PassedOut, on 2013-July-05, 11:32, said:
The alarmist claim that curbing emissions will require everyone to do everything manually is preposterous.
The carbon tax is also my preferred solution because it would support a market-based approach to developing different sources of power and because more revenue would become available to implement other methods of cleaning the atmosphere of existing greenhouse gases.
One thing that would be helpful..aside from a drastic switch to sustainable and profitable agriculture for farmers and not just chemical companies..would be a switch to less centralized power sources. It's been known for almost as long as we have known anything about electricity that there is a huge drop of effective usefulness over distance. That's one of the positive aspects of the liquid thorium reactors imo, in that they are cheap to construct and very safe, so they could be put near where the power is needed, thus cutting back on the waste power used just to push enough usable electricity sometimes hundreds of miles to get to where it's needed.
Zelanakh: Assuming you are talking about the current love affair that ill informed politicians have with GMO crops, I would be happy to discuss with you exactly what the economics of those "new and higher yielding" crops are and how they are inevitably and disastrously leading us directly into more and more trouble.
That's aside from the fact that non GMO crops have had as good or higher yields within a couple of years and thereafter, without poisoning the earth, water or food. After all, most of these chemicals were spawned for use in war and the chemical companies needed to find another market when the wars eventually ended, so somehow they managed to make it sound sensible to spray it on our food crops. Agent Orange renamed is still as bad.
Think about it for a split second. If reliance on fossil fuels is unsustainable, how are crops which
ever increasingly RELY on fossil fuels in the form of fertilizers and other chemicals in any way sustainable? Especially when they also have to use massive amounts of water to deliver them to the plants as otherwise the plants don't take them up?