Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Saving the planet
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThe real root cause of environmental issues is surely the continuing massive rise in the world’s population. Too many babies are being born worldwide - a situation that has been largely sidestepped for generations. Land use is now a competition between trees, agriculture, housing, leisurely and recreation, transport infrastructure and energy. Meanwhile people make celebrities of families with 9 or 22 children.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostLarge families in poor countries are explained by a need for care when social care of the elderly is lacking, and also, where disease is so great a factor in life chances beyond a lower age than that of advanced countries, a greater hoped-for expectation of succession. Raise living standards and life expectancy, and the problem reduces.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostLarge families in poor countries are explained by a need for care when social care of the elderly is lacking, and also, where disease is so great a factor in life chances beyond a lower age than that of advanced countries, a greater hoped-for expectation of succession. Raise living standards and life expectancy, and the problem reduces. If this does not happen it is because of the way the West has exported (sub-contracted) the poverty it had previously imposed on its own working classes.
Two things that slightly muddy the population waters, so to speak. Not all children are born equal in terms of their load on the earth's resources; an American child will have(on current showing) significantly more impact during its life than many(most?) others. The other, which is cause for despair frankly, is that when a country's birth rate falls it causes panic and attempts to get the women producing again - Japan, South Korea, Italy and China, off the top of my head. There are economic arguments put forward as to why that is the case, but it does rather fly in the face of the notion of how many people can the planet actually support to a reasonable(which will not be the ultra western standard) standard. Trouble is country takes priority over planet, and so collaborative solutions don't work internationally or at scale.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostDartmoor has plenty of Sitka spruce plantations used in paper and musical instrument manufacture. They are ugly (in my view) but if the energy consultants are to be believed sequester more carbon per acre than broadleaf (twice as much ) . Hardly surprising as they are so densely planted. They are grown in areas which were historically grazed for sheep and cattle. Indeed if you go back far enough crops were grown there as they were on the Lakeland fells. Unfortunately our ancestors didn’t understand crop rotation and destroyed the soil ( and the carbon therein) . They also cut down the oaks that gave us the name Dart (it is derived from the Celtic word for oak). So we now have an historically massively over grazed moor dotted with spruce plantations.
You’re right about carbon capture but I think we still have to give it a go. Small scale nukes are also full of problems - what do you do with the waste and is it acceptable / safe to put even small reactors in population centres?
Carbon offsetting is a bit of a con as well - it isn’t reducing carbon anything like fast enough . Before lockdown I calculated our 2 person tally at 18 tonnes per year and that’s with no flying. I reckon I’ve cut it by third with less gas consumption, fewer night away in hotels , more train travel etc . But to hit net zero the average 2 person household need to hit 1.2 tonnes per annum . With current tech we can only reach that by substantially cutting our standard of living - buying fewer clothes and manufactured goods, minimal air travel , reducing meat consumption.
Broadleaf woodland would originally have been the plant cover over much of the area, the modern perception of uplands = open moors is the result of human activity over millenia.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostSomething that was covered close to 50 years ago when I was a student, together with all the other environmental and eco concerns that are now so familiar.
Two things that slightly muddy the population waters, so to speak. Not all children are born equal in terms of their load on the earth's resources; an American child will have(on current showing) significantly more impact during its life than many(most?) others. The other, which is cause for despair frankly, is that when a country's birth rate falls it causes panic and attempts to get the women producing again - Japan, South Korea, Italy and China, off the top of my head. There are economic arguments put forward as to why that is the case, but it does rather fly in the face of the notion of how many people can the planet actually support to a reasonable(which will not be the ultra western standard) standard. Trouble is country takes priority over planet, and so collaborative solutions don't work internationally or at scale.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThe real root cause of environmental issues is surely the continuing massive rise in the world’s population. Too many babies are being born worldwide - a situation that has been largely sidestepped for generations. Land use is now a competition between trees, agriculture, housing, leisurely and recreation, transport infrastructure and energy. Meanwhile people make celebrities of families with 9 or 22 children.
Also capitalism, which is predicated on continual exponential growth. We need a global socialist revolution whose priorities are strongly green and as vinteuil points out, feminist. It is only in this context that population rise can be seen.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostNo. The problem is not too many people - rather, too many rich people, who have a far bigger carbon footprint than the poorest. https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/con...y-consumption/
Also capitalism, which is predicated on continual exponential growth. We need a global socialist revolution whose priorities are strongly green and as vinteuil points out, feminist. It is only in this context that population rise can be seen.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostNaturally regenerated forests tend to be more carbon-rich than plantations, allied to which the latter are a disaster for native wildlife species and for biodiversity.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostNo. The problem is not too many people - rather, too many rich people, who have a far bigger carbon footprint than the poorest. https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/con...y-consumption/
Also capitalism, which is predicated on continual exponential growth. We need a global socialist revolution whose priorities are strongly green and as vinteuil points out, feminist. It is only in this context that population rise can be seen.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThat’s a bit oversimplified. Plantations of mixed deciduous trees develop biodiversity quite quickly. Conifer plantations are often virtually devoid of significant levels of life.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt’s still a problem of too many people. Even extra human means a net increase in CO2, food and water consumption, and an increase in demand for building land. The rich may indeed take more than their fair share, and some levelling down by them would be helpful, but there would still be a huge overpopulation problem.
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