Night Strike wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote:Night Strike wrote:
Phatscotty wrote:However, burning coal and nuclear output will have to rise a bigillion % to supply the electricity for all the electric cars.
For all the complaining player does about unaccounted for costs, for some reason I never hear this one.

That's because you have never heard me giving much support for either nuclear energy OR electric cars.
And.. the problems with nuclear energy are similar to those with oil. The impacts don't effect everyone using oil today, and certainly don't impact those in charge of the companies, so they get ignored.
Player, the only way to have exactly zero impacts on everybody as far as pollution, etc. is to remove every single bit of technology we have. Sorry, but that's not going to happen, nor should it. As long as there is technology, there will be some form of pollution. You can't be against energy sources simply because it causes some sort of pollution. Look for ways to treat that pollution, not to remove the energy sources. It's a cost-benefit analysis at every level, but you can't just say "hidden costs trump everything" because that's a cop-out, not a solution. Yet that's what you do on every energy policy issue.
No. it is not what I do, it is what you like to claim I do because you refuse to accept either the depth of the problem OR the possibility of alternatives.
To begin, the whole idea of "no pollution" is simplistic to the point of nonsense. Even fully natural agents like manure (cow, pig, chicken, etc. poop) are pollution if dumped in the wrong locations or quantities. Dump it in a stream and it IS pollution, does cause very serious harm. Dump it in my garden, however, and I am very, very happy.... (provided you don't put too much in there!). I am quite capable of ensuring that it does not pollute the stream downhill from my. My neighbors -- hire Chem lawn and could care less if they kill half of my garden. (literally) as a result of mis-application of herbicides by low paid technicians. Of course, bad as that is, the average home owner over-uses herbicides and pesticides by something like 700% (or so I have read in pesticide industry reports -- when I got my application license a few years ago).
Anyway, that is the key. PROPER and EFFECTIVE utilization of resources. From the outset, it baffles me (not really, but bear with me) why business so wants to see environmentalism as "the enemy". Except.. they actually do not. More and more businesses ARE coming to recognizet that doing things in an environmentally sound manner is more cost effective for them. The problem is that our economy, our rules are absolutely skewed against the environment, against any environmental impact. About the only exception is the endangered species act and that (as much as I agree we need such legislation) often gets over-utlized or misutilized.
Let me give you a practical example. Sewage is a big issue. Know one of the most effective and cheapest ways to deal with natural effluent? A marsh! Know how many areas use this "technology"? I don't know the exact number, but very few. One of the first was installed near my alma mater (I actually worked on it, planted a good portion of it myself). It was so "groundbreaking" it won a Ford Foundation award of $100K. The same "nasty things" the Corps of engineers just spent over 50 years doing away with down south.. those same things are now prizes recognized for both their filtration capacity, birth and juvenile nursery grounds for many commercial species (and food for other commercial species),etc, etc, etc.
It is not environmentalists who are ignoring reality, thinking unsensibly or in uneconomic terms. That is the irony.
Further, you are wrong in your assumption that appropriate technology doesn't work. ... very, very wrong. There is a huge movement toward enviromentally sound engineering, business, etc. They do not get the huge funding that the chemical and gas companies get from the government, etc. However, they are making progress, despite that lack.
[quote="Night Strike"
TGD brought up ethanol. Ethanol is the biggest fraud currently in the energy industry. It actually takes more energy to produce 1 gallon of ethanol than it does for 1 gallon of oil. [/quote]
Yes, which is something I said in several threads a while back. See, you are not paying attention to what I am actually saying. You are jumping to conclusions given to by someone else.
Night Strike wrote:And want to talk about hidden costs? Ethanol has made the cost of corn to skyrocket, which is why ALL of our food prices have risen (you know, that other cost that real people have to pay yet the CPI never includes in their inflation index). It is STUPID to burn our food supply, and we're already reaping the consequences of it.
I agree and disagree. It is absolutely stupid to use our food supply for food. We can currently "afford" to do so, but only for a time. The overall harm is still far less than comes from petroleum use, and is actually more sustainable, but that gets into a lot of complicated data that you will no doubt dispute anyway.
The REAL issue is that ethanol does not have to be made from nice food grains. There IS a place for some ethanol in what are truly waste products. This is NOT what is being done right now, because making ethanol from nice seed corn in cheaper. Again, that gets back to the skewing of our market to avoid real costs. Even so, ethanol will never be able to truly replace petroleum products. There is not enough waste and the things considered true waste keeps shrinking as enterprising folks find uses for those previously neglected resources.
However, those are not the only solutions.. neither is electric run cars, etc. I would like to see more research into hydrogen fuel. A lot of the "problems" have been overstated. I would also like to see a lot of the engines already invented, but with patents held by the oil companies, brought out into open production. I still remember the man who invented an engine that ran off chicken manure back in 1970 or so. He made about $200K from selling his patent to an oil company. Folks talked for a bit about the revolution we would see in cars. Did it happen? Of course not because the oil companies had absolutely no incentive to produce anything other than cars that ran on a LOT of oil.
I don't want to drive this into yet another drug thread, but the case of Marihuana actually has a similar history. For all it is now considered a "gateway drug", etc. the real and true reason it was initially outlawed was due to pressure from timber and oil companies who saw hemp as competition. That's why they had to come out with those "refer madness" films back in the 50's...to make sure that everyone saw hemp as somethinge evil, and that LONG before THC levels were elevated to anything close to what we see now. (levels that now truly can "intoxicate").