Cross Posting from Transition Culture
Ingredients of Transition: Investing in Transition
by Rob Hopkins
http://transitionculture.org/2011/05/03/ingredients-of-transition-investing-in-transition/
Here is a last minute addition to the ingredients for the forthcoming ‘Transition Companion’. It is especially timely as OVESCO in Lewes’s share option has managed to raise £286, 600 is only £20,000 short of its target … if you live in an around Lewes, get your shares before 27th May!!
Money isn’t a neutral thing. The decisions we make with our investment choices either prop up and reinforce an economic model rooted in a past of cheap energy prices and climate irresponsibility, or they can help to bring forth a new, revitalised and more appropriate way of doing things.
“I think the last piece is seeing ourselves as part of the problem. Our consumption dollars, what drives the system, our investment dollars provide the foundation for the system. The more that we can create alternative systems by channeling our consumption and investment and convince others these are great ways of living, and consistent with what we’re trying to achieve long term, I think that’s the way we’re going to succeed”.
Michael Shuman[ii].
Making the kind of Transition that this book has argued for in the time that we have remaining will be an enormous, as well as an historic, venture. As we saw on earlier, successful localisation will require meaningful investment to make it happen. We have already looked at a range of ways of ‘plugging the leaks’ of our local economy (see Tool 19), but this final ingredient explores how investment on that scale might happen, and a range of possible mechanisms for enabling Transition to scale up sufficiently.
“OVESCO raises a quarter mil for community solar via people-power finance. If we replicate many times, we can begin to dream”.
Jeremy Leggett on Twitter, 1st May 2011.
For those of us fortunate enough to have investments, we do have some degree of control over choosing to invest in supporting local enterprises that actually work to strengthen the resilience of our local communities by providing renewable energy, food, transport, building materials and other essential goods and services for which there will always be a demand. Many of these opportunities may already exist. It is early days but there are many enticing opportunities that feel worth exploring, and could ultimately offer a more stable long-term investment than the global financial markets, as well as furthering the aims of Transition:
This book has argued that, in the context of peak oil and the unravelling debt crisis, global economic growth will become increasingly unfeasible. However, within that, it is perfectly possible that one of the key areas where we will see economic activity and growth will be at that local level. Designing and enabling models that make inward investment into Transition possible will be a key tool in its successful implementation.
** IMPORTANT! You should take expert advice before making any financial investment and the above is not a recommendation to invest in Transition, just some ideas to mull over.**
The Transition movement needs, as it continues to scale up, to think seriously about models that will enable, with confidence, the levels of finance that active Transition will require to come forward. Many models for enabling this already exist, and new ones are emerging.
You might also enjoy….
Forming a legal entity (Tool 5), Building partnerships (1.11), Practical manifestations (2.2), The ‘Great Reskilling’ (2.3), How we communicate (2.4), Financing your Transition initiative (Tool 8), Ensuring land access (2.10), Working with local businesses (3.3), Social enterprise/entrepreneurship (4.2), Scaling up (4.3), Community renewable energy companies (Tool 18), Strategic local infrastructure (4.4), Tools for plugging the leaks (Tool 19), Community ownership of assets (4.6), Community supported farms, bakeries and breweries (Tool 20).
[i] http://www.fc-utd.co.uk/communityshares
[ii] From an interview on Transition Culture which you can read in full at http://tinyurl.com/3t4e9vg.
[iii] A good overview guide is Hill, C, with assistance from Lynch, M. & Curtis, J. (2007) Community Share and Bond Issues: The sharpest tool in the box published by the Development Trust Association which can be downloaded from http://tinyurl.com/3bhke9w. Co-operatives UK’s document Investing in Community Shares offers a detailed guide for the potential investor, and can be found at http://tinyurl.com/44bc83w. A longer list of other useful resources on community shares is at http://www.communityshares.org.uk/resources.
Tags:
© 2025 Created by David MacLeod. Powered by