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Josh Mitteldorf's avatar

I'm certainly not advocating business as usual. In terms of policy, here's where I part from the "CO2 first" crowd:

* We shouldn't be converting from oil/gas/coal to nuclear power.

* We shouldn't be electrifying cars or heating systems.

* We shouldn't be constructing pipelines and pumping stations to bury CO2 underground.

* We shouldn't be cutting down forests for wood chips as "renewable biofuel".

* Spraying aerosols into the stratosphere to block the sun is hugely expensive, toxic, and criminally insane.

What we should be doing, in my opinion, is a massive conservation program to use energy more efficiently, as outlined by Rocky Mountain Institute. Transportation and industrial production can be made about 10 times more energy efficient, and money would actually be saved along the way -- it would not be more expensive (but there is an initial outlay for conversion). Home and building heating systems are completely unnecessary with radical design changes in new construction, using heat exchanged ventilation, passive solar, and superinsulation. These additional features are completely paid for by eliminating the need for a furnace, ducts, etc.

Beyond this, I'd like to see programs to enrich and empower people in poor countries of Africa and Asia. This will eliminate their need to sell natural resources cheap to the West, and it will lower birth rates, as educated, empowered women prefer smaller families. It also happens to be economic justice, in compensation for European colonialism of the past and American neo-colonialism of the present.

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Walter Crompton's avatar

Thanks, once again, for speaking frankly!

One aspect of warming that is rather-conveniently under-reported is an increase in rainfall. Each degree C in surface water temperature increases evaporation - and thus precipitation - by 3-4% (it also adds up to more cloud cover, which generally reflect sunlight, but also traps heat [clouds currently act as a net cooling factor]). Considering that drought is a huge limitation to worldwide agriculture and general plant growth (which results in greater carbon capture), how can this be ignored in our analysis of the situation? It seems that the most visible climate activists are cherry picking, and "coincidentally" doing so in the service of the sinister "globalists", and being effective in pulling in the good-hearted activists, as well.

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