Wysiwyg
Everyone wants money
- Joined
- 8 August 2006
- Posts
- 8,428
- Reactions
- 284
The end of the Industrial Revolution?
The world in unison has to stop burning hydrocarbons. Lubrication should be the only requirement for crude oil to be extracted. It might take longer to get around without the various fuels but I'm sure the planet could slow down and be a much happier place.
Lubrication should be the only requirement for crude oil to be extracted.
The name of the game is “kicking the can down the road a little.” In a finite world, we are reaching many limits besides fossil fuels:
- Soil quality–erosion of topsoil, depleted minerals, added salt
- Fresh water–depletion of aquifers that only replenish over thousands of years
- Deforestation–cutting down trees faster than they regrow
- Ore quality–depletion of high quality ores, leaving us with low quality ores
- Extinction of other species–as we build more structures and disturb more land, we remove habitat that other species use, or pollute it
- Pollution–many types: CO2, heavy metals, noise, smog, fine particles, radiation, etc.
- Arable land per person, as population continues to rise
Can someone tell Gail to stop contributing to the problems she identified.Gail Tvberg sums things up nicely witht he challenges we face
Yes those things too. The technology changes are so rapid present time that people are throwing away old technology, i.e. computers, printers, televisions, machines and mobile phones on a massive scale. It gathers momentum. The Chinese leader speaks in Parliament about growing China to prosperity and that will include a lot of technological pleasures and comforts so we can expect a massive consumption of new technologies that create new technologies.Smurf1976
Drugs, plastics, chemicals....
Can someone tell Gail to stop contributing to the problems she identified
THE US Secret Service wanted to bulldoze a major Brisbane roundabout ahead of Barack Obama’s University of Queensland speech on Saturday so his motorcade and armoured Cadillac would not be forced to slow down.
Police sources have told The Australian that Queensland authorities rejected the American request to fund the destruction and rebuilding of the troublesome traffic feature outside UQ’s St Lucia campus to smooth the path for the President’s car, known as “The Beast”.
The name of the game is “kicking the can down the road a little.” In a finite world, we are reaching many limits besides fossil fuels:
1.Soil quality–erosion of topsoil, depleted minerals, added salt
2.Fresh water–depletion of aquifers that only replenish over thousands of years
3.Deforestation–cutting down trees faster than they regrow
4.Ore quality–depletion of high quality ores, leaving us with low quality ores
5.Extinction of other species–as we build more structures and disturb more land, we remove habitat that other species use, or pollute it
6.Pollution–many types: CO2, heavy metals, noise, smog, fine particles, radiation, etc.
7.Arable land per person, as population continues to rise
That was a very sad little story from Gail Tyberg...
I so agree. Might cheer you a little, Smurf, to know that I have a refrigerator which I kept when my grandmother died about 33 years ago. She had used it for about five years prior to her death. It has never needed any repair. It's a little inconvenient because it has to be manually defrosted, but that's all.Consumerism and activity for the sake of activity in order to make the financial numbers look good is the real crux of the problem with resources and the natural environment. Changing the power source doesn't fix it.
Some people also just like acquiring stuff so buy new things when they don't need them.
... as buying a new one.
Changing the energy source only shifts the problem to something else. Instead of running out of oil and gas and suffering the effects of CO2 emissions, we end up running out of phosphate rock and suffering the effects of groundwater pollution instead. Or pick any of the other problems.
As for solutions, well I'll put it this way.
A desk, to pick a random item, ought to last a lifetime. What can possibly go wrong with basic office furniture? Same concept applies to all sorts of things that last many years with little if any technological improvement. And yet us silly humans still keep throwing perfectly good things away in order to replace them with new items which are no better than the ones we threw away.
Now go to a certain big name hardware store and note that they're selling lawnmowers for as little as $130 at times and certainly under $200. That's for a petrol powered mower, not a manual push one. The petrol isn't the issue, someone mowing an average suburban yard isn't going to use that much fuel anyway, but building something as basic (no real room for technological improvement) as a petrol powered mower that falls apart after a couple of years and can't be repaired (because they don't sell spare parts) is just madness. From an environmental and resource perspective, buying a $500+ mower and keeping it for a couple of decades is far more rational (ignoring arguments as to whether or not to have a lawn in the first place).
Consumerism and activity for the sake of activity in order to make the financial numbers look good is the real crux of the problem with resources and the natural environment. Changing the power source doesn't fix it.
Ask Christine Milne how her bling is made or where her clothes come from or what powers the plane she flies in or what energy source her office uses. I sincerely hope she is doing something practical besides rustling up the bandwagon.I keep going crazy when I see toasters, kettle, irons on sale for $7.
It just takes the mickey out of global warming, save the planet etc.
.Guess what percentage of total material flow through this system is still in product or use 6 months after their sale in North America. Fifty percent? Twenty? NO. One percent. One! In other words, 99 percent of the stuff we harvest, mine, process, transport””99 percent of the stuff we run through this system is trashed within 6 months
Globalisation is much to blame for it all.
Supply chains shipping semi finished good thousands of kilometres for a little more processing at each step of the value add chain.
We need to move towards producing and consuming much closer to home.
We also need to take a whole of life cycle cost into account and maybe use more expensive materials that are easier to recycle.
We either start to make the changes willingly, or they'll be forced on us in the not so distant future.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?