India today reveals their "carbon reduction" plans for the decade ahead and, big surprise, they've borrowed China's bright idea of "carbon intensity". Never heard that term before last week, did we ? the trick being to define "carbon intensity" as your carbon emission per unit of GDP : thus neatly allowing industry to claim earnest best efforts in eco-sensitivity while keeping on growing and belching smoke.
This neat ecological hip-swivel allows grimy economies to go boldly on growing, provided the new industries are just a little less stinky that the ones which grew in previous decades... not hard, really.
And overall ? it is just another confirmation that carbon emission reduction, as a general premise for supposedly saving the planet, is just not going to happen.
That truly is the reality : the 'BRICs' economies (Brazil, Russia, India, China) - who together have half the population of earth within their borders - are going to enjoy their own industrial revolution this century : and there just will not be the political will to give anything more than lip-service to the idea of reducing carbon emission radically.
For those of us not just recently out of the nest, this is old news: it was plain in the 1970's that we were on the road to gently wrecking the atmosphere and the time to have started doing something about it was then : it's just too late now. Modern economies hose carbon into the atmosphere like cash into a wall street [b]anker's wallet and they are not about to cease doing so.
And Joe Public doesn't have the will either : to really cut back on our emissions, would mean closing down most of our productive industry and reverting our mode of living back to the eighteenth century: it's just not going to happen. There are six thousand million of us seething like locusts on this planet, everyone loving their modern appliances and cars and warm homes. Want to save some energy ? put on a thick sweater and turn the heat down. Is that going to happen in middle America ? No. Is China going to stop building power stations ? No. Is Brazil going to stop industrialising ? No. Is India ? No.
SO : if carbon truly is a lost cause, what then ? Well we will have to adapt, that is all.
Adaptation is the real option (and one we could be getting on with now instead of the political time-wasting over carbon which will go on for the next decade or two). Yes the temperatures will shift a bit (they do anyway). Yes the water levels will rise a bit, and some island nations will have to move. Yes some coastal regions of Europe and North America will flood a bit (stop press ! house price drama in southern England .... ). JUST GET OVER IT.
Later, when it is patently obvious our options for fixing the problem are nothing to do with dreaming hopelessly that the world will fall out of love with energy, there will be some practical answers : some quiet scientists have already been looking at ways of altering the opacity of the upper atmosphere and actually reducing the amount of incident solar heat in a practial way. Politicians will dismiss these ideas as crackpot for a few more decades - because they find it easier to waste a few hundred billion on pointless wars than on actually building the industries that really could do something useful toward fixing some of these problems.
And what is the most exasperating aspect of this collective governmental stupidity ? If instead of wasting two or three hundred billion dollars on the illegal invasion of Iraq, America and the west had spent that money on fusion research, we would by now have cracked that difficult but marvellous technology. By now we would be beginning to deploy that final, clean electricity generation technology which will be the one which finally allows us to stop emitting carbon.
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