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Manufacturing, jobs and low technology

By Valerie Yule - posted Thursday, 9 October 2008


We are obsessed with cutting labour costs (translated as cutting jobs). So our salvage industries are still minimal. Millions of potential dollars are thrown out with our hard rubbish collections and during repairs and renovations. These salvage operations cost labour but see what else they save, and future-wise they become profitable. There are jobs in preferring re-using rather than re-cycling - which has greater costs in fossil-fuel energy and emissions.

Our current building methods involve reckless waste, including the problem that renovation can cost more than destroying and building from scratch. We are not building sufficiently repairable or sustainable houses “because it would cost too much labour”.

Alternative technology en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternative_technology magazines today report marvellous and gung-ho technology to help save the world, often do-it-yourself. It is great that sophisticated Australian products are increasingly advertised. But for the future we also need to think about the small and easy innovations, and how changes in relative costs of products and repairs must be made, and how to pay for the jobs that are needed instead of, as now, paying for jobs that increase waste.

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We need public education to seek the alternative technologies. Where is the TV show that makes showmanship of “best kitchen” practice before and after the present limited window of showing merely cooking? Where is the TV sitcom about preventing climate change through our own jobs and our own household? Where are the “Australia” shops that showcase local and other Australian products and inventions?

So much attention is being paid to carbon trading in by-and-by 2010 and what governments should do - but less to how our clay-footed economic system could adapt to a world without waste - without the waste of resources, production, environment and people, now thought essential for economic prosperity.

In shutting down our manufactures, we neglect what the factories and abandoned skills might be producing instead. In trying to stick to the jobs we have, regardless of what they may emit or waste, Australians neglect the jobs we need to have.

In trusting government money to inspire innovation, and future carbon trading to miraculously cap emitters, we neglect our greatest resource, our own enterprise. (Tom Quirk gives an angle on this in his recent On Line Opinion article.)

To produce further jobs with low technology manufactures, we need to come up with public lists of what we need to invent, to improve our world, and to perhaps set an example to the world.

We could think of commercial uses for pests like locusts and cane toads; weeds and waste from gardens; problem by-products such as carbon dioxide, arsenic, tailings, salt and so on. We could re-invent our sewerage systems, which, currently, are based on unlimited supplies of water; and think about how to use locally the liquid human sewage that is currently flushed away.

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Do I think that taking on more low-technology can make any difference to our future? Perhaps not much - but more than 20 million Australians can save waste and cut emissions faster than most of what is going on at present. “Pessimism of the intellect and optimism of the will” in practice.

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About the Author

Valerie Yule is a writer and researcher on imagination, literacy and social issues.

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