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Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
No argument.
Notice I said "Science..." not "Scientists..." There are plenty of politicians in the field. Usually they control who gets paid. |
Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
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The best solution would be to have all science funded anonymously, so the scientists wouldn't know whether it was government or big business money funding their operations. That way, they can actually do their job without worrying about finding results which clash with the ideology of those who hired them, as I'm sure the real answer (as with most things in life) about climate change is somewhere between "humans have absolutely no impact on climate change" and "humans are the sole reason for global warming". |
Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
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OK, so here's a good question: How DO we solve the problem of energy independence? Sure, we could come up with a world-changing idea (think 'Mr. Fusion"), but in my experience things usually don't change dramatically - instead they are changed incrementally. Example: If every house in the USA changed a single 100W incandescent bulb that was used for 4 hours a day to a Compact Fluorescent, we would save over 34 Gigawatt-hours of electricity A DAY, representing 34 million pounds of coal*. That's how we start saving - little steps... 111,162,259 households * (77 W * 4 h/day = 308 Wh) = 3.42 *10^10 *DoE says about 50% of electricity in the USA is from coal. Sites disagree about how much coal is used for a kWh, but using 1 pount per kWh is a reasonable number and it makes the math easier... |
Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
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Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
I agree that mankind doesn't cause climate change. A professor at MIT completely disproved that theory. Scientists are biased by money.
CO2 is a lost cause. It would take 33 years to drop the temperature 1 degree Fahrenheit is there was no CO2 emissions. CO2 is such a small volume of green house gases. |
Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
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Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
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Carbon taxes in the form of "fee and dividend' are genius: place a tax on carbon, then take 100% of this tax money, divide it equally among all tax-paying Americans, and cut them a rebate check each year. While the carbon tax would increase the price of goods, the rebate check would negate this increase (and if you're "green", you would actually profit off the system). This is lightyears better than "cap and trade", as every American would see direct benefits from living more economically sustainable as it takes all the hidden, negative economic externalities** and directly builds them into the price of goods. It would have the added benefit of being like a tax cut ("Woohoo! I just got a check for $3000!") while financially encouraging consumers to make greener choices ("do I drive my SUV to the corner store a 1/2 mile away for a gallon of milk, or do I walk there enjoying some fresh air and exercise?"). Businesses would have the incentive to make their products/services more sustainable, because the consumers would demand greener products to try to profit off the carbon tax. At the same time, people would start walking and biking more (weather permitted) for short trips. This would have the bonus of reducing pollution emissions from cars while actively increasing the physical fitness of America (which with 2/3 of the population overweight, needs a lot of exercise!). Plus, new sidewalks and bike paths are relatively inexpensive to implement quickly in suburbia. Would this force people out of their cars? Certainly not. It's kind of difficult to go to Ikea or Home Depot and bring anything of appreciable size home on a bike. But what it would do is create a system which which gives people more freedom of choice, as opposed to the current system which all but coerces every citizen to buy a car for any hope of getting from point A to point B. The carbon fee and dividend is so simple. No carbon markets, no issues of who gets grandfathered in, no massive increases in energy costs with little to directly benefit consumers in the short term, no tax credits or bailouts to maybe encourage companies to maybe fund one green project, no screwing around with heavy and hard to enforce regulations. Since consumer spending makes up about 80% of the economy, just put in a carbon tax+rebate system and its market forces would cause the system to fix itself (by reducing our imported oil and pollution output) from the bottom-up far quicker than any other solution. * The idea of taxing CO2 is more like an umbrella tax on pollution. Sources which emit large quantities of CO2, such as burning fossil fuels, often release a whole host of other pollutants. These other pollutants, whether its particulates like soot or various chemicals, have been shown time and time again to have direct negative impacts on human health, particularly for children, pregnant woman, and the elderly. By reducing CO2 emissions (such as my switching from fossil fuels to renewable or nuclear energy), you'll also reduce these other pollutants, thus increasing air quality and decreasing health related problems from pollution in a market-driven manner. ** For example, at current traffic volumes every car that drives into Manhattan imposes a cost of $160 in externalities on the economy of New York. Since obviously the tolls on the GW aren't $160, these costs are shouldered ("subsidized" if you will) by other segments of the economy. |
Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
Artdutra04:
When I first read this yesterday I thought that it was one of the most brilliant things I'd heard all year. In the last few hours though I've started to put a bit more thought into it, and there are a few issues with said plan (or at the very least questiion. 1.) How would large corporations be factored into this sort of plan? Would the pollution of a coal plant be taxed evenly by all of the factory workers? Or will the owners of the corporation be the sole recipients of the tax? Did the article specify? 2.) Why would the Federal government go through with this plan as opposed to cap-and-trade? More bluntly put, what would be the advantage of a plan that is totally revenue neutral as opposed to a plan which can be taxed for government revenue? Maybe I just being a bit too cynical here, but I just can't see this sort of thing passing =\ Quote:
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Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
I saw one issue right away with the plan: How are you going to figure out the amount of carbon being emitted by each person (factory/family/whatever your measuring unit is)? I know there are ways, but it's going to be difficult to implement them without protest.
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Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
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Two suggestions for today: 1. Unplug chargers (think cell phones and iPods) when not in use. Only 5% of the power drawn by a cell phone charger is used to charge the phone. The other 95% is wasted when it is left plugged into the wall. 2. Cut down on new wrapping paper. Wrap 6 of your holiday gifts in reused material like newspaper. By wrapping 6 gifts with found materials, you will reduce CO2 emissions by a total of 2 lbs and save a few dollars too! Why bother about a couple of watts or 2 lbs of CO2? Because your watts and my watts will add up! And it's an attitude thing. If you do a few little things, you start looking for more little things and then bigger things. Those can add up. And then no matter the social-political-scientific mumbo-jumble, you'll be part of the solution. |
Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
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Basically, it would take all the hidden costs of carbon/pollution that are currently buried in the system, and directly tie them into prices. Consumers would see this, and then use market forces to choose the cheapest/best product, which nine times out of ten would probably be the one that took less carbon to produce it (and thus, lower cost). Quote:
Think about it. By putting an industrial price on carbon, and allowing companies to "sell" carbon credits, you put a value on carbon which is directly tied to demand. Companies which reduce their pollution can sell credits to companies which don't. But what happens if all companies were to reduce their carbon footprint? The carbon markets would be flooded with supply, and the carbon market would completely collapse. There's just no incentive for the entire economy as a whole to reduce the carbon output under cap and trade, except for the fact that carbon traders on Wall St would profit off price increases on Main St. The point of environmental legislation should be to reduce pollution, not perpetuate it under false pretenses. Let's compare this to a carbon tax. Let's say everyone reduces their carbon emissions, through greener measures. The amount of money collected by the carbon tax would be less, so the rebate everyone would receive would again be less. But this isn't a problem, as the rebate (and potential to profit) is designed to get us "over the hump" to move from a fossil fuel economy to a greener industry. Once we're on the other side of that hump, there will be a point where continuing to go greener will become a matter of declining return on investment. Economic market-forces would drive the system into a system equilibrium between cost of carbon and declining ROI. Thus, there wouldn't be any point to embark on any green action which lacked economic feasibility. So rather than set hard goals for pollution reduction, it would simply let the system itself work out the best possible reduction in pollution for the prices people are willing to pay. Depending on what the value of carbon is set at (let's say it slowly increases over fifty years until it permanently plateaus), the economy will find the best solution on its own (and a slowly increasing tax over time would give enough time for engineers and scientists in R&D to come up with newer, better technology without breaking the bank). Quote:
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Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
Here is a link to the papers:
http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/mo...port_july.html and http://sg.answers.yahoo.com/question...0151749AAZ40e5 |
Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
Here is a link to papers done by Dr. Richard Lindzen of MIT:
http://www.heartland.org/events/Wash...Fs/Lindzen.pdf |
Re: Burt Rutan - Is Climate Change caused by Mankind?
1. Unplug chargers (think cell phones and iPods) when not in use. Only 5% of the power drawn by a cell phone charger is used to charge the phone. The other 95% is wasted when it is left plugged into the wall.
Even when there is nothing plugged into the charger? this is good info not only to save energy but to save money. mark |
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