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- Permaculture
- Alcohol Can Be A Gas!
- The Book!
- - Publisher-Direct Special
- - Book Reviews
- - Excerpts
- TOC
- the Front Matter
- the Back Matter
- Section 1 - Understanding Alcohol
- Section 2 - Making Alcohol
- Section 3 - Co-Products from Making Alcohol
- Section 4 - Using Alcohol as Fuel
- Ch 13 - Surprise! Ethanol Is the Perfect Fuel
- Ch 14 - Alcohol Versus Gasoline in Your Engine
- Ch 15 - Carburetion
- Ch 16 - Fuel Injection
- Ch 17 - Cold-Start Systems
- Ch 18 - Ignition Timing
- Ch 19 - Assorted Adjustments
- Ch 20 - Converting to High Compression
- Ch 21 - Smaller Engines
- Ch 22 - Flexible-Fuel and Dual-Fuel Systems
- Ch 23 - Methanol and Butanol
- Ch 24 - Cogeneration and Other Systems to Provide Energy from Alcohol
- Ch 25 - How Diesel Engines Can Run on Alcohol
- Section 5 - The Business of Alcohol
- Section 6 - A Vision for the Nation
- The List of Figures
- - Help Promote Alcohol Can Be A Gas!
- - The DVD!
- Alcoholics Unanimous Newsletter
- Research and Links
- White Lightning E-85 Kits
- Why Alcohol Fuel? The Two-Minute Summary
- Workshops with David Blume
- Alcohol Stations and Vehicles
- Events
- Press Room
- Don’t Get Mad…Get Ethanol! News Links
- Why Alcohol Fuel? The Two-Minute Summary
- Upcoming Events
- Busting Alcohol Myths
- Video Clips
- Alcohol Can Be a Gas Lecture DVD
- David Blume as a keynote speaker at the first Community Solutions Peak Oil conference.
- Global Gardener Video with Bill Mollison
- Interview with KPTV
- Interview with Peak Moment TV - Part 1
- Interview with Peak Moment TV - Part 2
- Permaculture Design with David Blume
- Watch: The American Home Grown Fuel Company
- Audio Clips
- Dave Blume on KUSP's Talk of the Day
- Dave Blume on NPR's Talk of the Nation
- Interview on KPOJ's Morning show 2007
- Interview on KTLK in Los Angeles (Dec 2007)
- Interview on PR6
- Interview on the Focus 580 with David Inge
- Interview on Thom Hartmann's Show 2007
- Interview on WORT FM with Mike Moon
- interview with 'The Food Chain'
- Interview with WI Public Radio
- print, radio and television mentions in 80s
- Thom Hartmann interview - June 2006
- Praise for the Book
- Reader Feedback
- Book Reviews
- Author's Biography
- Speaking Testimonials for David Blume
- Press Photos
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- Who We Are
About Permaculture
Permaculture is the art and science of designing human beings' place in the environment. Permaculture design teaches you to understand and mirror the patterns found in healthy natural environments. You can then build profitable, productive, sustainable, cultivated ecosystems, which include people, and have the diversity, stability, and resilience of natural ecosystems.
Permaculture designs range from households to major agricultural enterprises and even entire bioregions. Permaculture integrates disciplines relating to food, shelter, energy, water, trees/plants, wildlife, livestock, weather, waste management, economics and social sciences. These integrated designs create systems capable of yielding far more than the output of conventional systems. Permaculture can reclaim devastated lands, roll back deserts, build just social/economic systems, and design planet-based livelihoods.
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Most design systems are defined by a "market driven" ethic. Such designs are subservient to the conclusions of a short term cost/benefit analysis, discounting or ignoring such factors as environmental degradation or destruction of human community. Permaculture departs from any other design system in that it is guided by a common sense ethical system. This system forms the criteria for design decisions. The difference is in the ethic: |
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Briefly, when a design component isn't ecologically sound, community-building, and careful in its use of resources, then it's pretty unlikely that it will work out in the long run. This ethic is the basis of sustainability and also makes excellent, long-term business sense. Systems designed with these ethics are ecologically sound, economically stable, community building, and don't leave future generations with a cleanup bill for today's enterprise.



