Fleming conceived and developed the idea of
TEQs – the first and most widely studied model for the implementation of a
carbon rationing system. His
Energy and the Common Purpose (2005) helped set the parameters for the field, leading to 2008's UK government feasibility study of the proposal and an All Party Parliamentary report in 2011, authored by Fleming and
Shaun Chamberlin. Fleming's April 1999 article for
Prospect magazine, "The next oil shock?", interpreted the
International Energy Agency's 1998 report as predicting a global energy crisis in the coming decades. He later revealed that
Fatih Birol – the future Chief Economist of the International Energy Agency – agreed to meet with him after reading the article, and confessed that "you are right… there are maybe six people in the world who understand this". Fleming had a long history with peak oil, having been part of the team who wrote the Ecology Party pamphlet
The Reckoning in 1977, which discussed the issue and our need to rethink our use of energy. In his 2007 book
The Lean Guide to Nuclear Energy: A Life-Cycle in Trouble, Fleming argued: • Every stage in the nuclear process, except fission, produces
carbon dioxide. As the richest ores are used up, emissions will rise. • Shortages of
uranium – and the lack of realistic alternatives – leading to interruptions in supply, could be expected to start in the middle years of the decade 2010–2019, and to deepen thereafter. • It is essential that
radioactive waste should be made safe and placed in permanent storage. High-level wastes, in their temporary storage facilities, have to be managed and kept cool to prevent fire and leaks which would otherwise contaminate large areas. • The world's endowment of
uranium ore is now so depleted that the
nuclear industry will never, from its own resources, be able to generate the energy it needs to clear up its own backlog of waste. He also saw
economic growth as inherently impossible to sustain. In his renowned words, "Every civilisation has had its irrational but reassuring myth. Previous civilisations have used their culture to sing about it and tell stories about it. Ours has used its mathematics to prove it." As such, a key focus of his work was developing what he called 'the Lean Economy', a vision of how society could hold itself together after the inevitable end of growth, grounded in localisation, community and culture. He founded The Lean Economy Connection (renamed The Fleming Policy Centre after his death) to work on "the long term, stable, intelligent and culturally rich future which human society could enjoy if we understand the current predicament and respond to it decisively." Until his death he remained a strong advocate for
TEQs and community-based localisation, and an ardent critic of
nuclear power. ==Works==