R
Ridgerunner
Guest
There will, for a time, be a market for Chinese solar panels in the U.S.; perhaps in other developed countries. But the technology is still not cost-effective for the end user. It’s a “boutique” consumer item. The reasons why China has manufacturers who make it and ship it here while U.S. attempts fail are: a) It’s not cost effective no matter who makes it, and b) they can manufacture them cheaper than we can.China is a truly pathetic country. Acc to a docu I saw the costs of its environmental harms outweigh its growth in GDP/year (and their “EPA” has absolutely no authority at all). They are going backwards fast.
Which brings up another issue – anti-environmentalists and climate change skeptics often say AGW is a hoax that is being perpetrated by “warmers” who want to bring the world into totalitarian communism.
The point is the totalitarian nations like China (and Russia) have a much worse track record on the environment than do democratic nations.
However the problem is we can hardly call ourselves a democracy when the multinationals own the goverment and the media (including a big presence on the internet), and have enormous influence on our public educational systems and also in our local parishes.
We just don’t get the truth and are flying blind by not understanding that AGW is real and needs to be addressed by everyone starting 20 years ago.
The world is as pathetic as China.
But talking about why people reject AGW is getting off topic. On good thing China is doing is getting in to making alt energy products… So if the US refuses to encourage such production, at least we have some source from which to buy things we want…
And this government has indeed encouraged production of alternate energy devices and resources, spending billions in the way of subsidies, loan guarantees, etc. And still, it’s not viable from a market standpoint; witness the bankruptcy of Solyndra and the absolute foolishness of the corn ethanol program.
But getting back to my point, which one might acknowledge to actually be topical, I don’t think we, in this country, have any idea how Chinese people live. The poverty is almost universal and it’s extreme. The people who come from the countryside where they’re lucky to have enough even to eat, to work in some utterly befouled place like Shanghai at what we consider miserable wages, consider themselves fortunate for the opportunity, never mind that it’s dark at noon and that respiratory diseases are rampant. They actually have money for the first time; something they didn’t dare to hope for not so long ago.
The same is true in India. People point to Calcutta, for example, as hell on earth. And yet, the in-migrants to Calcutta are there for the tiny opportunities that Calcutta presents. People who never had money in their hands before, now do. They can not only avoid starvation (for the most part) but they might actually aspire to owning a radio or a cheap cell phone. People who routinely work in extremely toxic environments on the job are not concerned about CO2 emissions, and we are not going to convince them to return to the countryside and starvation for the sake of them.
We in the West have luxuries the rest of the world doesn’t have, and one of those luxuries is the ability to actually care anything about the environment in which we live. Another is the ability to do anything about it. And that is precisely why emissions in the U.S. are not on the increase while those of China and India increase by 10% or more per year, with no end in sight.
Returning to my consideration of why, exactly, people in the U.S. might rightly feel responsible for MMGW (if, in fact, it exists and is harmful) what we have been doing is preaching a gospel about CO2 emissions that the developing countries responsible for most of it are going to ignore and are, in fact, ignoring. Reduction of fossil fuel use, we say, is the answer, no matter the hardships it causes…and that’s in a country where emissions are not increasing.
Possibly those who believe in MMGW cannot come up with ways to persuade the rest of the world to ameliorate atmospheric carbon. If we want to have any significant effect on it, we are going to have to find ways to make it attractive; ways to make it pay or at least to improve diets. We could be pursuing, say, silvoculture with effect, rather than throwing a half billion dollars at a Solyndra. We could, instead of making utility bills “skyrocket”, find ways to sequester carbon in the countryside, and to make it attractive to do, both here and abroad. That is something the policymakers in this country resolutely fail and refuse to do. Why?
Because it doesn’t have the “moral romance”; the “I’m giving something up for the world” charm which Catholics, it seems, find particularly attractive. Perhaps it’s our not eating meat on Friday and giving up things for Lent that inclines us to that.
Yes, people ought to do things that save money because it’s prudent to do it. But beyond that, what? Is making life harder for the poor or even the middle class the answer when we know for sure that making utility bills “skyrocket” or making CAFE standards so harsh that no family of six could ever fit in the same car together won’t have any effect on carbon emissions?
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