unenlightened
unenlightened
ProtagoranSocratist
unenlightened
It's also possible that our activities will lead to mass extinctions, which isn't 100% a bad thing, since these cycles dominate the universe. — ProtagoranSocratist
ProtagoranSocratist
Hmm. 2 months since my last post, and 4months since anyone else's.
There really is nothing to discuss is there? It's all our funerals, and so no one will attend. — unenlightened
Punshhh
Well at least the troll (don’t mention him by name) has left the thread.Hmm. 2 months since my last post, and 4months since anyone else's.
There really is nothing to discuss is there? It's all our funerals, and so no one will attend.
Pierre-Normand
Downunder, our agrarian National Party just dropped its net zero emissions policy, while record-breaking storms dropped 9cm hail on some of the richest farmland in the country.
And so it goes. — Banno
frank
Meanwhile Bill Gates shifted his position from advocating for climate change mitigation to focusing more on improving human welfare. Katharine Hayhoe, who is (or at least was, last time I had heard of her) a Republican climate scientist, argues much more sensibly than Gates: — Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand
I think adaptation is becoming the mainstream focus. Just in case our heroic efforts to reduce CO2 emissions fail, we can try to protect the most vulnerable. — frank
ChatteringMonkey
"People often think of climate change as a separate bucket at the end of a long row of other buckets of problems we're trying to fix that are wrong in the world," Hayhoe told Axios.
"This includes poverty, disease and access to clean water."
"Climate change is not a separate bucket," Hayhoe said. "The reason we care about climate change is that it's the hole in every bucket." — Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand
Yes. But this is the problem: — frank
magritte
our times are still one of the cooler ones geologically speaking: there have been periods of time on earth that had flourishing life and much hotter temperatures. — ProtagoranSocratist
Pierre-Normand
And the reason we can't get off of fossil fuels, is because without them we wouldn't even have buckets. — ChatteringMonkey
ProtagoranSocratist
Well at least the troll (don’t mention him by name) has left the thread.
Maybe we can now get back to serious discussion. — Punshhh
ProtagoranSocratist
Geologically we are speaking in million-year or even billion-year time frames. Civilization only goes back thousands of years which on this time scale is hardly noticeable. Geologically we are and we are not, no matter. Global warming is only an issue to us because humanity, in a broad sense, is endangering its very frail short-lived outlier existence on a temporarily hospitable planet. — magritte
frank
In other words, the very process of filling other buckets (economic growth, poverty reduction) is widening the hole (climate destabilization). This makes Hayhoe’s metaphor vivid, not refuted. — Pierre-Normand
ChatteringMonkey
In other words, the very process of filling other buckets (economic growth, poverty reduction) is widening the hole (climate destabilization). This makes Hayhoe’s metaphor vivid, not refuted. — Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand
Aren't you essentially making the same point here, that resolving our problems (growth and poverty reduction etc) makes the problem worse (cause more warming because of CO2)? — ChatteringMonkey
ChatteringMonkey
If Asia-Pacific coal consumption is surging because of poverty alleviation and industrial development, then mitigation isn’t optional. It’s the condition for those gains to be sustainable. With no mitigation, alleviation efforts become attempts to refill increasingly rapidly leaking buckets. — Pierre-Normand
unenlightened
frank
But it is in fact Asia and especially China that is really leading the development of green energy technology. — unenlightened
unenlightened
I was pointing out the main obstacle to fixing the problem: — frank
The largest generator of renewable energy by a country mile is China. In 2023, clean power made up 35% of China’s electricity mix, with hydro the largest single source of clean power at 13%. The growth of renewable power generation in China has been colossal since 2000, far outpacing other countries worldwide. For example, China installed roughly as much solar capacity as the rest of the world combined in 2022, then doubled additional solar the following year. However, China’s position as a country heavily dependent on fossil fuels cannot be overlooked.
frank
Punshhh
ProtagoranSocratist
Punshhh
Yes, he/she was always attacking general comments about climate related issues, within a philosophical overview with badly researched data. It became pointless to debate them and it put people off posting.The problem with that kind of attitude they have towards this thread is that the basis of the whole thing was concerns about the awful things that almost undoubtedly are going to happen.
There’s a difference between countering what someone is saying in a confrontational way and the continuous trolling of everyone who posts on a thread with walls of copy and paste data, for months on end. You’re not trolling at all.I appreciate naming the things we are referring to in discussion overall, just because i literally did think you were hinting that maybe i was "the troll" since I responded to unenlightened in an almost opposite way.
Yes, you are right, but what can an individual do, other than make some ethical choices in what they buy and reducing their fossil fuel use where they can?You all can worry about inevitable global warming from behind a computer screen (sometimes i do since the wildfires create air pollution, and GW could lead to extra crop failures and water shortages), but talking about it through computers is not really addressing the problem, or coming anywhere close to lowering the carbon emissions.
Yes and right wing populists taking advantage of people’s fears, economic and political instability and war mongering are the very worst things we could be doing and yet the worse these things become, the more the populists and oligarchs thrive.For example, it's important to know that militaries disproportionately create carbon emissions. Why this tends to stay out of news media discussions is beyond me, except maybe it doesn't mesh with the profit motive of the news industry
unenlightened
↪unenlightenedFine. They just built 100 coal power plants, but they're going to give those up in favor of solar. — frank
↪unenlightened I wasn't fixing the blame. I was pointing out the main obstacle to fixing the problem: — frank
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