Danik wrote:The 'world' doesnt actually need humans : we rather need the world.
I so agree. The world doesn't need saving or needs us.
Danik wrote:The 'world' doesnt actually need humans : we rather need the world.
Feniks wrote:Marcellus wrote:Feniks wrote:And one last gem for those of you who claim "Trump-off to destroy the world"
http://www.businessinsider.com/us-2015-renewable-energy-investments-2016-5
The US spends the second most in the development of renewable energy of any nation in the world. This includes development by private companies and government agencies. All the Paris agreement did was require the US to basically triple its' investment amount, not to the benefit of the US, but to the benefit of other countries who don't spend anything, without actually requiring those other countries to meet the same standards as the US.
Basically the UN needed a checking account to fund their agenda and they once again turned to the US. We are 20 trillion in debt. the checkbook balance is in the red. Like Trump or not, this was a very bad deal and does next to nothing to address climate change.
Answer to question posed above, the #1 greenhouse gas in the atmosphere is water vaporwhich is 85-90 of greenhouse gas volume. 8-9% is CO2 and of that 8-9% only about 3% is man-made. which if you do the math. Overall man-made CO2 emmissions account for about 0.117% of total greenhouse gases.
I also have a great site to... um... site!
https://skepticalscience.com/empirical- ... -basic.htm
Here is the math i spoke of earlier.
http://www.geocraft.com/WVFossils/greenhouse_data.html
Yes this could go on forever.
Mack wrote:I'm just having a hard time understanding why so many people think all you have to do is throw money at some scientists and then voila we have a solution..
Meliva wrote:Mack wrote:I'm just having a hard time understanding why so many people think all you have to do is throw money at some scientists and then voila we have a solution..
I don't think just throwing money will solve anything, but proper funding given to the right people helps. It can be given to builders to construct things such as solar panels and wind turbines, or researchers to try to come up with more efficient methods. I certainly think a lot of the money spent on the US military budget could do a lot more good in other places, such as the medical fields, renewable energy, or NASA. Like I said before, even if you cut the military budget in half we would still be #1 in spending in military. That money could be so much more useful in other fields.
Mack wrote:I do agree that we definitely overspend in the military sector, and we could put that money to use on our infrastructure.. but I still disagree with the solar plants and wind turbines being high priority.. there is so much natural gas out there that we just burn it off because we can't store it all I would say let's use that
Danik wrote:
We can use the economic argument for lots of things : why vaccinate every school child against measles, smallpox, etc.. its cheaper to just bury the ones who dont make it. Anyone recall which major car manufacturer left a fatal flaw un-remedied because it was cheaper to be sued and pay the legal costs when it went wrong than to fix all those cars?
If we can make a moral case to justify spending over a billion dollars a day to 'liberate' Afghanistan and Iraq.. I do think trying to keep a world worth living in, as opposed to us all just surviving in a radically changed environment, is worth considering.