Khross wrote:
We can, but we aren't. That's the point you seem to be missing. We have a list of IPCC Recommendations. We have a list of Kyoto Recommendations. We have no list, no media coverage, no political interest in actual conservation. The political interests are all that matter when it comes to our government. I'm not presenting a false dilemma, because current action is not providing funding or money toward solvable man-made problems.
Khross, that's completely false. There are tons upon tons of lists for actual conservation and actual restoration activities of actual local environmental problems. I've spent my entire carreer fixing local problems and I'm one of many, many, many people who do this.
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Because policies are not being pursued that phase out existing energy infrastructure. We still have to meet increasing demand. And, ultimately, economics is the fundamental issue with the situation: politics. We can't remove what's already here or replace it with solar/wind farms, because those sources alone as insufficient to meet the increases in demand, much less supplant the already existing demand.
Ok, if we have increasing demand, then we have to construct some new type of energy manufacture. Something must be built; a coal plant, solar array, or something else. Again, pursuing "cleaner" energy does not cost more in local environmental damage than another type of facility.