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Am I an Activist for Caring About My Grandchildren's Future? I Guess I Am
Concerted action to tackle climate change will happen only if the public demands it for the sake of future generations
"How did you become an activist?" I was surprised by the question. I never considered myself an activist. I am a slow-paced taciturn scientist from the Midwest US. Most of my relatives are pretty conservative. I can imagine attitudes at home toward "activists".
I was about to protest the characterisation – but I had been arrested, more than once. And I had testified in defence of others who had broken the law. Sure, we only meant to draw attention to problems of continued fossil fuel addiction. But weren't there other ways to do that in a democracy? How had I been sucked into being an "activist?"
My grandchildren had a lot to do with it. It happened step by step. First, in 2004, I broke a 15-year self-imposed effort to stay out of the media. I gave a public lecture, backed by scientific papers, showing the need to slow greenhouse gas emissions – and I criticised the Bush administration for its lack of appropriate policies. My grandchildren came into the talk only as props – holding 1-watt Christmas tree bulbs to help explain climate forcings.
Fourteen months later I gave another public talk – connecting the dots from global warming to policy implications to criticisms of the fossil fuel industry for promoting misinformation. This time my grandchildren provided rationalisation for a talk likely to draw ire from the administration. I explained that I did not want my children to look back and say: "Opa understood what was happening, but he never made it clear."
What had become clear was that our planet is close to climate tipping points. Ice is melting in the Arctic, Greenland and Antarctica, and on mountain glaciers worldwide. Many species are stressed by environmental destruction and climate change. Continuing fossil fuel emissions, if unabated, will cause sea levels to rise and species to become extinct beyond our control. Increasing atmospheric water vapour is already magnifying climate extremes, increasing overall precipitation, causing greater floods and stronger storms.
Stabilising climate requires restoring our planet's energy balance. The physics is straightforward. The effect of increasing carbon dioxide on Earth's energy imbalance is confirmed by precise measurements of ocean heat gain. The principal implication is defined by the geophysics, by the size of fossil fuel reservoirs. Simply put, there is a limit on how much carbon dioxide we can pour into the atmosphere. We cannot burn all fossil fuels. Specifically, we must (1) phase out coal use rapidly, (2) leave tar sands in the ground, and (3) not go after the last drops of oil.
Actions needed for the world to move on to clean energies of the future are feasible. The actions could restore clean air and water globally. But the actions are not happening.
At first I thought it was poor communication. Scientists must not have made the story clear enough to world leaders.
So I wrote letters to national leaders and visited more than half a dozen nations, as described in my book, Storms of My Grandchildren. What I found in each case was greenwash – a pretence of concern about climate but policies dictated by fossil fuel special interests.
The situation is epitomised by my recent trip to Norway. I hoped that Norway, because of its history of environmentalism, might be able to take real action to address climate change, drawing attention to the hypocrisy in the words and pseudo-actions of other nations.
So I wrote a letter to the prime minister suggesting that Norway, as majority owner of Statoil, should intervene in its plans to develop the tar sands of Canada. I received a polite response, by letter, from the deputy minister of petroleum and energy. The government position is that the tar sands investment is "a commercial decision", that the government should not interfere, and that a "vast majority in the Norwegian parliament" agree that this constitutes "good corporate governance". The deputy minister concluded his letter: "I can however assure you that we will continue our offensive stance on climate change issues both at home and abroad."
A Norwegian grandfather, upon reading the deputy minister's letter, quoted Saint Augustine: "Hypocrisy is the tribute that vice pays to virtue."
The Norwegian position is a staggering reaffirmation of the global situation: even the greenest governments find it too inconvenient to address the implication of scientific facts.
It becomes clear that concerted action will happen only if the public, somehow, becomes forcefully involved. One way citizens can help is by blocking coal plants, tar sands, and the mining of the last drops of fossil fuels.
However, fossil fuel addiction can be solved only when we recognise an economic law as certain as the law of gravity: as long as fossil fuels are the cheapest energy they will be used. Solution therefore requires a rising fee on oil, gas and coal – a carbon fee collected from fossil fuel companies at the domestic mine or port of entry. All funds collected should be distributed to the public on a per capita basis to allow lifestyle adjustments and spur clean energy innovations. As the fee rises, fossil fuels will be phased out, replaced by carbon-free energy and efficiency.
A carbon fee is the only realistic path to global action. China and India will not accept caps, but they need a carbon fee to spur clean energy and avoid fossil fuel addiction.
Governments today, instead, talk of "cap-and-trade with offsets", a system rigged by big banks and fossil fuel interests. Cap-and-trade invites corruption. Worse, it is ineffectual, assuring continued fossil fuel addiction to the last drop and environmental catastrophe.
Because the executive and legislative branches of our governments turn a deaf ear to the science, the judicial branch may provide the best opportunity to redress the situation. Our governments have a fiduciary responsibility to protect the rights of young people and future generations.
I look forward to standing with young people and their supporters, helping them develop their case, as they demand their proper due and fight for nature and their future. I guess that makes me an activist.
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42 Comments so far
Show AllGood essay. It is indeed depressing the hypocracy involved here on the part of Norway.
I see what you mean. But in effect that is what I am trying to say. The Norwegians are reflective of the real situation.
"A carbon fee is the only realistic path to global action. China and India will not accept caps, but they need a carbon fee to spur clean energy and avoid fossil fuel addiction"
Here lies the problem with the current thinking (in my opinion)...there will be no Global action just as there is no Global economy or Global law or Global government. Absolutely correct that China and India have zero interest in caps, reducing energy use or the enviornment for that matter. Lip service yes, real action, no.
What would a Carbon tax or fee generate (and it is politically impossible)in the real world, very little. No reduction in use, but a lot of subtrefuge.
So if the Grand Plans are not possible (and I FIRMLY believe they are not) whats to be done?
I believe it will take small action.
Actually, China has a rather aggressive program to develope hydro, wind, solar, and nucler power, have by far the highest fuel efficiency standards, and are aggressively developing electric vehicles. Electric scooters and electrified bicycles are so popular that their demand for batteries drove the global price of lead through the roof. Lithium batteries are now filling the demand.
Its carbon emissions will continue to increase, but per-capital energy use by Chinese will remain far below the US.
And of course a tax would reduce use. Basic economics. The high taxes on gasoline are the reason Europeans use far less gasoline per-capita than the US.
"Its carbon emissions will continue to increase, but per-capital energy use by Chinese will remain far below the US."
Lets hope so, but frankly I doubt it, (coal burning plants) though near time future their economy has hit the speedbump so it may slow them. I suspect in the end they will go the same route as France and Japan...nucler power.
"And of course a tax would reduce use. Basic economics.
The high taxes on gasoline are the reason Europeans use far less gasoline per-capita than the US."
True. But my point is that it is politically impossible to push a gasoline or energy tax through. And thanks to Pelosi and Obama it will be many years.
Two points, China is far behind Texas in Windpower, but we are buying the turbines from them, benefit of research and manufacturiung to them. And not long ago I noticed that the basic ingredient in the batteries for electric cars was found only in China. Do you by any chance know anything about the latter? (or anyone)
China seems to have a lot of "rare earths" nowhere else found on the planet, that I know of.
mite,
You seem to suffer from a typical america-centric "we are the world" mentality.
Just because the USA is not making progress toward carbon or fuel taxation and other carbon emission-cutting incentives does not mean the rest of the world isn't.
I thought most wind turbine components are coming from Europe.
No there is no special ingredient for the batteries or other parts in electric cars that only China has. But they can build stuff much cheaper. The use of neodymium magnets in the electric motors may enhance the motor's efficiency a little bit, but are not that necessary - regular alnico magnets work fine.
I thank the Chinese comapny Thundersky Battery Co. Ltd. every day for making inexpensive lithium ferrous phosphate available in small quantities to ordinary EV garage tinkering shmucks like me at an affordable price. US upstart lithium battery manufacturers won't return your phone call unless you are a big corporate suit ordering many thousands of them.
"I thank the Chinese comapny Thundersky Battery Co. Ltd. every day for making inexpensive lithium ferrous phosphate available in small quantities to ordinary EV garage tinkering shmucks like me at an affordable price. US upstart lithium battery manufacturers won't return your phone call unless you are a big corporate suit ordering many thousands of them."
No doubt the 'unfair' trade agreements have a lot to do with cheap Chinese stuff, much of it being crap. My hobby is computer and home theater, and cheap Chinese items have allowed me to purchase much more than I would ordinarily have been able to.
But before we sing the praises of the Chinese and Chinese goods, let's look at the total cost of those goods with respect to personal suffering, environmental destruction, and low quality (with regard to a lot of things including appliances, that wind up costing you MORE [in the long run] than a similar quality product would). The Chinese do what's best for their bottom line, and they don't want to give up any of their chips. Our loss, except for the gain of a very few, in manufacturing jobs has become their gain. Remember too, that a huge reason that companies move there is because of LESS environmental restriction.
Add all this to the fact that their population is about 3 times ours, and you may find that they more part of the problem than the solution.
I would suggest that we should be thinking America centric. Thats who we are. And only here can we do anything.
Frankly Sabo, I don't see a lot of progress anywhere in the world.
Chessgames has avery good point about foreign mamufacturing.
and are aggressively developing electric vehicles. Ya and all that power is coming from Coal powered generation plants.
Sorry, but Europeans have a choice in regard to transportation - most of us do not. Raising fuel taxes only makes employment at minimum wage impossible - as if we're not impoverished enough. Instead of encouraging mass transit, the US has stifled it vigorously for the last century - the TINA effect makes choice impossible on a large scale (in the US).
"One way citizens can help is by blocking coal plants, tar sands, and the mining of the last drops of fossil fuels."
You will never get enough citizens together with enough resolve and capacity for physical force to block these activities.
The only way to "block" them is to demonstrate that there are alternatives for electricity production which are both "carbon-free" and cheaper than the above, which get more expensive with every day that passes.
It's possible, with the Atmospheric Vortex Engine technology to produce electricity more cheaply than by by using fossil fuels and produce it more reliably and economically than other, so-called "renewables" (wind, solar, etc.)
http://vortexengine.ca
Cheap electricity might eventually also be the key to making "synthetic" fossil fuels for vehicles by recycling the carbon dioxide that we produce (Doty Windfuels) from coal plants.
Only two years and less than $100 million would be required for development of the technology in a project that is "fast-tracked" by the government.
The basis for this technology has been described in many peer reviewed articles in the literature. Also see FAQs at the website.
If you are interested in saving the planet--support the AVE, it's the only means of obtaining the results we (especially our children) are in need of before it's too late.
As an atmospheric scientist, Dr. Hansen should know the AVE's potential, but, as the proverb says--"there are none so blind as he who will not see."
I looked at the vortex generator technology over a year ago. I am impressed by the concept of these type of generators. This is but one of hundreds or thousands of sustainalbe energy sources that are suppressed by the energy interests at the peril of our planet. Another completely underexploited energy source is hydroxy fuel. I am going to design a solar oven to use on my roof next summer. I have been also reducing my carbon footprint steadily over the last 5 years.
Thanks Mr Hansen for a great contribution to the fight for responsible energy. It is my opinion that the only solution is to turn the governance of at least the energy of the world over to Science and Scientists. Politicians are too corrupt to ever accomplish anything worthwhile.
Most Scientists are either in the employ of government or corporations. How will you remove them to arms length, so that the science will not be tainted by ideology and/or policy interests?
Many scientists are employed by universities and nonprofits. While conflicts of interest are always present, there is still a climate of honesty and disclosure. The best journals, Science, Nature, and others, base publication decisions on the strength of the science, not the congruity between the conclusions reached and corporate desires.
Am not sure if you think the government only funds studies which produce results it wants to see. You would have to prove that supposition and I think you will have a hard time doing it.
Dr. Hansen remains employed by the USGS, and seems untainted by the ideology of those above him. At any rate, the suggestion was that the scientists themselves will to be the ones at the top making policy.
An imperfect exmple was President Carter, who by profesion was an engineer. His policy decisons represented the high water mark of enlightenment in environmental and energy policies.
People love protesting, but at the same time don't realize that it is EACH ONE OF US who is THE PROBLEM. I would wager that the vast majority of the people taking part in the protests have an environmental footprint significantly bigger than world average. Change starts with our own choices, not with protesting in the streets.
"Change starts with our own choices, not with protesting in the streets."
Nonsense.
So during the civil rights movement, blacks should have just started with their "own choices" and everything would have worked out.
When women were denied the right to vote, they too should have stayed indoors and not protested in the streets, and just worried about their "own choices".
Ad infinitum.
Power concedes nothing without a demand.
Why not both?
I engage in protest, but I also have altered my personal situation, for about 12 years now, so as to gratly reduce my carbon footprint.
The trouble is, my example has not led to a single person changing their personal energy consumption. They see me every day on the elctric motor scooter, they see the windows open instead of the AC; the RE agents saw how I was only interested in houses near a frequent bus route and short walk to shopping. The effect is nil. In the case of the scooter, frequent derision in suburban areas.
The only thing that will work will be a massive a public presence in the media and elsewhere that makes a low-carbon lifestyles "cool" combined with laws and tax incentives to punish cheaters.
What if a number of elements were presented to folks as being in their own interests, ie. save them money?
How about reducing energy consumption by tax credits, Credits ensure you must do it before you get your reward, unlike tax reductions. And aimed specifically at citizeens, not corporate entities.
The system, to be effective, has to be global. Tax credits don't help the poor, because the poor pay no tax. So any cost increase that is the result of a carbon tax, will hit the poor especially hard, because despite the fact they pollute the least, they have to spend the little they have - often a mere $1 a day - on products which now have an additional energy tax built in. The only fair way is to divy up the world's energy, to give every adult person the same level of access to energy [with some adjustment for climate zones and family size. A year after the system is in place, families will get no further credit for any child beyond one born to them, in order to bring world population down over time, in a controlled manner]. Those who use less than their quota can sell their surplus to those who want to use more, and benefit directly. Meanwhile, the overall global energy quota gets reduced from year to year. This will redistribute wealth from the robbers who live the high life to the people who need it most. We don't need a system run by Wall Street types, who incidentally ruined the world economy with their gambling and fraud, nor do we need more taxes misappropriated and redirected by government, which money will ultimately and by some miracle largely end up in the hands of their friends. The energy belongs to all of us, not governments, and least of all some corrupt, unelected international body of bureaucrats.
"The system, to be effective, has to be global"
Essentially then your view is that it is impossible.
Not impossible, but improbable. The way I see it, there will be no system that will be universally beneficial. Whatever system will come into place will benefit a few people who will profit, and not make any sacrifices at all, as usual.
The point I am making is that a lot of people think that protesting buys them a "free pass". What stops people from using less energy on their own? How many of these protesters "have to have" the newest gadgets? own vehicles? Many don't realize that to live sustainably, they'd have to cut their own lifestyle by up to 90%. Suddenly they might wake up. I live a fairly frugal life, but even my lifestyle is not sustainable if 7 billion humans would be living it. Something has to give, in terms of both changing our lifestyle as well as reducing population.
>>malatesta1936 wrote: So during the civil rights movement, blacks should have just started with their "own choices" and everything would have worked out. When women were denied the right to vote, they too should have stayed indoors and not protested in the streets, and just worried about their "own choices".
**Wrong analogy**. The correct analogy would be like a bunch of closet bigots participating in the civil rights movement because they wanted to appear cool. Or like a bunch of misogynist, male supremacists demanding voting rights for women for whatever reason.
The civil rights movement was (somewhat) successful because there were not many hypocrites and closet bigots at the grassroots level, even though there might have been at the elite level - in Congress. In contrast, there are those who demand action on climate change who are somewhat lazy, insincere and dishonest - as can be seen by their reluctance for and outright rejection of any personal change. Instead, they would say, "it's the system, stupid!", or point to the rich people or to China and India. They would point to anything and everything but would not take a look at their own ecological footprint, their carbon footprint, their water footprint and so on. They would be quick to label others who say there need be ***no conflict*** between working on personal change and for systemic change as puritans or some such derogatory term. Limiting our consumption and GHG emissions to our fair share is not some utopian ideal - because emissions have a global effect, and our share has to be decided on a global basis, per capita. What Jonathan Edwards said was perfectly valid, and you can easily spot a whole lot of hypocrisy, denial, weaseling and outright aggression whenever someone mentions personal change as a **starting point**.
In mathematics and logic, there is something called ***"necessary but not sufficient"*** when something needs to be proved or disproved. I think serious efforts to make the right choices at the personal level are ***necessary*** for any major action, though by themselves they may not be sufficient. Those who refuse to address personal choices may end up marching with a bunch of hypocrites on the streets and that may not be much fun nor effective. The system is far too smart and far too powerful to be inconvenienced by those who are not sincere and committed at a personal level, and it can brush them off very easily.
The responsibility is the people's, ultimately. When the people create a government they delegate responsibilities to the government. So when the government fails, the people have to re-assume the delegated responsibility until they can straighten out the government's dysfunction. It's a very simple logic, but when the elites (Big Brother) censor simple logic out of the public dialog, the logic becomes "strange", and is rejected irrationally. But with the picture clarified you can think how to act as the situation evolves.
I have a "slightly" different view. Governments all over the world are by the Elites, for the Elites, and for 'their' purposes, governments function just fine. You, on the other hand, get to "vote" for a slate of candidates which are all ultimately approved by the Elites, so all you ever get is a show-democracy, a circus of sorts. Any outsider will have to run as an independent, but how many independents can compete with the financial steamroller of an organized party which is beholden to the interests of corporations and billionaires? The only thing that would have even the remotest chance of changing things - albeit slight - would be a revolution in which all governments get overthrown and all billionaires get killed - [purely theoretically and philosophically speaking] - which isn't going to happen. However, even after that, there would still be the fight against human nature, which cannot be won without destroying the very essence of what it means to be human. Look at the countries which have had revolutions, and which ones are not, today, under the control of corporations and billionaires? I think the only one is Cuba, and nobody could pay me enough to live there.
>>Jonathan Edwards wrote: "The only thing that would have even the remotest chance of changing things - albeit slight - would be a revolution in which all governments get overthrown ... However, even after that, there would still be the fight against human nature, which cannot be won without destroying the very essence of what it means to be human."<<
I don't know what you mean by "the very essence of what it means to be human", but it most certainly is NOT driving down a suicidal path, threatening to take everyone along towards death and destruction. You are assuming that humans are meant to be stupid and suicidal. I don't agree, despite what I see all around me. I don't usually talk about specific villains - such as capitalism, but here I have to point out - that human beings have the capacity to live with their imperfections without being utterly destructive, and they are even capable of achieving perfection (which, to me, simply means to live happily and freely without consuming more than your fair share; that is, simply live and let others live; might sound boring, but boring is better than destructive). What corrupts such capability and turns people on a destructive path are certain ideologies such as capitalism and organized religions. Of course, the more basic problem is that people "allow" their life to be corrupted by these ideologies. It is possible for people to take back their freedom and live intelligently. Living intelligently would of course mean not messing up nature too much, because we are indeed part of nature. That is not a sentimental statement - it's a fact. How can it be otherwise?
You mentioned Cuba, and I agree with you partly - that I wouldn't want to live in a country were personal freedoms and the freedom of speech are not respected. On the other hand, if I live in an island with a finite amount of resources, I will accept certain limitations on how much I can consume. The problem with capitalist countries, especially those conquered by people from distant lands, is that such limits are not "felt" by the settlers, as the resources somehow seem bountiful compared to where they came from. So they go on a binge. The society they produce over several generations also reflects such wasteful consumption, but to them it seems like the result of their ingenuity and other societies living simpler lives and with less consumption seem "underdeveloped". But living off the natural capital and on ecological debt can go on only so long. I don't know if the leaders of Cuba have explained things to their people sufficiently that there is nothing to be ashamed of consuming less so long as people can have a decent quality of life. When people understand the natural limitations and adopt voluntary simplicity, life need not be so bad. Of course, you would still need to keep corrupting and and predatory influences under check. It would be stupid to allow certain things in the name of freedom when their destructive consequences can be foreseen. Just like parents are responsible for their children. But explaining things to the children is better than simply saying no. Of course, parents can't assume they know everything, either - so active listening is part of parenting or leadership.
What I meant to say was that, despite such a revolution, there will always be human beings who will seek to "gain the upper hand" over others, and it would only be a matter of time until things revert to the status which had previously been overthrown. Even Castro was lured by the exercise of power, despite the fact that during the revolution, one of their very rules was that none of the revolutionaries would become politicians. Once the revolution succeeded, that quickly went out the window, and the fellow revolutionary who balked at this change in course was handed a 25 year prison sentence. The revolution eats its children.
Thanks for clarifying, and I guess you are right about some humans who'll seek some kind of dominance. But when more people awaken to freedom and intelligence, I think such tendencies on the part of some to dominate others can be tackled effectively and without fear. I have read lots of books by J. Krishnamurti and have also listened to his speeches online (and also in person - once). He talks of a psychological revolution as the basis for correct action. In fact, one of his books is also called "The Only Revolution", and I happen to think that it's important to get it right when people talk of change, and so it's important to start with oneself. This doesn't have to be a long drawn-out process of a gradual evolution. If the intensity is there, change could come about quickly. That is also the reason I don't agree with people who think they can bring about major change without change at the individual level, not realizing that they may end up repeating past mistakes carried out in the name of "revolution".
Good points Alcyon. My favorite book by "K" is Freedom From the Known. Some other great works of his is "The Network of Thought," and "The Ending of Time." That said, I believe that few here will be receptive; they believe that 'activism,' even that preceding awareness and self-understanding, is more important, where the observer is perpetually trying to transform the observed, rather than realizing that it is impossible to impose meaningful order from the periphery inward, where psychological disorder persists. The conflict arising within must be dealt with simultaneously. It does not mean being inactive, on the contrary, it means acting with awareness. Instead, political activists try to make the world over in accordance with some ideal, or set of fixed ideas or beliefs, most of which they unconsciously accept and never challenge.
Some argue that is completely selfish and/or self-centered, or new-age to work inwardly. "We must DO something!" they exclaim. Without awareness and a deeper understanding, we will get nowhere, and inner and outward conflict, along with division will continue to increase. And where 'tolerance' really amounts to nothing more than repressed hatred and resentment.
Lately, you can even see an increasing level of conflict in these blogs, and the 'slandering' that goes along with it. Nice to see you posting again.
Hi chessgames56, sorry, this is a late reply. I read your post above and didn't feel there was anything for me to add. However, I thought I should say something about your last sentence :) Frequently - like every single day - I think I should take a break from posting, as I feel things are happening in the outside world - that is, outside of our little discussions here that we don't seem to have the power to do anything about. In fact, I even think that our time would be spent better by arguing on right-wing sites (and facing the brickbats, of course). But then again, something always brings me back here.
I haven't read "The Network of Thought". Maybe that too is a collection of some of his talks, which I might have read?
Yes, rtdrury, the responsibility is the people's, ultimately. And that means, the individual's. It is the individual's responsibility to spot insanity and to find ways, first of all, to not add to the insanity, and secondly, to do what one can, along with a whole lot of other, sane individuals, to cure the collective insanity. Everyone knows the definition of insanity, of course.
This may deflate some of you.
You can do nothing for the future because it will alter it.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1393844
I thought this was a great article.
I think one reason I joined the Green Party is because we have the best platform regarding the environment and climate change. There are Green Party Candidates who are running in both the States and Europe.
Last time the BNP did better then the Green Party in elections and I am hoping that this time the Green Party does better then the BNP in the next election. There is no reason why the Green Party in the UK can’t do better then the BNP!!!!!! We as Greens must work toward gaining political power.
If we are not working to gain political power than we are wasting our time and energy. That is a truth!!! Yes, we need protests and all the rest, but we need people who are willing to bring our goals into reality. To do that we must work to slowly gain political power in the world.
James Hansen I have never met you, but I admire you. It is good to know that there are people still left in the world who will fight for the children and their future. God bless.
Christine Cosser
The Green Party is a political tool. In my opinion, it is not genuine. The Green Parties are pushing the agenda of Maurice Strong et al, which envisions nothing comparable to global energy equality.
I'm an activist. A radical.
We will never turn this climate around trying to use price. Price hikes only continue to hurt the small fry.
Rationing. Yep. Gas, electric, water. Three resources that need to be rationed.
No one wants to hear about it but its the only thing that is fair and equitable. Everyone get the same amount.
If you bought a big house to heat of cool you should've thought about the embodiment of energy then. If you bought a big gas hog and drive a lot of miles, too bad, you knew then that we were dumping too much carbon in the air. Did oyu plant a big grassy yard. Ever heard of xeriscaping?
Let's get serious. Unless and until someone implements rationing we are all going to die a lot sooner than we thought. It's very simple. We cannot sustain where we are and keep waiting for the white knight of technology to save us.
Buckle up. We're in for one heck of a ride.
There needs to be a global energy budget. Each gets the same share. Imagine someone like Al Gore - I like to use him as an example, because I believe he is one of the biggest hypocrites, with all the mansions he owns - having only access to the exact same amount of energy as... let's say... some poor person from Angola. Now, Al Gore wants to continue living his lifestyle so, he has to buy credits from the global energy pool available. Likewise, there are other (still) rich people who want to buy those surplus credits. Now, this person from Angola can sell her unused (monthly? - wouldn't want to have an endless commitment to fuel the lifestyle of the elites) credits at auction to these elites. Suddenly her credits jump in value, and she fetches enough value from a month's worth of credits to feed and house and clothe and educate her family for two or three or four or even six months. I believe it would be a fantastic wealth redistribution tool, which would incorporate a sense of justice in the distribution of the planet's energy.
People without grandchildren don't care.
As for the oil sands project . . . it will happen, no matter how much protesting and reasoning respectfully presented by informed opponents, unless the grandparents and parents get their collective boot on the neck of the boss. The boss is an animal that understands pain and the fear of pain. When you demonstrate your willingness and ability to crush his skull, he will get religion.
It is already too late and the oceans tell all.
7 billion people. The oceans are empty and dying. Soon all the people who have so far largely lived off of the ocean, will have to switch to food from the land... just in time for a decline in oil production.