L
lynnvinc
Guest
Since our gov refuses to do much about this problem, I’m just trying to appeal to people, and sweeten the pot by telling of the cost-savings. Going after finite resources is more expensive than reducing, reusing, recycling, and becoming resource/energy efficient/conservative (Lovins refers to those savings as “negawatts”).I find this to be an interesting statement, in light of a lecture I just finished concerning the difference in perception between private goods and the commonwealth. If something is held in common, such as natural resources like water, air and forests, then the depletion is often perceived as having little or no cost. People who have tried to put a real number on natural resource depletion, put it at about $2.5 Trillion right now. This is equivalent to the economic crisis of 2007-08 occurring every year. But because, it is not money deposited in a bank, we don’t count it. One thing is certain. It is not a sustainable economic model, and it may well collapse catastrophically in the next 50 years.
Global warming is only a part of the problem. There is acidification of the oceans occurring at an alarming rate, from surface interaction with the hydrocarbon being spewed into the atmosphere. …
We are consuming resources 30-50% on average faster then they can be replaced. This has obvious implications, as we realize those resources are finite. This same spending model has been adopted by our society in general. The combined spending of local, state and federal governments is $1.30 for every $1.00 collected in revenues. That is not a sustainable model either. If we time it right, maybe we will see massive government failure as the environment collapses on us, and most species on the planet have died.
I agree AGW is only one of some 9 or so very serious environmental problems confronting us, plus resource depletion and entropy.
Here are some links to the “Safe Operating Space for Humanity & the 9 Planetary Boundaries” – several of which we have already breached:
- stockholmresilience.org/planetary-boundaries
- stockholmresilience.org/research/researchnews/tippingtowardstheunknown/quantitativeevolutionofboundaries.4.7cf9c5aa121e17bab42800043444.html
- stockholmresilience.org/research/researchnews/tippingtowardstheunknown/thenineplanetaryboundaries.4.1fe8f33123572b59ab80007039.html