The city is an ecosystem and as such it functions in the same way
that other ecosystems do, which is through energy transformation. The
natural ecosystem transforms the energy of the sun. The primary
producers of natural ecosystems capture sunlight energy and, in the
environment of a warmed and heated earth, light and dark reactions of
photosynthesis occur.
This basic process produces most of the food of the plants and
animals on earth. The energy of sunlight is captured in the plants and
chemically stored as food. This food, the protein, carbohydrate, and fat
of metabolism, constitutes a universal energy storehouse for animals and
non-green plants; they are all dependent upon it.
The more diversification in the ecosystem, the more ways sunlight
energy will be trapped, and the more ways the food will be consumed and
converted into protoplasms of the organisms of the food chain. Most
simple communities cannot efficiently use the vast quantities of energy
that fall upon them and are forced to diversify and become more
complicated. Excess food always paves the way for population and species
increases. A mature community that is highly developed can utilize large
quantities of energy, transform it into the many elements of the complex
system, and in so doing stabilize itself enormously.
The natural ecosystems of the earth that have the greatest
productivity, i.e., the ability to use energy, have the greatest
complexity. In terrestrial environments they are forest communities with
their many layers of photosynthetic receptors. These communities provide
the greatest number of niches for animals and non-green plants that
depend upon the chemical energy of food fixed in photosynthesis.
In marine environments, which are the most productive on earth, light
penetration to a depth of about 600 feet results in photosynthesis and a
great diversity of organisms, which in turn result in highly diverse and
productive communities. The waters of the estuaries and the coral reefs
abound with the diversity of photosynthetic producers and non-green
plant and animal consumers.
The communities of man are consumers and transformers of energy. The
rise of technology is the rise of the utilization of energy: first that
of man himself; then of hand tools and draft animals; and finally of
mechanized toolssteam and internal combustion engines, electrical
motors, physical, chemical, and nuclear energy.
During the rise of technology, man developed cities where the work is
done and where energy conversion occurs. With the transportation of
materials, fuels, and energy, the cities have become the principal
places of energy utilization. The simpler the city, the less need it has
for energy. The more complicated the city, the more energy it will use.
The more diversified the energy sources, the more stable the system; the
fewer sources of energy, the less stable.
The power grids of the nation are rapidly becoming one. The New York
City power blackout occurred because the system was dependent upon
relatively few alternative methods of transmission. Once the grid system
broke down, large sections of the northeast were blacked out, with
serious consequences. Ecologically, it was a lack of redundancy that
contributed to the failure of transportation of power to cities.
Redundancy is a major ecological factor in ecosystem stability. The
power grid, if it is to remain effective as it grows and encompasses all
of the United States, must be many power grids. It must have redundancy
built in every conceivable way so that if one part of the system fails,
other portions will automatically continue to function.
The history of the city as the transformer of energy illustrates the
congruity of the city and other natural ecosystems. As the cities have
increased in complexity they have done so because of increased knowledge
of energy transportationmechanical, chemical, physical, and
nuclear. An analysis of energy utilization and the effects of energy
utilization upon the stability of ecosystems provides the only logical
basis for technology assessment.
In studying the achieving society, electrical energy production is
used as the index of achievement. Highly developed nations have high
energy production and consumption. Those with the greatest energy
consumption also consume the greatest amount of the world's raw
products. In evaluating technology, the most important question is: What
is technology, old or new, doing to the natural ecosystem of the world?
For centuries there was little concern for ecosystem degradation,
whether of man or nature, but recent trends in technology have resulted
in instability and degradation of the human as well as the natural
ecosystems that threaten the very existence of technological man.
The vast consumption of energy needed to power individual automobiles
is wasteful. In terms of efficiency of use the automobile not only
wastes energy because its energy converting process is inefficient, it
also pollutes and degrades the environment and disperses the human
community. Water, electricity, gas, and sewage disposal become
inordinately expensive due to the low density of the population
served.
High speed transportation can and does have effect upon human
ecosystems by a stabilizing easing the rate and amount of goods and
people moving in the course of business. The automobile is
self-defeating and detrimental when it is made the basis of
transportation in the neighborhood communities of man, for it distorts
the community out of proportion to the size and energy capability of man
himself. Moreover, it has a tendency to inhibit the movement of the
non-driverthe aged, the young, and the infirm. Telephone
communication knits together the community and is a stabilizing
influence.
Pesticides simplify ecosystems making them prone to invasion by
unwanted organisms. This disadvantage must be weighed against the
possible gains. Pesticides bring about a reduction of ecosystem
diversity and the stability that is the hallmark of ecosystem health.
The effects of technology can be measured against that standard.
The computer, the extension of man's brain, is capable of processing
the voluminous data that must be evaluated, and the computer is ready
and waiting. We need to understand that technology assessment is an
ecological problem. Specifically, it is the problem of evaluating the
use by man of energy and the effects of that energy upon the ecosystems;
the primary one of these is the city.
Theodore W. Sudia
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