Planning for peak oil? : An examination of what municipal and regional planners in Greater Vancouver know about peak oil and think about its relevance to planning and a local planning response
Canadian suburbs and cities are heavily reliant on inexpensive oil and natural gas; they depend on them for many essential needs including transportation, heating, and the import of goods and foods from distant and neighbouring regions. Growing debate around 'peak oil' has brought the f...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-176862018-01-05T17:39:03Z Planning for peak oil? : An examination of what municipal and regional planners in Greater Vancouver know about peak oil and think about its relevance to planning and a local planning response Larson, Lisa Canadian suburbs and cities are heavily reliant on inexpensive oil and natural gas; they depend on them for many essential needs including transportation, heating, and the import of goods and foods from distant and neighbouring regions. Growing debate around 'peak oil' has brought the future of these fuels into question. Those who believe in peak oil expect that global conventional oil and gas extraction rates will reach a maximum by 2020, after which they will inevitably decline. They expect that without a corresponding drop in demand the prices of these fuels will dramatically increase and result in future disruptions to fossil fuel dependent lives. In this thesis I argue that the likelihood of peak oil and our dependence on cheap oil and gas epitomize the unsustainable nature of our suburbs and cities. I propose that planning, as a profession oriented towards the future and dedicated to supporting our society's transition to sustainability, has a responsibility to help us prepare for a 'post-carbon age'. Through interviews with 26 randomly selected municipal and regional planners in the Greater Vancouver region I examined what local planners know about the peak oil debate and think about its potential consequences and importance to local planning. I also investigated whether they believe peak oil warrants a local planning response and what that response should be. My results indicate that planners in this region have a limited awareness of peak oil, although the majority agree that the issue is relevant to planning. The majority also agree that it could force our lives to change, but that it is difficult to predict how exactly. In addition, my results show that fifty percent of local planners believe that peak oil is something to which local planning should respond. Their general recommendations of what planning might do to address peak oil are similar to those commonly associated with 'sustainability planning'. While they are a good place to start, I propose that more detailed, energy-centric, and comprehensive policies should be formulated under a precautionary planning approach, together with greater awareness of and dialogue about peak oil within public, political, and planning communities. Applied Science, Faculty of Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of Graduate 2010-01-07T20:45:57Z 2010-01-07T20:45:57Z 2006 2006-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17686 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. |
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Canadian suburbs and cities are heavily reliant on inexpensive oil and natural gas; they depend
on them for many essential needs including transportation, heating, and the import of goods and
foods from distant and neighbouring regions. Growing debate around 'peak oil' has brought the
future of these fuels into question. Those who believe in peak oil expect that global
conventional oil and gas extraction rates will reach a maximum by 2020, after which they will
inevitably decline. They expect that without a corresponding drop in demand the prices of these
fuels will dramatically increase and result in future disruptions to fossil fuel dependent lives.
In this thesis I argue that the likelihood of peak oil and our dependence on cheap oil and gas
epitomize the unsustainable nature of our suburbs and cities. I propose that planning, as a
profession oriented towards the future and dedicated to supporting our society's transition to
sustainability, has a responsibility to help us prepare for a 'post-carbon age'. Through interviews
with 26 randomly selected municipal and regional planners in the Greater Vancouver region I
examined what local planners know about the peak oil debate and think about its potential
consequences and importance to local planning. I also investigated whether they believe peak
oil warrants a local planning response and what that response should be.
My results indicate that planners in this region have a limited awareness of peak oil, although the
majority agree that the issue is relevant to planning. The majority also agree that it could force
our lives to change, but that it is difficult to predict how exactly. In addition, my results show
that fifty percent of local planners believe that peak oil is something to which local planning
should respond. Their general recommendations of what planning might do to address peak oil
are similar to those commonly associated with 'sustainability planning'. While they are a good
place to start, I propose that more detailed, energy-centric, and comprehensive policies should be
formulated under a precautionary planning approach, together with greater awareness of and
dialogue about peak oil within public, political, and planning communities. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of === Graduate |
author |
Larson, Lisa |
spellingShingle |
Larson, Lisa Planning for peak oil? : An examination of what municipal and regional planners in Greater Vancouver know about peak oil and think about its relevance to planning and a local planning response |
author_facet |
Larson, Lisa |
author_sort |
Larson, Lisa |
title |
Planning for peak oil? : An examination of what municipal and regional planners in Greater Vancouver know about peak oil and think about its relevance to planning and a local planning response |
title_short |
Planning for peak oil? : An examination of what municipal and regional planners in Greater Vancouver know about peak oil and think about its relevance to planning and a local planning response |
title_full |
Planning for peak oil? : An examination of what municipal and regional planners in Greater Vancouver know about peak oil and think about its relevance to planning and a local planning response |
title_fullStr |
Planning for peak oil? : An examination of what municipal and regional planners in Greater Vancouver know about peak oil and think about its relevance to planning and a local planning response |
title_full_unstemmed |
Planning for peak oil? : An examination of what municipal and regional planners in Greater Vancouver know about peak oil and think about its relevance to planning and a local planning response |
title_sort |
planning for peak oil? : an examination of what municipal and regional planners in greater vancouver know about peak oil and think about its relevance to planning and a local planning response |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17686 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT larsonlisa planningforpeakoilanexaminationofwhatmunicipalandregionalplannersingreatervancouverknowaboutpeakoilandthinkaboutitsrelevancetoplanningandalocalplanningresponse |
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