TheRiov wrote:
I’m not sure the point you’re making here. From my reading of the 2014 budget report, The lions share of the ‘climate change research’ was on clean energy tech and energy use reductions.
The point I’m making is, the narratives being promoted don’t match the solutions proposed. Do you want to meet Koyoto’s climate numbers? Replace coal burning power plants with nuclear powered generators and you’ve met it - 20% reduction in CO2 emissions, right there. No additional technology breakthroughs needed. Declare a moratorium on legal
As I see it, the problem is either as dire as it’s been declared to be, or it’s not. I’ve been told we’re at a tipping point. Looking at what is being done, where the money is being spent and how much is being spent, I don’t see actions commensurate to the narrative. If it’s the end of the world as we know it, if 100 million people are really going to die directly because of climate change consequences in the next 12 years as we’re being told, then it’s time to abandon fear of the atom and go nuclear. Given the forecasted population densities and power requirements, it’s the only way, well, unless aliens gift us a better solution.
Instead, I just see governments fiddlefarting around, talking about how carbon credits are a solution, other folks going on about how "cow flatulence is an even bigger problem than we thought”, etc. How's the government really responding? Earmarking climate change “clean energy tech” money and giving it to private companies that failed to deliver :
Evergreen Solar - $25 million
SpectraWatt - $500,000
Solyndra - $535 million
Babcock and Brown - $178 million
EnerDel’s subsidiary Ener1 - $118.5 million
Amonix - $5.9 million
Fisker Automotive - $529 million
Abound Solar - $400 million
Willard and Kelsey Solar Group - $700,981
ECOtality - $126.2 million
Raser Technologies - $33 million
Energy Conversion Devices - $13.3 million
Mountain Plaza, Inc. - $2 million
Olsen’s Crop Service and Olsen’s Mills Acquisition Company - $10 million
Range Fuels - $80 million
Stirling Energy Systems - $7 million
GreenVolts - $500,000
Nordic Windpower - $16 million
Konarka Technologies Inc. - $20 million
Mascoma Corp. - $100 million
That money’s been thrown out the window. It’s gone.
Chicken little’s are going full tilt but nobody’s addressing the problem as the problem is being described, or even attempting to develop a solution for the problem as it’s being described. That solution is nuclear energy. I’m not happy about it, I’d rather a different solution, but there it is, if you want to save the world, if the world is in as dire a climate situation as is being claimed, thats all that’s on the drawing board today, it’s the only available tech that can be implemented as quickly as it’s being claimed is needed.
It’s all smoke and mirrors and the problem isn’t as bad as is claimed, OR, we have to do something TODAY, OR, it's too late and we’re all going to burn/freeze/drown.
Pick one and stop with the platitudes.