On Jan 28, 2008 4:51 PM, P. J. Alling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yes fanatics.  To reduce the "carbon footprint" to the extent required
> to actually reverse the warming trend, (the much touted Kyoto Protocols
> wouldn't even come close, and the estimated short term loss in GNP in
> the US to implement those would probably bring on a Global Recession, if
> we actually tried to conform to them),  would impoverish even the United
> States.  China and India would face violent revolution, (stifled rising
> expectations tend to cause such things),  Worse yet, the required
> surplus wealth needed for relief of those parts of world effected by
> global warming if it's not caused by man, (and I happen to believe that
> it's probably not, though I do admit I could be wrong) simply wouldn't
> be there.  Thats just for starters.  Then theres the unfortunate truth
> that the poorer a country is the less it's people care about the
> environment.  Just staying alive is much more important.  A good example
> is the loss of the rain forest in Brazil.  A major cause of that loss is
> relatively poor ranchers and farmers attempting to turn it into farms
> and ranches.  The fact that this a poor place to do that is not stopping
> them, they have to eat.   Every single time I hear someone talk about
> sustainable energy sources I get the feeling they just haven't gotten a
> handle on the magnitude of the problem, or they make it someone else's
> problem.  Solar isn't going fill the gap in any major way, not without
> covering thousands of acres of land with solar power cells, (just look
> at the energy flux available in sunlight to get your base of what's
> available, then look at the typical conversion efficiencies in solar
> power cells, you lose a lot of potential right there, but then
> atmospheric conditions take a toll...)  When you finally come up with a
> reasonable estimate of watts per acer divide that into the amount of
> electricity that Canada used before WWII and see if you can sustain even
> that level of comfort with solar power, with Canada's entire land
> area...  Wind is even worse.  Most places you have to have duplicate
> capacity for electrical generation based on some other method, most
> places that's natural gas.  Then there's the wealthy well connected
> people who don't want a modern windmill even on the horizon.  It begins
> to limit your options for placement, (the best place to generate power
> is near to where it's used after all).
>
> So let's see, global warming fanatics want us to impoverish ourselves to
> stop climate change from happening.  Which we might not even be able to
> do. If we do that and they are wrong, we will have many more deaths and
> greater environmental degradation for no particular gain. If we do
> impoverish ourselves and they are right, there will still be needless
> deaths and dislocations, (an analysis I'd love to go into but heck, this
> is already too long and with no footnotes you will refuse to even
> consider this but hey you asked).
>
> Let's not forget that controlling your carbon footprint is becoming the
> preferred way for most governments to get even more detailed control of
> your life.  California currently is trying to get a law that would allow
> them to take remote control of the thermostats of every home and
> business in that State, (starting with new construction but extending to
> everything eventually).  The incremental loss of freedom is astounding,
> and it only gets worse from here...

I could be wrong, but I don't think that wind and solar power are the
dead-ends that you paint them out to be.  I don't think wind-farms are
the answer, nor do I think that acres and acres of solar panels out in
the desert are the answer either.

Think small, think local.

How about a wind-generator on every roof?  How about solar panels on
every roof to heat our water and/or our houses?  They don't have to
provide every single watt necessary - we can still tap into our local
electric grid, and on windy/sunny days, the excess power is actually
sent into the grid, and the homeowner is credited for it, essentially
getting free power on cloudy/calm days.  The electricity savings are
substantial.

Expensive?  Maybe, due to economies of scale.  Once every new house
being constructed has these things on them, the price will plummet.
In Toronto the price of a new house averages something like $300,000.
Why balk at spending another $10K for devices that will save more than
that over the life of the home?

Will that alone save the planet?  Maybe yes, maybe no, but it makes a
hell of a lot more sense than the "mega-projects" that we've used to
power our dwellings and other buildings.

Unsightly?  Maybe.  So are satellite dishes, and so were TV aerials in
the 60's, but people still erected those, and didn't mind them because
they were (and still are, WRT dishes) considered useful.

We can keep saying it can't be done, or we can do something about it.

BTW, please stop throwing Kyoto at us.  It's so flawed, so useless,
that I suspect the only reason it was ever ratified was so that global
warming deniers could then say "Kyoto will never work, so the
environmentalists are wrong - there's no solution."  Kyoto's not the
answer, never was, never will be.

cheers,
frank





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"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept."  -Henri Cartier-Bresson

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