Contact: Megan Quinn

937-767-2161

<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>[EMAIL PROTECTED]

New Documentary Film on Cuba

The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil

YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio - May 2006 . . . The just released film, The 
Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil, documents Cuba's 
emergency transition to local organic agriculture, renewable energy, 
and large-scale mass transit. The transition occurred following the 
Soviet collapse in 1990, when their massive subsidies of imported oil 
and food to Cuba were halted.

In this documentary, ordinary Cubans talk about the immediate 
hardships they faced. Their GDP dropped by more than one third, 
transportation nearly stopped and food became scarce - the average 
Cuban lost 20 pounds during the first years of this economic crisis.

The film visits urban gardens and organic farms, explains the 
relationship between food and fossil fuels, and shows how a society 
can change from an industrialized, global focus to a local, 
community-based one. It is a rare view into this island culture, 
using firsthand reporting that focuses on what Cubans learned about 
adapting to living with less.

Cuba's experience provides a living model for how the rest of the 
world can respond to the coming world oil production peak and 
irreversible decline some oil experts say will occur this decade. 
"Everyone who is concerned about Peak Oil needs to see this film," 
said Richard Heinberg, author of The Party's Over and Powerdown. "It 
is a story not just of individual achievement, but of the collective 
mobilization of an entire society to meet an enormous challenge."

The documentary is drawing rave reviews with such comments as,

"The most uplifting portrayal of a success story coming out of 
chaos," and "A must see for survival in the next energy age beyond 
oil." Viewer Joshua Lockyer, of Atlanta said, "If we want to know how 
we as a nation are going to survive the peak oil crisis we need to 
have models...This film begins to show us how."

The Community Solution, Executive Producer of the film, is a 
non-profit organization in Yellow Springs, Ohio dedicated to seeking 
viable, low-energy options to the coming peak oil crisis. It hosts 
the annual "U.S. Conference on Peak Oil and Community Solutions," and 
offers other programs to increase public awareness about peak oil.

Producers Faith Morgan, Pat Murphy, and Megan Quinn traveled to Cuba 
in 2004 to capture Cubans' story on film. Greg Greene, videographer 
and writer/director of the documentary The End of Suburbia, and 
photographer John Morgan, traveled with them as additional crew in 
Cuba. Eric Johnson was editor and Tom Blessing IV, associate producer.

The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil runs for 53 
minutes and is available on DVD or VHS for $20 plus shipping and 
handling. To order, visit, visit 
http://www.communitysolution.org/cuba or call 937-767-2161.


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