If you consider yourself an environmentalist because you drive a Prius, recycle, shop at the farmer's market and grow a few of your own vegetables, you are in for a rude awakening with this thought-provoking book. I wanted to plug my ears (I read the audio version) through much of the book because what Owen describes as environmentally sustainable ideas and behavior just doesn't jive with my sense of fun. In fact, Owen seems to have a little too much fun relinquishing the agricultural idealists among us of our fanciful "environmental" ideas. And even though this was a painful listen, I must admit that the man has a point.
Owen's basic premise is that densely populated cities like New York are inherently sustainable and environmentally friendly, thanks to concentration of resources and infrastructure (water, energy, food, roads, etc.), the fact that it's easier to walk or take the metro than to drive in New York, and the fact that most New Yorkers live in small dwellings with shared walls, meaning they spend less to heat and cool their apartments and can't accumulate as much stuff as those of us living in our luxurious, 2500 square foot mini McMansions. Some points and my thoughts:
-Driving needs to become unpleasant enough that people prefer to take public transport. The reason New Yorkers walk or take public transport is because driving is a nightmare. It's hard to make driving less appealing than public transport in the suburbs though, due to sprawl and toll roads, so people should really be living in more densely populated centers where public transport makes sense. I think he has a point here, because even though there are, technically, public transport options where I live (I could cross a road to the bus stop, take a one hour bus to the metro station, take the metro for one stop, then take another bus another 20 or 30 minutes to work) it's just much easier to sit in traffic for an hour each way. The author also says that high-mileage cars like the Prius, often just give people an excuse to drive more, even though it's more about total miles driven than mile per gallon. While I agree with this, I think it's going to be preeeeetty hard to convince a majority of Americans to move to the cities, and I'm less Draconian: If you need a car, I think you might as well buy the one that gets more miles per gallon.
-Green space isn't an efficient use of a city's real estate. Owen argues that New York would be better served if Central Park was broken up into smaller parks, because few people go into the interior of the park and it's not safe at night anyway. I don't know that I agree with this. Yes, it would be more efficient if cities were all concrete and metal with tiny little pocket parks thrown in for fun, but this removes humanity from cities, and a city with fewer green spaces is unlikely to attract more Americans. Also, I don't know that I agree that the interior parts of Central Park are underused. I think every city needs to have a large green space where a person can feel like they are "disappearing" into nature because, having lived in a very large city with nary a large park nearby, I know how draining and exhausting it can be to see nothing but transport, buildings, sidewalks, rail, etc. At some point, efficiency become inefficient. There's a tipping point. And to me, New York without Central Park just isn't complete.
-Industrial food production makes the most sense because food is produced in areas of abundance and shipped out to areas of less abundance. All this locavore/farmer's market whimsy is nice an all, but the local food movement is not sustainable. Owen gives the example of driving 30 miles round trip to pick blueberries, when he could have just walked to the grocery store to get blueberries that were shipped from California -- Calorie for calorie (and gas mile to gas mile) the California blueberries create less of a carbon footprint. I (sadly) agree that Owen is probably right about this, but I think it's a simplistic argument. Does the argument still hold if the farmer's market is a 15 minute walk or 5 minute drive from my house? Is there not something to be said for keeping (at least some) farmland farmland, and therefore preventing further sprawl? But maybe I just want to believe this because I myself enjoy going to the farmer's market, picking up my CSA box and growing some of my own vegetables. Maybe that's the version of sustainability I prefer to believe, and I'm deluding myself. I drive 16 miles round-trip to the farmer's market in my moderately fuel-efficient Honda Civic, but I could just pick up the same products (grown and picked in California, Florida, Mexico and Chile) for half the price and 1/4 of the distance at my local grocery store.
It's interesting because I've also been reading Wendell Berry and Barbara Kingsolver, who are more of the back-to-the-earth, small-local-farms-grow-your-own food variety of environmentalism, and this is the kind of environmentalism that holds more sentimental appeal to me...but Owen does a pretty good job of turning this argument on its head by arguing that in no way could we feed the world on small, local farms. And you know Berry and Kingsolver are doing a lot more driving than the average New Yorker living, as they are, in the rural Appalachian Mountains.
But even if Owen makes a good argument for industrial food production, I'm not entirely convinced. As someone new to growing my own vegetable and purchasing all my produce from the farmer's market, I can say that I've gained a new appreciation for food as a living, mysterious and wonderful thing. Since I started planting my own food and spending a little more for locally grown produce, our household's food waste has gone way down, because I see the value in the things I buy and grow. They aren't just expendable commodities -- a peach, a tomato, a carrot -- these are things that grow from the soil, things that require water and sunlight and care to thrive, and they are meaningful and deserve to be treated with respect. Industrial agriculture, in my opinion, turns food into something that's easy to waste and hard to care about because it's so cheap and plentiful.
-Owen pooh-poohs things like composting, recycling, solar panels, energy-saving light-bulbs, etc., saying that if we really want to be environmental, these things are a far distant second to driving less and using less energy, and we'd be more environmentally conscious by living in cities. I think most municipalities' recycling programs are a joke. Most of the supposed "recycling" just ends up going to the dump. But done well, I do think recycling is important, and I think it's important for us to keep in mind that all the plastic we buy doesn't just disappear. And yes, while it would be great if more Americans chose to live in dense cities, why shouldn't those who decide to live in suburbs and rural locales do the things they can do, like change to energy-saving appliances (only when the ones they already have die, of course), recycle, compost, etc.? There is nothing like compost to give you feel-good vibes: Watching your food waste (banana peels, apple cores, cardboard boxes) turn into soil is nothing short of magical and gives you a whole other level of appreciation for soil. But again, maybe I'm just saying this because this is something I enjoy doing.
I do like that Owen talks about the importance of flying less. It always makes me cringe a little (yes, in a very judgmental way) when I hear of people flying to L.A for a long weekend, or going to Paris for four days. It feels wasteful. And yes, I used to do a lot of this myself, i my younger days. I think a lot of younger environmentalists tend to be blind to the carbon footprint of flying: They might drive a Prius and recycle and get a CSA box at the farmer's market, but they also take 40 flights a year in the name of experiential/cultural consumption. I'm not Draconian on this: I usually fly twice a year and don't expect people to quit flying, but I do think that as a whole, we could be more conscious and considerate of the environmental impact of flying.
I like the idea of smaller homes. Even for those of living in the suburbs or rural areas. You just can't accumulate as much stuff in 1200 or 1500 square foot house as you can in a 4000 square foot house. My house growing up was modest by American standards at 2500 square feet, but I remember that we had to buy furniture and stuff for unused rooms. We had a living we used about once a year with leather sofas, a nice coffee table and accent chairs. We had a dining room that I remember using a handful of times, but which had to be furnished with a large wooden dining room table, buffet and China Cabinet. Our garage was a 400 square foot storage unit, and I don't remember our cars ever actually fitting in there. Our 1200 square foot finished basement held our old furniture we weren't ready to give away yet. So I do agree that more space equals more stuff, because even if you never use your living room, it's a little creepy to have an entirely empty room in your house.
Owen's main argument is that government needs to make driving more challenging, because driving allows for inefficient sprawl and suburbs. He believes congestion is our friend, because the more unpleasant driving is, the more less likely we are to do it. While I was listening to this book, I was thinking about the new highway projects happening in my town of nearly 100,000 people. Even though most of the workers in my town work in D.C or closer in to D.C., the local government chose to expand the highway and add toll roads rather than adding a metro line...this is kind of an example of what Owen says, that projects like these are aimed to make driving easier for individuals, rather than contribute to sustainability and environmentally sound policies. So now, instead of 60 minutes, my commute might take 52 minutes, but I'm not lessening my carbon footprint in any meaningful way.
What's interesting is that Owen lives in semi-rural Connecticut with his wife, in a house far larger than necessary for two people. He lived in New York City as a young man, but left for the far-flung suburbs after having his first child. He notes he's often asked about this, and his argument for staying where he is is that he and his wife don't commute and live a very energy efficient lifestyle, so he'd rather his home be occupied by people like him and his wife, than some other family with a larger carbon footprint. OK, but now that other family can't move into his house, but they might move into a newly constructed, bigger house 10 miles further that will require an even bigger carbon footprint. Maybe Owen just likes the suburbs.
Another point that wasn’t touched on is that cities are not necessarily affordable for the average American. A lot of Americans move to the suburbs because they are fleeing gutted city public schools, and the average American can’t afford the $5,000 or $6,000 rent on a two-bedroom apartment in Manhattan (and that’s for a very modest place). Nannies, daycare and food are more expensive in Manhattan. It takes work to carry your weekly groceries up four flights of stairs, and to carry the stroller down those same stairs, especially if you can’t afford “help.” Americans don’t necessarily all move to the suburbs because they dream of manicured lawns, unused living rooms and massive highways (though some, I’m sure, do – my parents, for example, came to the U.S from Bogota, and were delighted by the pastoral landscapes of the suburbs) – a lot of us live in the suburbs because the city is financially out of reach (or we think it is) and because living in the suburbs is easier in many ways.