Originally posted by Dave2002
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The principal basic needs are heat, light and water - these are fundamental requirements not only of humans but of almost all living organisms on the planet - so, where's the problem? Is it a lack of these resources or a lack of due harnessing of those resources? Clearly, it's the latter. There's more than enough light and heat energy from the sun to keep the planet going for the foreseeable future and but a tiny proportion of the world's available water could be capable of supporting all life on it many times over (for some basis statistics, see http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/earthhowmuch.html); the problem, therefore, is obviously harnessing and distribution in both cases. In the first, it's the need for solar installations of all sizes and capacities from vast farms down to individual panel arrays and then how best to store and distribute the energy harnessed; in the second, it's about ensuring that sufficient fresh water be sourced, collected, stored and distributed - and possibly that some saline water is desalinated, too, unless adequate advance arrangements can be made to capture, store and distribute some of the fresh water to be released by melting ice caps (which would, if possible, amount to playing climate change at its own game by turning one effect of it to our advantage). OK, these are both very big asks and the fact that so little work has been undertaken on either until relatively recently is undoubtedly a vast human indictment, but at least this illustrates that we're not talking about resources "running out" or being "overused" or about human demand getting out of proportion but about putting up the (solar-powered) red warning light to encourage the focussing of minds of addressing these vast opportunities for the future.
Another factor about much of the more emotive and agenda-driven talk about climate change is the avowed presumption on the part of some of the more Puritanical eco-moralists that all climate change, howsoever caused, is somehow "bad news"; quite a lot of it is so, of course, but not necessarily all of it and, if it were all bad news, then the planet would be our potential enemy in terms of all climate change that occurs and has occurred naturally without human intervention. The term that used to be used widely (and erroneously) for climate change was "global warming" and it's pretty obvious to most people that this is an absurdly simplistic descriptor for what's happening; we're enduring a miserably cold and wet summer in UK while America basks in the hottest six months since records began. More importantly, however, had the principal manifestation of climate change been global cooling, the eco-warriors would have had to suppress their natural instincts to try to persuade people to manage on less of this and that because the driving need would have been to burn ever more fossil fuels to keep us warm and keep us going until the effects of that ice age passed.
You are correct in stating that "demand for resources is outstripping supply", but this is because we've done nowhere near enough preparatory work to ensure that this incresing demand doesn't outstrip supply; likewise, you are right to point out that "every time we make a technical improvement, so that fewer resources are needed, what happens instead is that demand increases, and quite possibly the net effect may be worse than if no improvements had been made" but, again, it's for the same reason. We've been putting the cart before the horse for generations rather than addressing these issues head on and seizing available opportunities before it begins to become a global problem. Whether we still have enough time left after decades of complacent dawdling to deal with these resource issues so that demand outstripping supply ceases to be an issue for the future remains to be seen, but there can be little doubt that we are having to confront a serious race against time in order to achieve this end.
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