L
lynnvinc
Guest
I actually heard about the great oil dome under the Arctic Ocean some 10 years ago from an Alaskan oilman (now retired in S. Texas) – he said it was there, but too dangerous to extract with all the ice. He didn’t believe in GW, so he thought it would just remain there untouched, but I was thinking, as soon as the ice melts (maybe in 30 or 50 years) there will be a mad scramble for it (I think it is in international water there).An article of the earlier week, of JUN, before the 22nd had a special report about The Arctic: the last sentence concluded one article by saying, The Arctic has become the symbol of The Age of Man. What started me thinking is the contention between countries on the issue, that the two countries, which will not go to war, but among whom the greatest geo-strategic stakes exist, Canada, and The U.S., recognizing superficially this abrupt conflict; I started wondering: how might opinions change on this issue? Of course, the key to this issue in my opinion, that became clear through the article is this: the ordinary course of nature, throughout The Arctic, hasn’t really changed, but sea ice, and glaciers, have melted more rapidly than even the most extreme predictions: were this a natural occurrence, then where is the natural phenomenon to explain such a dramatic melting of The Polar Ice Cap? The explanation of course, gases from man’s activities, which blow with the wind, and drive in part, the ocean’s currents, end up at one time or another at The North Pole, they become trapped, and warm The Polar Ice Cap. As The Polar Ice Cap melts, and glaciers melt, land becomes available to soak in the heat, and the darkness of water, increased without the reflectivity of ice, stores more, and more, and still, more heat. The key to the contention; seems to be, that irregardless of what good, all our efforts to conserve, and mitigate our damage to The Polar Ice Cap, at some point there is no return: decreasing greenhouse gases at some point, may not restore The Polar Ice Cap to previously observed norms., but this leaves us with the economic stakes, like oil, and gas, and gold, silver, and nickel. Not all of this belongs to The U.S., but what little I recall of it, belongs to Canada, and still there is Greenland, and Denmark. The thing is this as well: The Polar Ice Cap may be close to the point of no return, but to further the mechanisms of The Age of Man, to bring the same effect on Antarctica, … well, I leave you to your own conclusions. As a Californian, limiting fossil fuels burned is one thing I can do to mitigate the change. (The article was in the periodical, “The Economist” around page 52.)
It’s like we are dope addicts addicted to things that are really bad for us and our families and future generations, and even tho there are programs & alternatives & solutions that can help us greatly reduce if not end the addiction, we just want more and more for our bigger and more gas-guzzling vehicles. Hummers aren’t enough – we’ll be wanting 5 mpg army tanks next, as others arm themselves on the roads with more dangerous vehicles, sort of in a personal vehicle arms race. We just can’t get enough, no matter what the financial or environmental or life costs…
It’s getting to the point that if you suggest solutions – like going on wind-powered electricity (which is cheaper in our area) and buying a Volt (with the $1000s a family would have saved had they been doing the EC things for 30 years), and even saving money on the Volt (once it paid for the difference thru savings in about 6 or 7 years).
Well, even if you suggest those as possible solutions to financial, if not environmental problems, you are suddenly labeled a communist trying to take over the world and put everyone in chains. It’s like the anti-environmentalists have gone berzerk. I’ve read they are disrupting city meetings around the nation, where residents and councilmen are looking into having bike lanes, or beefing up public transportion, or various ways to help their city become more energy and resource efficient, etc.