic farming practices
- 👩🌾 Community cooperation essential for food security
- 🌱 Urban agriculture transformed city landscapes
- ⚡ Transition to manual labor reduces fossil fuel reliance
- 🌾 Reclamation of land for sustainable practices
- 🚴♂️ Increased bicycle use transformed transportation
- 🏥 Healthcare maintained despite economic hardships
- 🚦 Decentralization of education mitigated transportation issues
- 🌿 Over 80% of Cuba's agriculture is now organic
Timeline
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The Community Solution is an organization focused on local community-based strategies to cope with the impending peak oil crisis, emphasizing cooperation, conservation, and curtailment. Their interest in Cuba arises from the island's significant response to an economic crisis post-Soviet Union, deemed the 'special period', which serves as an early model for addressing future global energy challenges.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
In the early 1990s, Cuba faced economic collapse, losing substantial GDP and 80% of its foreign trade, leading to severe oil shortages and a food crisis. This scenario required the Cuban population to adapt quickly, initiating urban vegetable cultivation to survive, showcasing resilience in the face of adversity and resource scarcity.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
As global oil production nears its peak—suggesting an ultimate decline in energy availability—the study of Cuba's historical response during its economic crisis offers valuable insights into managing impending similar global crises created by peak oil.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
The concept of peak oil, established by Dr. M. King Hubbert, highlights the unsustainable trajectory of oil reliance, suggesting that the end of cheap fossil fuels could radically alter societal structures. Despite recognizing the regressions in energy consumption, post-1970 US policies favored traditional energy practices, ignoring long-term sustainability, a lesson Cuba learned the hard way.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
In the wake of the 1970s oil crisis, repeated warnings by geologists went unheeded, leading to unchecked fossil fuel dependence. American policies reverted to prioritizing oil production over sustainable energy solutions, sidelining innovations that might have mitigated future crises, ultimately resulting in a cycle of crisis and reaction.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
Cuba's post-Soviet investments in oil-dependent agricultural systems faltered, leading to widespread malnutrition. Immediate drastic adaptations were necessary, transitioning from industrial agriculture reliant on imports to localized food production, prompting a community-driven approach to food security and agriculture.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
Cuba's urban gardens and permaculture initiatives emerged from the dire need during the special period, transforming city landscapes into productive spaces. They cultivated community cooperation while providing essential food sources amid scarcity, highlighting the role of grassroots efforts in sustainable urban agriculture.
- 00:35:00 - 00:40:00
The shift towards organic farming in Cuba allowed a reorientation of its agricultural sector, ultimately leading to higher yields without fossil fuel dependence. Educational workshops facilitated knowledge transfer among citizens, focusing on food production resilience in the face of resource limitations and environmental considerations.
- 00:40:00 - 00:45:00
Innovative transportation solutions emerged in Cuba through necessity, drastically reducing reliance on fossil fuels. Widespread use of bicycles, carpooling, and creative alternatives such as repurposed trucks demonstrated adaptability while fostering a culture of community interdependence during significant fuel shortages.
- 00:45:00 - 00:53:04
Cuba's energy policies adapted to reduced fuel availability focused on renewable sources. Noteworthy achievements included the adoption of solar energy, biomass utilization for electricity, and education on energy conservation practices—all of which signify successful attempts at fostering self-sufficiency and community resilience toward energy crises.
Mind Map
Video Q&A
What is the peak oil crisis?
The peak oil crisis refers to the point in time when oil production reaches its maximum level, after which production will continuously decline due to limited resources.
How did Cuba respond to the peak oil crisis?
Cuba responded by implementing community-based agricultural initiatives, focusing on urban farming, organic practices, and reducing reliance on fossil fuels.
What were the main challenges faced by Cuba during the economic crisis?
Cuba faced severe food scarcity, blackouts, a collapsing economy, and an embargo which restricted access to necessary resources.
What is urban agriculture?
Urban agriculture involves growing food in cities and towns, converting vacant lots and rooftops into gardens and farms.
How did the Cuban government support agriculture during the crisis?
The government incentivized smaller farms and cooperatives, promoting organic farming methods and ensuring localized food production.
What role did community cooperation play in Cuba's adaptation?
Community cooperation was crucial, as citizens collaborated to grow food, share resources, and support each other during the crisis.
What lessons can other countries learn from Cuba's experience?
Other countries can learn the importance of adaptability, community-driven solutions, and sustainable practices in response to energy and economic crises.
How did the agricultural practices in Cuba change?
Cuba transitioned from industrialized agriculture that relied on fossil fuels to organic and sustainable methods, significantly reducing pesticide use.
What impact did the crisis have on Cuba's healthcare system?
Cuba maintained its commitment to free healthcare, ensuring continued access to medical services despite economic hardships.
What is meant by 'thinking globally, acting locally'?
This phrase emphasizes the importance of localized responses to global issues, encouraging individuals and communities to take initiative for sustainable practices.
View more video summaries
- 00:00:06the community solution
- 00:00:07is an organization exploring the peak
- 00:00:09oil crisis
- 00:00:11its focus is on local community-based
- 00:00:13solutions that reflect the values of
- 00:00:15cooperation
- 00:00:16conservation and curtailment
- 00:00:31[Music]
- 00:00:41the breakup of the soviet union in the
- 00:00:43early 1990s
- 00:00:44created a major economic crisis in cuba
- 00:00:46known as the special period
- 00:00:50so we have from 1989 united through 93
- 00:00:54a free fall of the economy 2 of 34
- 00:00:57percent of gdp gross domestic product
- 00:00:59when i tell you free fall of the economy
- 00:01:02trying to imagine an airplane
- 00:01:03suddenly lose their engines it was
- 00:01:06really
- 00:01:07a crash cuba lost 80 percent of its
- 00:01:11export in import markets
- 00:01:13oil imports dropped by more than half
- 00:01:15buses stopped running
- 00:01:16factories closed electricity blackouts
- 00:01:18were common
- 00:01:19and food was scarce people almost
- 00:01:21starved
- 00:01:23in reality when this all began it was a
- 00:01:26necessity people had to
- 00:01:27start cultivating vegetables wherever
- 00:01:30they could
- 00:01:32over the next decade cuba took drastic
- 00:01:34steps to find solutions
- 00:01:35it is the first country to face the
- 00:01:37crisis that we will all face the peak
- 00:01:40oil crisis
- 00:01:49two years ago we learned about a concept
- 00:01:51called peak oil
- 00:01:52in which we will find that oil
- 00:01:55production is sort of reaching a peak
- 00:01:57sometime the next few years and will be
- 00:01:59going down
- 00:02:00and that implies basically a major
- 00:02:02change in our way of life
- 00:02:04and what we've discovered is that cuba
- 00:02:06because
- 00:02:07their own artificial peak oil was
- 00:02:09imposed on them when the soviet union
- 00:02:11collapsed
- 00:02:12is actually a model for what's going to
- 00:02:15take place
- 00:02:16in the rest of the world we wanted to
- 00:02:18see if we can capture
- 00:02:19what is it in the cuban people and the
- 00:02:22cuban culture
- 00:02:23will allow to go go through this very
- 00:02:26difficult time
- 00:02:27without competing over scarce resources
- 00:02:31we think cuba has a lot to show the
- 00:02:33world about how to deal
- 00:02:35with energy adversity which i think
- 00:02:36we'll all be facing
- 00:02:41[Music]
- 00:02:45in 1949 oil geologist dr m king hubbard
- 00:02:49developed the theory of oil depletion
- 00:02:51making the prediction that the fossil
- 00:02:52fuel era would be very short
- 00:03:00in 1956 he forecasted that american oil
- 00:03:03production
- 00:03:04in the continental 48 states would reach
- 00:03:06peak production in 1970
- 00:03:09production did peak that year as he
- 00:03:11predicted
- 00:03:14in 1974 hubbard testified to a senate
- 00:03:17subcommittee
- 00:03:18warning of the dangers of declining
- 00:03:19fossil fuels in an exponential growth
- 00:03:22culture
- 00:03:24the u.s oil peak in 1970 combined with a
- 00:03:27crisis in the middle east
- 00:03:28led to severe oil shortages and an
- 00:03:30economic crisis in the country
- 00:03:32americans experienced record high
- 00:03:34interest rates long gas lines
- 00:03:37the highest gasoline prices in history
- 00:03:40recession and a declining stock market
- 00:03:44government films were produced
- 00:03:45explaining the problem
- 00:03:48we were caught by surprise with a crisis
- 00:03:50that could recur
- 00:03:51and recur unless the entire country
- 00:03:53recognized the dangers of a quite real
- 00:03:56energy shortage
- 00:03:58our industrial progress and economic
- 00:04:00growth was fired by what many seem to
- 00:04:02look on
- 00:04:03as endless energy but warning signs were
- 00:04:06there
- 00:04:08i think it's going to end with everybody
- 00:04:11changing their
- 00:04:12their habits during this time gas
- 00:04:16purchases were restricted to every other
- 00:04:17day
- 00:04:18long gas lines appeared and the speed
- 00:04:20limit was lowered
- 00:04:22president carter formed a task force
- 00:04:24which in 1980 published the global 2000
- 00:04:27report to the president
- 00:04:30the report pointed out that by the year
- 00:04:322000 half of all the oil available in
- 00:04:34the world would have been consumed
- 00:04:38carter had begun a new energy policy tax
- 00:04:41credits were offered for alternative
- 00:04:42energy
- 00:04:43and wind turbines began to appear on the
- 00:04:45landscape
- 00:04:47but then alaska's prudo bay in the oil
- 00:04:49fields of the north sea came online
- 00:04:52the oil crisis eased and prices dropped
- 00:04:55carter's call for frugality and care
- 00:04:58was rejected ronald reagan moved into
- 00:05:01the white house
- 00:05:02and dramatically cut research and
- 00:05:03development for alternative energy
- 00:05:07it was morning in america again and the
- 00:05:09country went to sleep
- 00:05:10for a generation
- 00:05:14but the problem didn't go away as oil
- 00:05:17consumption continued to increase year
- 00:05:19after year
- 00:05:22in 1997 petroleum geologist dr colin
- 00:05:24campbell wrote the coming oil crisis
- 00:05:27three years later he founded the
- 00:05:29association for the study of peak oil
- 00:05:31known as aspo and held the first meeting
- 00:05:34on peak oil in sweden in 2002.
- 00:05:38dr kenda faye a princeton oil geologist
- 00:05:41published hubbard's peak in 2001
- 00:05:43followed two years later by richard
- 00:05:45heinberg's seminal work
- 00:05:46the party's over in 2005
- 00:05:50matt simmons book twilight in the desert
- 00:05:53challenged the stated oil reserves of
- 00:05:55saudi arabia
- 00:05:59a flood of books and magazines began to
- 00:06:01appear on the market
- 00:06:0325 books were published in 2004 and 2005
- 00:06:07and hundreds of articles in newspapers
- 00:06:09and magazines
- 00:06:22the long sleep of the 80s and 90s is
- 00:06:24coming to an end
- 00:06:25and with no more preparation than in
- 00:06:271970 global peak oil
- 00:06:29is arriving peak oil is the point in
- 00:06:34time
- 00:06:35when oil production reaches its maximum
- 00:06:38and that doesn't mean that we're running
- 00:06:40out what it means is that we're going to
- 00:06:41have a continuous decline in production
- 00:06:43from that point
- 00:06:44peak oil occurs when a reservoir is
- 00:06:47about half empty
- 00:06:49reservoir pressure drops to the halfway
- 00:06:51point and so less and less oil
- 00:06:53will be extracted each year world oil
- 00:06:56production grew slowly until the 1950s
- 00:07:00then accelerated until the late 1970s
- 00:07:03dipped for a few years because of the
- 00:07:05mideast crisis
- 00:07:06and then began increasing again
- 00:07:09in a few years we'll hit the ultimate
- 00:07:11peak when half the world's oil will be
- 00:07:14gone
- 00:07:15oil production will begin to decline at
- 00:07:18the same time world oil demand will
- 00:07:20continue to grow
- 00:07:21and world population is increasing along
- 00:07:24with it
- 00:07:25what peaks is not total oil it's the
- 00:07:28easy oil to produce
- 00:07:30what's left is the less desirable oil
- 00:07:32you couldn't get out in the first place
- 00:07:34very fast
- 00:07:35it takes more energy to produce and a
- 00:07:37far smaller quantity comes from each
- 00:07:39well
- 00:07:39oil is finite natural gas is finite coal
- 00:07:43uranium all these are finite fuels
- 00:07:46so there's going to be a peak for all of
- 00:07:47these and peak oil is just the beginning
- 00:07:51the effect on our culture could be
- 00:07:52extreme our economy and our way of life
- 00:07:55are based on consuming oil and other
- 00:07:57fossil fuels
- 00:07:59each person in the u.s consumes the
- 00:08:01yearly per capita equivalent of 10
- 00:08:02barrels of oil for food
- 00:08:04nine barrels of oil for automobiles and
- 00:08:07seven barrels of oil for their homes
- 00:08:10the major use of fossil fuels is for
- 00:08:12food production
- 00:08:16what peak oil means is essentially a
- 00:08:19limited supply
- 00:08:21world oil discovery peaked in the
- 00:08:22mid-1960s and has been declining ever
- 00:08:25since
- 00:08:26right now we're consuming about five
- 00:08:28barrels of oil for every one that we
- 00:08:30discover
- 00:08:31that is an unsustainable amount and
- 00:08:33can't be continued much longer
- 00:08:36but at the same time we have increasing
- 00:08:38demand throughout the world especially
- 00:08:40in developing countries like
- 00:08:41china now in 1993
- 00:08:45china had 733 000 cars on the road and
- 00:08:47by the start of 2004 they had 6 million
- 00:08:50cars
- 00:08:50by the end of 2004 they had 8 million
- 00:08:53cars
- 00:08:54they've convinced people that it's nice
- 00:08:56to drive well the whole vision for these
- 00:08:58developing countries is that they're
- 00:09:00going to be like america someday
- 00:09:01and that the people are going to be able
- 00:09:02to consume the way that americans have
- 00:09:04consumed
- 00:09:05but that's not going to be able to
- 00:09:06happen and that's not even possible for
- 00:09:08america
- 00:09:09americans won't be able to consume like
- 00:09:11americans today
- 00:09:14peak oil is unprecedented we've never
- 00:09:17become dependent on fossil fuels before
- 00:09:20in human history and we've never
- 00:09:21experienced
- 00:09:22a peak in fossil fuel production so we
- 00:09:25we're flying blind
- 00:09:26as as a global community and so we need
- 00:09:30examples
- 00:09:31we need some sort of laboratory
- 00:09:33experiment where we can
- 00:09:35run this and see you know what's the
- 00:09:37best way to do it what's
- 00:09:38what's not so good and so on and cuba
- 00:09:40provides us with that because cuba has
- 00:09:43already undergone
- 00:09:44a kind of energy famine
- 00:09:52[Music]
- 00:10:04[Music]
- 00:10:10after the soviet union oil import
- 00:10:13dropped from 13 14 million tons a year
- 00:10:16to only four
- 00:10:21cuba in the 80s have 90
- 00:10:24000 russian tractors factories of
- 00:10:28pesticides and chemical fertilizers you
- 00:10:30we receive
- 00:10:31from the soviet union in 1990 everything
- 00:10:34changed
- 00:10:35there was nothing when the deep economic
- 00:10:38crisis began in the 19 early 1990s it
- 00:10:41was a change in our lifestyle we all of
- 00:10:43a sudden so abruptly in a matter of
- 00:10:46weeks time you know a huge change
- 00:10:50we saw symptoms of malnutrition in
- 00:10:53children of five years of age
- 00:10:55we saw pregnant women with anemia
- 00:10:58we had underweight babies
- 00:11:02at birth the impact on food scarcity was
- 00:11:06disastrous
- 00:11:07the average cuban lost 20 pounds by
- 00:11:091994.
- 00:11:11we were desperate for everything we
- 00:11:14don't care about first
- 00:11:15war quality standards on any commodity
- 00:11:18we just need food it doesn't matter what
- 00:11:19you bring we buy it
- 00:11:21without imported fuel oil it was
- 00:11:23impossible for cuba to generate the
- 00:11:25electricity it needed
- 00:11:27resulting in blackouts throughout the
- 00:11:28country
- 00:11:30well we had at that time power cuts that
- 00:11:33lasted
- 00:11:34for many many hours maybe up to 14 16
- 00:11:37hours
- 00:11:38a day and this in a climate such as ours
- 00:11:42it's very difficult because you do need
- 00:11:46the fridge so the spool won't uh spoil
- 00:11:50so you had to cook on a daily basis but
- 00:11:52what you had to eat at that moment
- 00:11:54because you just couldn't put things
- 00:11:55away
- 00:11:56and it was very difficult moment power
- 00:11:59cuts were particularly hard in cuba's
- 00:12:01large housing complexes
- 00:12:03in a tropical climate with its heat and
- 00:12:05humidity it was difficult to be without
- 00:12:07the use of air conditioners and fans
- 00:12:09without elevators people use the stairs
- 00:12:12water was carried up or hauled up the
- 00:12:14outside of the building using a pulley
- 00:12:15and rope
- 00:12:16[Music]
- 00:12:18when taking a bus people had to wait
- 00:12:20three to four hours
- 00:12:22when the bus arrived at work often there
- 00:12:24was no power
- 00:12:25even if there was power sometimes there
- 00:12:27were no spare parts or raw materials
- 00:12:30so even if they got to work and had
- 00:12:32electricity there was nothing to do
- 00:12:34after work they'd have to wait another
- 00:12:36three to four hours for a bus and often
- 00:12:38when the bus arrived
- 00:12:39it was full and they'd have to wait for
- 00:12:41another one
- 00:12:44the government imported 1.2 million
- 00:12:46bicycles from china
- 00:12:47and manufactured half a million more
- 00:12:50we had to then learn how to use bicycles
- 00:12:53and
- 00:12:55bicycles was distributed all around the
- 00:12:57country to try to get to our workplaces
- 00:13:00doctors went to the hospitals you know
- 00:13:02on bikes without any culture of using
- 00:13:05bikes
- 00:13:06it was just political will that was it
- 00:13:08there's no other way
- 00:13:10in 1992 the united states tightened its
- 00:13:12embargo on cuba
- 00:13:14any ship that docked in a cuban port was
- 00:13:16denied access to the u.s
- 00:13:18for six months afterwards
- 00:13:21almost overnight 750 million dollars
- 00:13:24worth of food and medical supplies to
- 00:13:26cuba were halted
- 00:13:28a few years later the embargo was
- 00:13:30intensified and foreign businesses
- 00:13:32working in cuba were barred from
- 00:13:33entering the u.s
- 00:13:35cuba's access to foreign capital was
- 00:13:37crippled
- 00:13:39in the case of cuba you try to suffocate
- 00:13:41a country you deprive the country of
- 00:13:43access to a financial sources so cuba
- 00:13:47cannot have access to the world bank
- 00:13:49or to the imf for good an american
- 00:13:52dollar reached 150 pesos
- 00:13:55and the average salaries is like two
- 00:13:57pesos now that where people are making
- 00:13:59two bucks a month so money was not
- 00:14:02useful to to get stuff so
- 00:14:05we end up being like an experiment no
- 00:14:07like with control conditions
- 00:14:09like nothing or very little things can
- 00:14:12get from the outside
- 00:14:13so everything has to happen from the
- 00:14:15inside
- 00:14:16during the first five years of the
- 00:14:18special period government food rations
- 00:14:20kept the crisis at bay
- 00:14:22these food distributions guaranteed a
- 00:14:24minimum level of food to each of cuba's
- 00:14:26citizens
- 00:14:27and it was invented when we lost
- 00:14:29diplomatic relations with the u.s
- 00:14:31no more economic relations with the u.s
- 00:14:33and in order to prevent
- 00:14:34boarding okay so the more people have
- 00:14:37more money
- 00:14:38would just swipe to do away with
- 00:14:40everything on the counters and others
- 00:14:41would go hungry
- 00:14:43they invented this ration food
- 00:14:45distribution system
- 00:14:47with food imports reduced by 80 percent
- 00:14:49the government supplied food
- 00:14:50distributions had to be cut drastically
- 00:14:53you have the official state market
- 00:14:55through subsidies
- 00:14:56ration card which has been shrink to
- 00:15:00perhaps one-fifth of consumption from
- 00:15:02almost 100 percent
- 00:15:04now let's go to this board because i
- 00:15:05want to show you so you can understand
- 00:15:08this on a monthly basis any one of the
- 00:15:10cuban population has
- 00:15:12granted through this system three
- 00:15:15of four weeks of basic consumption
- 00:15:18according to united nations minimum
- 00:15:20level of
- 00:15:21calories ingestion in a month
- 00:15:26to complete the four weeks basic level
- 00:15:30it could come in the form of subsidized
- 00:15:32food on your workplace
- 00:15:34lower prices so you pay meals at
- 00:15:36subsidized prices
- 00:15:38so that allows you to pay only weekends
- 00:15:40or nights
- 00:15:41meals so there might be a week
- 00:15:45okay that you might have to buy extra
- 00:15:47purchase actually it depends also on
- 00:15:49your pcb habits
- 00:15:56every aspect of cuban life was affected
- 00:15:58by the special period
- 00:15:59but no change was as far reaching as
- 00:16:02agriculture
- 00:16:04cuba had committed to the green
- 00:16:06revolution a system which requires the
- 00:16:08massive use of fossil fuels in the form
- 00:16:10of natural gas-based fertilizers
- 00:16:13oil-based pesticides and diesel fuel for
- 00:16:15tractors and other farm machinery
- 00:16:20the country's agriculture was more
- 00:16:21industrialized than any other latin
- 00:16:23american country
- 00:16:25and exceeded the us in its use of
- 00:16:26fertilizer
- 00:16:29the cuban agricultural conventional
- 00:16:31green revolution system
- 00:16:33never was able to feed the people you
- 00:16:35have high yields but
- 00:16:36it was not oriented to the plantation
- 00:16:38agriculture
- 00:16:39open economy we export citrus
- 00:16:42tobacco hurricane and we import
- 00:16:47the basics in say percent of the rice
- 00:16:51more than 50 percent of the vegetable of
- 00:16:53the oil and the lard that we consume
- 00:16:55so the system even in the good times
- 00:16:58how people here remember and
- 00:17:01never fulfill the basic needs
- 00:17:07cuba's agriculture began to falter as
- 00:17:09one problem after another halted
- 00:17:11production
- 00:17:12fuel and parts for tractors were almost
- 00:17:14impossible to find
- 00:17:16seeds tools animal feed and vaccines
- 00:17:18were scarce
- 00:17:55the lack of fuel drove us to have a very
- 00:17:58big shortage of food so people
- 00:18:02they end up squatting places in the city
- 00:18:04and growing food there
- 00:18:06without knowing how because they were
- 00:18:08engineers they were doctors
- 00:18:10there was not farmers a drastic effort
- 00:18:13to convert every piece of arable land to
- 00:18:15organic agriculture was begun
- 00:18:18[Music]
- 00:18:22during the special period cuba was able
- 00:18:24to help prevent famine through an urban
- 00:18:26agricultural movement
- 00:18:28every vacant lot in the city was trained
- 00:18:30into orchard
- 00:18:32at first urban gardening was an ad hoc
- 00:18:34local survival response to the crisis
- 00:18:38they needed food they didn't know how
- 00:18:40and they just did it
- 00:18:41trial and error and there was a space
- 00:18:44they have a problem with garbage dumping
- 00:18:46rats so they fix all of those problems
- 00:18:49get rid of the garbage and start growing
- 00:18:51things there
- 00:18:52another thing during a special period
- 00:18:54was this identification of idle
- 00:18:56plots of land right that were cleaned up
- 00:18:59by the community and turned into
- 00:19:01agricultural gardens urban agricultural
- 00:19:03gardens
- 00:19:04hearing of the crisis australian
- 00:19:06permaculture experts came to cuba to
- 00:19:08assist in developing new ways to garden
- 00:19:10and raise food
- 00:19:13so in october of 1993 the first two
- 00:19:16australians came
- 00:19:17and so we started to design the rooftop
- 00:19:20garden in that place
- 00:19:22and after that we got this a small
- 00:19:25project
- 00:19:26for us it was a lot of money 26 america
- 00:19:28thousand american dollars
- 00:19:31and we started to do a train the trainer
- 00:19:34course
- 00:19:36they're one of the largest capacity
- 00:19:38centers for permaculture in havana
- 00:19:40and they themselves have trained over
- 00:19:42400 people
- 00:19:45not only have through these workshops
- 00:19:47and courses
- 00:19:48have has the community learned about
- 00:19:52permaculture but they here in the center
- 00:19:54have learned a lot about the community
- 00:19:56for example if someone comes here and
- 00:19:58they have a health problem
- 00:20:00what they can they do whatever they can
- 00:20:03to help with that
- 00:20:04but also they serve as kind of a
- 00:20:06reference point they will go
- 00:20:08and look for the specialist and bring
- 00:20:10them here so it's a
- 00:20:12mutual relationship the people
- 00:20:15cooperating with and caring about each
- 00:20:18other
- 00:20:19are the main factors that we need
- 00:20:22to encourage we can all plant fruit
- 00:20:25trees we can all have water catchment
- 00:20:27devices on our roofs
- 00:20:29it's not the technology it's the human
- 00:20:31relationships
- 00:20:33the neighbors are starting to see the
- 00:20:35possibilities of what they can do in
- 00:20:36their spaces
- 00:20:37and they're starting to create
- 00:20:40natural gardens on their roofs and also
- 00:20:43in their patios
- 00:20:46cubans who formerly lived on the
- 00:20:48equivalent of just two dollars a month
- 00:20:50found new ways to supplement their
- 00:20:51income
- 00:20:53these grapevines have a lot of uses it
- 00:20:55provides shade
- 00:20:56so you have a little patio area you also
- 00:20:59can
- 00:20:59make wine out of the grapes and and it's
- 00:21:01very good for the
- 00:21:02family economy because if you do it well
- 00:21:04you can get about 10 pesos for
- 00:21:07for a bottle of wine cuban's view of
- 00:21:09agriculture has changed dramatically
- 00:21:12farmers are now among the highest paid
- 00:21:14workers and people from all fields are
- 00:21:16attracted to the profession
- 00:21:18i'm a musician mechanics mechanics
- 00:21:22automobile mechanics
- 00:21:27designer of the electronics and
- 00:21:30nothing of this i am doing only this
- 00:21:34only animals just animals and this
- 00:21:37planet
- 00:21:38so he's an urban farmer on top of the
- 00:21:40history
- 00:21:43the farmers in cuba are not the poorest
- 00:21:47people in the society on the contrary
- 00:21:49they have food
- 00:21:50so they don't have to spend their money
- 00:21:52on food and they sell food so they make
- 00:21:54good living
- 00:21:56so it is important to take a dug in
- 00:21:57account that is another way to dignify
- 00:22:00the people that grow food
- 00:22:04with the very low cost we were producing
- 00:22:06food and now we have
- 00:22:08more than 1 000 kiosks allocated in the
- 00:22:11city
- 00:22:12that provide you with fresh
- 00:22:15fruits and vegetables produced in the
- 00:22:18neighborhood
- 00:22:19more than 50 of the total vegetable
- 00:22:22needs
- 00:22:24of the havana's population 2.2 million
- 00:22:26inhabitants is supplied by the airborne
- 00:22:28agriculture
- 00:22:32in small cities and towns urban gardens
- 00:22:34are even more productive
- 00:22:35providing 80 to 100 of the fruits and
- 00:22:38vegetables they need
- 00:22:41urban agriculture supplies food locally
- 00:22:43eliminating much of the need for
- 00:22:44transporting food over long distances
- 00:22:49the country have 169 municipalities
- 00:22:53so five kilometers around the municipal
- 00:22:56towns also are considered urban
- 00:23:00agriculture so
- 00:23:01it's a national system that is employed
- 00:23:03more than 140 thousand people
- 00:23:05actually is creating jobs it's a growing
- 00:23:08sector of the economy
- 00:23:10and it is very important and we're very
- 00:23:13proud to say that
- 00:23:16[Music]
- 00:23:21cuba eliminated the need for natural
- 00:23:23gas-based fertilizers and oil-based
- 00:23:25pesticides by developing organic farming
- 00:23:27methods
- 00:23:28fortunately research centers had begun
- 00:23:30studying sustainable agriculture before
- 00:23:32the crisis
- 00:23:34because of this preparation the
- 00:23:36transition to an approach to farming
- 00:23:37that didn't depend on fossil fuels was
- 00:23:39implemented nationally within just a few
- 00:23:42years
- 00:23:44without fossil fuels more manual labor
- 00:23:46was needed
- 00:23:47making smaller farms necessary and
- 00:23:49increasing the number of farmers
- 00:23:51one of the challenges the peak oil
- 00:23:54challenges
- 00:23:55is to reclaim land from
- 00:23:59the large scale conventional agriculture
- 00:24:04[Music]
- 00:24:25is a living being
- 00:24:27and in the top soil in the first three
- 00:24:30inches of soil
- 00:24:31is the key you add chemicals you damage
- 00:24:35all of that
- 00:24:35so then the soils became almost like sun
- 00:24:41so we're going to be having interesting
- 00:24:43challenges
- 00:24:44into rehabilitate the
- 00:24:47the soil cuba found that it took from
- 00:24:51three to five years to make the land
- 00:24:52fertile and productive again
- 00:24:56organic needs a transition
- 00:25:00needs some time and needs some money to
- 00:25:03establish the system because
- 00:25:05when you get the soy the soil is so
- 00:25:07damaged and dead
- 00:25:09that you need to to rebuild the soil you
- 00:25:12need to bring back the soil to life
- 00:25:14you have to follow the natural cycles so
- 00:25:17you hire nature
- 00:25:18to work for you not work against nature
- 00:25:21to work against nature you have to waste
- 00:25:24huge
- 00:25:25amounts of energy conventional people
- 00:25:27use this heavy machinery
- 00:25:28that compacts the soil huge tractor huge
- 00:25:32combined
- 00:25:33trucks and things like that so you have
- 00:25:35to
- 00:25:36to open the soil again add more
- 00:25:38nutrients
- 00:25:39the first ethic to take care of the land
- 00:25:42of the earth
- 00:25:43this is very important if we don't take
- 00:25:45care of the of the earth
- 00:25:48heirs will take care of us and get rid
- 00:25:49of us
- 00:26:01for me it's more important how
- 00:26:04the things that i'm eating are growing
- 00:26:06or i produce
- 00:26:07that what i'm eating so if you if
- 00:26:10if a vegan eats these heavily pesticide
- 00:26:13polluted vegetables
- 00:26:15he's not doing much election
- 00:26:22organically
- 00:26:31[Music]
- 00:26:34cuba's new agriculture uses a variety of
- 00:26:36soil enhancing alternatives to rebuild
- 00:26:38and maintain the soil
- 00:26:40crop rotation composting and green
- 00:26:43manure
- 00:26:43which is a process of plowing young
- 00:26:45vegetation into the soil
- 00:26:49many tons of organic composter produced
- 00:26:51using kitchen scraps rice hulls and
- 00:26:53other organic matter
- 00:26:55worm humus is made in long troughs where
- 00:26:58worms are fed organic waste products
- 00:27:00this makes a richer fertilizer than
- 00:27:02regular compost
- 00:27:1080 of cuba's agricultural production is
- 00:27:13organic
- 00:27:18the lack of fuel drove us to use
- 00:27:22less machinery to go to smaller farms to
- 00:27:25combine
- 00:27:26different crops in one small piece of
- 00:27:28land preventing
- 00:27:29pets spreading
- 00:27:33if you have one million plants of corn
- 00:27:36you will have one million bucks that
- 00:27:38eats only corn
- 00:27:39and you have a pest
- 00:27:43we develop many biopesticides and many
- 00:27:46biofertilizers
- 00:27:47today we are even exporting to central
- 00:27:50american countries
- 00:27:51another latin american countries who are
- 00:27:53exporting biopesticides and
- 00:27:55biofertilizers
- 00:27:57remember cuba has one advantage
- 00:28:01if the acute population of cuba is two
- 00:28:03percent of the population in latin
- 00:28:04america
- 00:28:05cuba has 11 of all the scientists
- 00:28:08in latin america
- 00:28:12it's difficult to grow certain crops in
- 00:28:13cuba's heat so farmers use a variety
- 00:28:16of mesh covers to cut the sun's rays
- 00:28:19we can extend the season and just using
- 00:28:22something as simple
- 00:28:23as putting a fabric a porous fabric over
- 00:28:28a simple structure that you can remove
- 00:28:30when a hurricane is coming
- 00:28:32and you can build again it's very simple
- 00:28:35and these fabric also allows you to
- 00:28:37control the pest
- 00:28:39because you not only reduce the
- 00:28:41radiation
- 00:28:42and the heat but you also reduce the
- 00:28:44number of bugs entering into the
- 00:28:46area in the 80s in cuba were used
- 00:28:5021 000 tons of pesticides
- 00:28:54chemical pesticides now is one thousand
- 00:28:57we are using 21 times
- 00:29:00less pesticides this is good for the
- 00:29:03environment this is good for the health
- 00:29:06and this is also good for the soil
- 00:29:11cuba uses crop interplanting to reduce
- 00:29:13the need for pesticides
- 00:29:14and make their agriculture more
- 00:29:16sustainable
- 00:29:18nobody fertilizes a forest and nobody
- 00:29:20irrigates the forest
- 00:29:22the forests do by itself so if you are
- 00:29:24able to create like something like food
- 00:29:26forest
- 00:29:27your main effort is like pick the fruits
- 00:29:30and pick the pros
- 00:29:32and so in that way the effort is less
- 00:29:35you work hard in the very beginning but
- 00:29:36once the system is established
- 00:29:39you work a lot less is what we call lazy
- 00:29:42people agriculture but
- 00:29:44is because you are working with nature
- 00:29:46not against nature these people in the
- 00:29:48conventional system
- 00:29:49works against nature
- 00:29:54one of the good sides of the crisis was
- 00:29:56to go back to oxen
- 00:29:59to use animals not only
- 00:30:02that they save fuel they they do not
- 00:30:06compact the soil
- 00:30:07the way the tractor does they exert less
- 00:30:10pressure
- 00:30:10and even the legs of the oxen remove the
- 00:30:13earth
- 00:30:16older farmers who still remembered how
- 00:30:17to grow and train oxen were set up in
- 00:30:19training schools
- 00:30:24in a little over a year most
- 00:30:25cooperatives had someone trained in the
- 00:30:27process of raising thousands of oxen had
- 00:30:29begun
- 00:30:32a pair of oxen is not the same of a
- 00:30:34tractor a man can work
- 00:30:36eight hours in a tractor you have
- 00:30:38conditioner
- 00:30:39and a cd player but you cannot work
- 00:30:43for those hours because oxen just go in
- 00:30:46the floor they say that's it you know
- 00:30:48but you need also to train those people
- 00:30:50and train the oxen as well
- 00:30:52so it was necessary a result of a change
- 00:30:56of mind
- 00:30:57the change of scale and it was a big
- 00:30:59effort but
- 00:31:01how much money they saved in fuel how
- 00:31:03much money they saving
- 00:31:05in parts how much money they say they
- 00:31:08save in tractors
- 00:31:09but i should say how much more how much
- 00:31:11money is the pollution of these tractors
- 00:31:13you have to re-analyze from several
- 00:31:15approaches they did it because they have
- 00:31:16to
- 00:31:17but from a few years point of view
- 00:31:21there are many benefits
- 00:31:24[Music]
- 00:31:28to increase food production the
- 00:31:29government worked with farmers to find
- 00:31:31local solutions
- 00:31:33the result was smaller farms and
- 00:31:35cooperatives with a high degree of
- 00:31:37privatization
- 00:31:38and autonomy forty percent of the large
- 00:31:42state farms were divided into privately
- 00:31:44owned cooperatives
- 00:31:45tens of thousands of acres of land were
- 00:31:47leased rent-free to small farmers
- 00:31:50decision-making was localized with fewer
- 00:31:52state regulations
- 00:31:54two requirements you grow things there
- 00:31:56you if you don't grow things there
- 00:31:58we take you the place from away from you
- 00:32:00and give it to somebody else
- 00:32:02and second that the land is a delivered
- 00:32:06to you in use of fruit usually fruit is
- 00:32:08an old roman word that means that you
- 00:32:10can use the land without paying taxes
- 00:32:12or without paying for her but if this
- 00:32:15this land is needed for another purpose
- 00:32:17for
- 00:32:17me it can be like you you have to give
- 00:32:20it back to
- 00:32:21to the government these smaller farms
- 00:32:25and cooperatives were better able to use
- 00:32:26the new sustainable practices
- 00:32:28vital for growing food organically
- 00:32:32twelve to fifty percent of the total
- 00:32:34arable land is in private hands in cuba
- 00:32:36so these are the private farmers they
- 00:32:40are by far the highest production
- 00:32:43per acre and per person
- 00:32:47in second places is like corpse
- 00:32:50cooperative and they are the second
- 00:32:54and third is like huge government states
- 00:32:58these new private farms and co-ops also
- 00:33:01began to function in new ways
- 00:33:03but we have credit and services scopes
- 00:33:06what does that mean you don't want to
- 00:33:07join their labs with me
- 00:33:09we don't so we are together in the cup
- 00:33:12for credits
- 00:33:13to buy the seeds together to to to hire
- 00:33:16the machinery
- 00:33:17for this stuff but we don't have to join
- 00:33:19their lab
- 00:33:20so it's a way of decentralized but
- 00:33:23centralized
- 00:33:24at the same time thousands of families
- 00:33:28moved to rural land
- 00:33:29with land rights guaranteed a sense of
- 00:33:31ownership led to greater productivity
- 00:33:35private farmers markets and new export
- 00:33:37markets led to greater production
- 00:33:40the communities have changed it's a
- 00:33:43local economy
- 00:33:44people were exchanging many of these
- 00:33:47gardens
- 00:33:48they supply for free food to elder
- 00:33:51people's circles
- 00:33:52daycare centers schools working centers
- 00:33:56pregnant women and they do it for free
- 00:33:59and they don't do it because it's
- 00:34:01compulsory they do it because they want
- 00:34:03it
- 00:34:03they want to do their little part to the
- 00:34:06society
- 00:34:07but in other places people don't know
- 00:34:08their neighbors they don't know their
- 00:34:10names
- 00:34:10they don't say hello to each other he or
- 00:34:13not they would knock
- 00:34:14the door and say i need some salt i need
- 00:34:17sun sugar
- 00:34:19i brought you an avocado
- 00:34:23and recover this this sense of neighbor
- 00:34:26for me it's not going backwards
- 00:34:30your main chain
- 00:34:34[Music]
- 00:34:40without oil for transportation cuba's
- 00:34:42educational system was threatened
- 00:34:45decentralizing universities provided
- 00:34:47people with access to nearby schools for
- 00:34:49higher education
- 00:34:50and lessened the impact of fuel
- 00:34:52shortages the example of the
- 00:34:53universities now that to put in every
- 00:34:55municipality also
- 00:34:57because in my opinion transportation and
- 00:34:59housing is right now
- 00:35:00the biggest problem is in cuba because
- 00:35:04this depends more on oil
- 00:35:09this large building was the most
- 00:35:12exclusive school in cuba they suck occur
- 00:35:15but today is the university of medical
- 00:35:17sciences
- 00:35:18for your information cuba had three
- 00:35:21universities
- 00:35:22but today has about 50.
- 00:35:25seven of them in havana medical clinics
- 00:35:29and schools are available throughout
- 00:35:31cuba
- 00:35:32during the crisis the cuban government
- 00:35:33continued supplying its citizens with
- 00:35:35free health care and education
- 00:35:38very different from what happens
- 00:35:40worldwide when there is an economic
- 00:35:42crisis the first thing they do is cut
- 00:35:44down on social services this was not the
- 00:35:46case
- 00:35:48doctors nurses and social workers live
- 00:35:50within the neighborhoods where they work
- 00:35:52part of the social fabric of the
- 00:35:53community
- 00:35:55cuba's free medical care helped them in
- 00:35:57the crisis in spite of the hardships
- 00:36:00they maintained a life span and infant
- 00:36:02mortality rate roughly equal to that in
- 00:36:04the u.s
- 00:36:05even though the average cuban consumes
- 00:36:07less than one-eighth the energy
- 00:36:09of the average american
- 00:36:12overall the economic crisis improved
- 00:36:14cubans health
- 00:36:15increased walking and biking reduced
- 00:36:17diabetes and the number of heart attacks
- 00:36:19and strokes
- 00:36:20the cuban diet changed fat consumption
- 00:36:23was reduced
- 00:36:24while more vegetables and a wider
- 00:36:26variety of vegetables were eaten
- 00:36:29before humans didn't eat that much
- 00:36:32vegetables because
- 00:36:34they they eat more tubers for example
- 00:36:37cassava
- 00:36:38taro potato but rice and beans
- 00:36:42and pork meat was basic the basic diet
- 00:36:44no the national food or whatever
- 00:36:46and they said that the rest of the seeds
- 00:36:47with a section of maybe tomato
- 00:36:50and lettuce and a little bit of cabbage
- 00:36:52where weeds
- 00:36:54so at some point necessity teach them
- 00:36:57and now they demand it they look for it
- 00:37:01cuba actually trains more doctors than
- 00:37:03they need and sends them to developing
- 00:37:05countries around the world
- 00:37:08they also exchange doctors and medical
- 00:37:10expertise with venezuela
- 00:37:12in return for oil
- 00:37:24when i look at other countries developed
- 00:37:26countries
- 00:37:27everything goes around making the
- 00:37:29automobile more efficient
- 00:37:32how much energy do you need to produce a
- 00:37:35car
- 00:37:36you have to spend energy on producing a
- 00:37:38car and later you have to find
- 00:37:40the fuel to make the car move so think
- 00:37:43about
- 00:37:44reducing the number of cars
- 00:37:48during the worst of the crisis there was
- 00:37:50very little fuel for cars
- 00:37:52the freeway and country roads were
- 00:37:54almost empty cuba needed to develop a
- 00:37:56mass transit system overnight
- 00:37:59with few resources they had to be
- 00:38:01innovative old trucks were made into
- 00:38:03buses with canopies to keep off the rain
- 00:38:06and steps welded on the back
- 00:38:09another solution was the camel a trailer
- 00:38:12pulled by a semi tractor that can carry
- 00:38:13up to 300 people
- 00:38:18in havana and other provinces carpooling
- 00:38:21and hitchhiking are common
- 00:38:22government cars are required to pick up
- 00:38:24anyone who needs a ride
- 00:38:30the loss of fuel for transportation also
- 00:38:32affected small towns and cities
- 00:38:35there people turned to horses and mules
- 00:38:37for transportation
- 00:38:40[Music]
- 00:38:44during the first years of the special
- 00:38:46period bicycles were a necessity
- 00:38:48this was not easy for cubans who had
- 00:38:50been used to cars and buses
- 00:38:54it requires more consciousness and more
- 00:38:56awareness
- 00:38:57about the the use of the bicycle that
- 00:39:01the bicycle is not uh something that we
- 00:39:03have to use because we don't have fuel
- 00:39:05or we don't have buses in the city
- 00:39:07the question is that the bicycle never
- 00:39:10contaminates is more healthy and
- 00:39:13for short distances it's very practical
- 00:39:16but if you have to move 20 kilometers a
- 00:39:18day
- 00:39:19back and forth 40 kilometers a day in a
- 00:39:21chinese bicycle no gears all still
- 00:39:25after five years you hate it
- 00:39:30and that's what's what happened in cuba
- 00:39:32like at some point when they're
- 00:39:33a little bit more camels or bosses
- 00:39:36people
- 00:39:37just quit because they were sick of it
- 00:39:39one day people start
- 00:39:41thinking about the end of the car there
- 00:39:43will be an era a moment in the
- 00:39:45the life so one day the car appeared and
- 00:39:48one day the car will disappear
- 00:39:50the car will be something that we will
- 00:39:52remember
- 00:39:53as a moment in the development of the
- 00:39:55mankind
- 00:40:00[Music]
- 00:40:08since the special period began it's been
- 00:40:10difficult to build new housing because
- 00:40:12of a scarcity of tools and materials
- 00:40:17cement production requires a lot of fuel
- 00:40:20and that's why the cement production has
- 00:40:21been
- 00:40:22reduced everyone in cuba has a place to
- 00:40:26live
- 00:40:26and 85 percent of the people own their
- 00:40:28own home
- 00:40:31but most houses are small and simple
- 00:40:33with few amenities
- 00:40:35in the countryside that means a small
- 00:40:37house with a living room
- 00:40:39kitchen and two or three bedrooms
- 00:40:43rural housing has the advantage of more
- 00:40:45open space where people can grow
- 00:40:46vegetables and fruit
- 00:40:48and raise livestock
- 00:40:53[Applause]
- 00:40:58[Music]
- 00:41:04oh
- 00:41:10in havana if you don't live in one of
- 00:41:12the old single family homes
- 00:41:13it may mean living in a dilapidated
- 00:41:15building or with your relatives in a
- 00:41:17crowded apartment
- 00:41:19even so the city is a place many people
- 00:41:21want to live
- 00:41:24havana already has the values that many
- 00:41:27urban planners and academics in the
- 00:41:29world will like to recover
- 00:41:32many people have come and said you
- 00:41:34should preserve the city we want to
- 00:41:36recover
- 00:41:37after the big sprawl many people are
- 00:41:40looking back to the traditional city and
- 00:41:42looking the ways to live
- 00:41:44in the traditional city in a more human
- 00:41:47way
- 00:41:48but living in a city without adequate
- 00:41:50transportation causes major difficulties
- 00:41:53they have to come and go they have to
- 00:41:55commute and they have to spend
- 00:41:57time and looking for a transportation
- 00:42:01between the city and the neighborhood
- 00:42:06to reduce the long commutes new
- 00:42:08mixed-use developments
- 00:42:09include schools places to work and
- 00:42:11places for recreation
- 00:42:12within walking and biking distance of
- 00:42:14people's homes
- 00:42:16everybody must use the same space
- 00:42:19so design provides a common space for
- 00:42:23everybody
- 00:42:24this is a way to keep your community
- 00:42:28alive
- 00:42:32[Music]
- 00:42:38at the start of the special period 95 of
- 00:42:41cubans were connected to the national
- 00:42:42electric grid
- 00:42:44the other five percent lived in remote
- 00:42:47areas
- 00:42:48photovoltaic and wind energy are too
- 00:42:50expensive to meet much of cuba's energy
- 00:42:52needs
- 00:42:52but for areas not connected to the grid
- 00:42:55small-scale wind and hydro systems
- 00:42:57as well as solar panels are used
- 00:42:59priority is given to schools and clinics
- 00:43:04recently more than 2 000 rural schools
- 00:43:07were
- 00:43:08supplied with solar panels to have
- 00:43:11electricity it was less costly to give
- 00:43:14them
- 00:43:15the solar panels rather than to connect
- 00:43:17them to the grid
- 00:43:18in los tumbos solar panels power the
- 00:43:21school clinic
- 00:43:22community center even people's homes
- 00:43:28if they have their the panels up up on
- 00:43:30the roof
- 00:43:32and they're recharging the light battery
- 00:43:34right now compact fluorescents
- 00:43:36they can put this radio on and this is
- 00:43:39another thing
- 00:43:40that's her sons who live right there
- 00:43:46small solutions have been developed
- 00:43:47throughout cuba such as using the sun to
- 00:43:50pre-heat water
- 00:43:53people in incuba used to
- 00:43:56shower with heat water so they use
- 00:44:03traditional oil or energy
- 00:44:06whatever they have to heat water so if
- 00:44:09we can have
- 00:44:10solar heaters it's better but when you
- 00:44:14obtain the water
- 00:44:15from the solar heater it is 60 degrees
- 00:44:18you can save the half of the
- 00:44:22the fuel you use to to heat the water to
- 00:44:26boil
- 00:44:28before the crisis cuba relied on
- 00:44:30imported fuel oil to generate
- 00:44:31electricity
- 00:44:32without this they had to modify their
- 00:44:34power plants to burn their poor quality
- 00:44:36domestic crude oil
- 00:44:38our crude oil is
- 00:44:41very a bad a bad thing for environment
- 00:44:46but we had no choice it's a matter of
- 00:44:49live or die they also began using crop
- 00:44:52waste to generate electricity
- 00:44:54sugar meals have been turned in power
- 00:44:57plants
- 00:44:58because you meal the sugar and then you
- 00:45:00have the gas
- 00:45:01you burn the fibers you produce heat and
- 00:45:04then you produce electricity
- 00:45:06so you can turn a sugar mill with during
- 00:45:09the season or after the season
- 00:45:11into an additional power plant
- 00:45:14and right now in cuba during the time of
- 00:45:17harvest
- 00:45:18which is about three or four months
- 00:45:19during the year 30
- 00:45:21of the energy that's generated in cuba
- 00:45:23comes from
- 00:45:25the renewable source of biomass now this
- 00:45:27is what we call the energetic
- 00:45:29sovereignty we do not depend on all
- 00:45:32imports
- 00:45:33to to produce electricity
- 00:45:37[Music]
- 00:45:45the problem is what the people said
- 00:45:47about cuba
- 00:45:48in the states is not what we are doing
- 00:45:51here
- 00:45:52many people there things how they can
- 00:45:55survive
- 00:45:56if they don't have anything okay come
- 00:45:59here
- 00:46:00and you can see how we can survive and
- 00:46:03in this way we can begin to understand
- 00:46:06each other and to know how to to think
- 00:46:10mankind is burning in one century all
- 00:46:13the oil accumulated by nature
- 00:46:14during millions of years and that is
- 00:46:16absurd completely absurd
- 00:46:18i don't see that countries who depend
- 00:46:21largely on imported oil
- 00:46:23are thinking about alternative sources
- 00:46:25of energy
- 00:46:27they are just planning for the next week
- 00:46:30if i'm in cuba
- 00:46:31i say people we have problems
- 00:46:34we must turn off all the lights that we
- 00:46:36are not using
- 00:46:37and everybody said okay we are going to
- 00:46:40turn off
- 00:46:41but if i say in united states people
- 00:46:44we must turn off all the lights because
- 00:46:48we need
- 00:46:48everybody say why if i pay the problem
- 00:46:50is we must change how we think
- 00:46:54you know the idea of peak oil is that
- 00:46:56things are going to change and there's
- 00:46:57going to be less
- 00:46:58i think cubans understand that on on an
- 00:47:01international global level because
- 00:47:04island people have that innate sense of
- 00:47:06a limited resource
- 00:47:08and also they realize in terms of energy
- 00:47:10if they want to be politically
- 00:47:12independent
- 00:47:13they had to be economically independent
- 00:47:15to be economically independent you have
- 00:47:17to be energy independent
- 00:47:19it's only going to last in the next 10
- 00:47:22to 15 years
- 00:47:23who knows maybe not maybe
- 00:47:27in cuba we find an enormous
- 00:47:32oil tank underground for
- 00:47:3550 years more or wonderful we have 50
- 00:47:38years more
- 00:47:39but the security of supply is getting
- 00:47:42more risky day by day
- 00:47:49and there is this hope to find in the
- 00:47:52deep waters of the mexican gulf
- 00:47:54good petrol but people don't think about
- 00:47:57that
- 00:47:58as an asset no we're going to improve
- 00:47:59their life here no no we're going to
- 00:48:01sell it you know
- 00:48:02because people know that we don't need
- 00:48:04that to live you know what i mean
- 00:48:06okay we need money to develop but it's
- 00:48:08it's like an
- 00:48:11something to sell not something to use
- 00:48:13or to waste
- 00:48:14the sun was able to to maintain the life
- 00:48:18in earth during millions of years
- 00:48:23only the problem is now when we arrive
- 00:48:26and we change
- 00:48:27the the way we use the energy the
- 00:48:30problem is
- 00:48:31if the sun has been
- 00:48:34enough to sustain the life
- 00:48:37and now we cannot sustain the kind of
- 00:48:40society we have
- 00:48:42in our planet the problem is with our
- 00:48:45society
- 00:48:46not with the energy not with the or the
- 00:48:49war
- 00:48:49of the energy
- 00:49:03[Music]
- 00:49:08so there are infinite small solutions
- 00:49:11you fix one little problem here
- 00:49:13one little problem there and life is
- 00:49:15better you think
- 00:49:16globally you act locally this is very
- 00:49:19important
- 00:49:20because otherwise you give the
- 00:49:22impression of people that this is
- 00:49:23united nature presidents scientists
- 00:49:26and they don't have to do anything that
- 00:49:29they will fix the problem
- 00:49:30but people have to start from scratch
- 00:49:33and start to do
- 00:49:34small things baby steps
- 00:49:37crisis or changes or problems can
- 00:49:40trigger
- 00:49:41many of these things that these are
- 00:49:44a sustainable alternative whatever it's
- 00:49:47called but it's
- 00:49:47basically adaptive we are adapting to
- 00:49:50changes
- 00:49:51and that's the success of the human
- 00:49:55[Music]
- 00:49:56beings
- 00:50:00[Music]
- 00:50:03what we must know is that the world is
- 00:50:06changing
- 00:50:07and we must change um
- 00:50:10the way we saw the world
- 00:50:13and one of the things we need
- 00:50:17is more friendship more love because
- 00:50:20we have also only one word
- 00:50:24the world is only one and it's for all
- 00:50:27of
- 00:50:27us
- 00:50:32[Music]
- 00:50:35i think we can learn a lot from each
- 00:50:37other and reflect more on how to be
- 00:50:39happy
- 00:50:40with less and how you really don't need
- 00:50:42that much
- 00:50:44uh you know to to be happy
- 00:50:48i think that that's a challenge the
- 00:50:49world challenge
- 00:50:51cuba has modest experience
- 00:50:55that you know maybe some other people
- 00:50:56could learn from and
- 00:50:58i think will be a time for sharing a
- 00:51:00time for cooperation and a time for more
- 00:51:02solidarity
- 00:51:04and for working together i think maybe
- 00:51:07we'll have a better world
- 00:51:24[Music]
- 00:52:16do
- 00:52:19[Music]
- 00:53:04you
- Cuba
- peak oil
- energy crisis
- sustainable agriculture
- urban farming
- community solutions
- organic farming
- economic crisis
- Cuban adaptation
- local solutions