I know one thing this forum doesn't need is yet another thread on global warming. Yet this is an opinion I've been touting for some time, and I feel I don't want to derail any other thread by putting it out there.
Firstly, I am of the opinion -- based on what I've read -- that human behaviour has contributed to climate change. What is in dispute is the extent to which this has occured and the consequences of it. None-the-less, I feel (again based on what I've read) that the impact is sizeable enough to negatively impact a relatively large number of people within a relatively short amount of time. The scale of each of these statements I am not prepared to define precisely, basically because at this level I don't consider myself to be informed well enough.
Secondly, there are concerned efforts by many authorities to try to address what are perceived as some of the key contributions to anthropogenic global warming, namely carbon pollution.
I have no problem with this, as I cannot see the sustainability of carbon based industry in the long run. I also cannot see the sustainability of population increase in the long run, and wonder which future governments are ever going to make the difficult economic decision to do something about either issue.
Now the real concern I have is that so much focus is being placed on how to reduce the impact of climate change, with little focus being given to how to react to it. It seems that carbon fuels will not be eliminated for some time yet, that populations will increase while current economies encourage it, and that changes to our climate and our environment will occur in spite of the best efforts to limit our impact. As pessimistic as all this sounds, why is so little being done to create more flexible infrastructures for when changes do occur?
The one certainty is that with time, the climate will change. Australia's increasing reliance on water in a climate where drought is becoming more frequent is a perfect example. The Queensland government is trying to impliment water recycling, yet instead of just doing it, they are putting up a referendum. In other words, if (like happened in the Queensland town of Toowoomba) it is rejected, then alternative and less effective schemes will have to be applied, to the detriment of our population.
Climates change. No argument there. So why don't we acknowledge that and create schemes that are sustainable and flexible?
Athon
(climbs down from soap box and dusts it off)
Firstly, I am of the opinion -- based on what I've read -- that human behaviour has contributed to climate change. What is in dispute is the extent to which this has occured and the consequences of it. None-the-less, I feel (again based on what I've read) that the impact is sizeable enough to negatively impact a relatively large number of people within a relatively short amount of time. The scale of each of these statements I am not prepared to define precisely, basically because at this level I don't consider myself to be informed well enough.
Secondly, there are concerned efforts by many authorities to try to address what are perceived as some of the key contributions to anthropogenic global warming, namely carbon pollution.
I have no problem with this, as I cannot see the sustainability of carbon based industry in the long run. I also cannot see the sustainability of population increase in the long run, and wonder which future governments are ever going to make the difficult economic decision to do something about either issue.
Now the real concern I have is that so much focus is being placed on how to reduce the impact of climate change, with little focus being given to how to react to it. It seems that carbon fuels will not be eliminated for some time yet, that populations will increase while current economies encourage it, and that changes to our climate and our environment will occur in spite of the best efforts to limit our impact. As pessimistic as all this sounds, why is so little being done to create more flexible infrastructures for when changes do occur?
The one certainty is that with time, the climate will change. Australia's increasing reliance on water in a climate where drought is becoming more frequent is a perfect example. The Queensland government is trying to impliment water recycling, yet instead of just doing it, they are putting up a referendum. In other words, if (like happened in the Queensland town of Toowoomba) it is rejected, then alternative and less effective schemes will have to be applied, to the detriment of our population.
Climates change. No argument there. So why don't we acknowledge that and create schemes that are sustainable and flexible?
Athon
(climbs down from soap box and dusts it off)