Energy slave
An energy slave is that quantity of energy which, when used to construct and drive non-human infrastructure replaces a unit of human labor. An energy slave does the work of a person, through the consumption of energy in the non-human infrastructure.
History
In 1940, Buckminster Fuller was the first to use the term "energy slave" in a map in Fortune. He calculated the yield of an energy slave by taking the energy from minerals and water consumed by industry and dividing it by the energy provided by a human being. For a world population of just over two billion people, Fuller estimates that there are thirty-six billion energy slaves at the time, representing 17 per capita. In 1940, these energy slaves were not equitably distributed around the world: the United States owned twenty billion of them. In 1950, Fuller revised his calculations upwards and estimated that, on average, each human holds 38 energy slaves.In 1963, Alfred René Ubbelohde also used this concept in his book Man and Energy. In Germany, the physicist Hans-Peter Dürr used this concept. The term is also mentioned in a 1975 book and has become popular in the scientific literature.
An exhibition in Switzerland in 2001 presents a popularised definition of "energy slaves" based on the work carried out by Tourane Corbière-Nicollier under the supervision of Olivier Jolliet of the EPFL-GECOS laboratory in Lausanne. The definition given is ː "The energy slave is a unit of measurement that allows us to better understand and evaluate the consequences of our life choices. An energy slave works to produce energy 24 hours a day. He produces an average power output of 100 W."
In France, the term energy slave is used by Jean-Marc Jancovici and has been studied by the historian Jean-François Mouhot. Jean-Marc Jancovici draws the following conclusion: "in a democracy: it is not only the way of life of Mr. Dassault or the Queen of England that has become unsustainable if we put ourselves in the realm of physics, but that of each and every one of us, including factory workers, cleaners and supermarket cashiers."