Climate Deal: US and China Join Paris Climate Accords (bbc.com) 163
An anonymous Slashdot reader quotes the BBC:
The US and China -- together responsible for 40% of the world's carbon emissions -- have both formally joined the Paris global climate agreement... It will only come into force legally after it is ratified by at least 55 countries, which between them produce 55% of global carbon emissions. Before China made its announcement, the 23 nations that had so far ratified the agreement accounted for just over 1% of emissions. This will put pressure on G20 nations over the weekend to move faster with their pledge to phase out subsidies to fossil fuels...
There's a G20 summit starting on Sunday, and the BBC's environmental analyst reports that the accord "will just need the EU and a couple of other major polluters to cross the threshold." Its ultimate goal is to stop global temperatures from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius -- "well above the aspirational 1.5C heating that the UN accepts should really be the limit" -- though U.K. researchers report that already 2016 temperatures may be rising 1.1C above pre-industrial levels.
There's a G20 summit starting on Sunday, and the BBC's environmental analyst reports that the accord "will just need the EU and a couple of other major polluters to cross the threshold." Its ultimate goal is to stop global temperatures from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius -- "well above the aspirational 1.5C heating that the UN accepts should really be the limit" -- though U.K. researchers report that already 2016 temperatures may be rising 1.1C above pre-industrial levels.
Hooray! (Score:5, Informative)
Now please quit arguing that since China isn't doing anything, there's no point in the U.S. doing anything either. Fact is, the U.S. and China together are responsible for more than 38% of global greenhouse gas emissions, more than the EU, Russia, India, Japan and Brazil combined. We have a unique responsibility in the fight against global warming.
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At the risk of being flamed for not picking up on the (obvious) sarcasam - Really?
Re:Hooray! (Score:4)
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I wouldn't be surprised to see 1100... arguing that Volcanos violate the laws of physics, so they will never work.
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Re:Hooray! (Score:5, Informative)
Icelandic vulcanos produce more but thei don't count that. They can't do much about that either.
Well, good thing then that that claim is plainly wrong, by many orders of magnitude. Overall, volcanic activity produces less than 1% of human CO2 emissions [usgs.gov]. And Iceland is only a small part of the overall picture. This is based on a a well-debunked claim - currently no. 74 [skepticalscience.com] of pseudo-sceptical arguments.
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Icelandic vulcanos produce more but thei don't count that. They can't do much about that either.
What's a "vulcano"? Is that a latin version of a Vulcan?
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All of the worlds volcanoes combined emit 65-319million tonnes / year (the low point being natural seepages, the high point being major erruptions)
Humans emit 29billion tonnes / year
So not only does the USA emit more CO2 per year than the largest and most active volcano years, but so does Canada, and Canada has only 10% of the output of the USA.
So not only are your numbers wrong. Even if they were an order of magnitude in your favour they'd still be wrong. Stretch it even further and it would almost be as w
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Don't get caught in the trap of discussing other natural carbon emission sources, it is a stupid argument because of course they are in addition and not a bloody alternate. So volcanoes release green house gases (as well as gases that block sunlight and cool the planet) in bloody addition to man made sources and of course methane from man made sources as well as currently frozen methane to be released. So not a crazy crap either or but in addition to. Not matter how many fossil fuellers we sacrifice to tho
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I don't consider it a trap to point out to idiots that they have their facts the wrong way around and even then are still off by an order of magnitude. Yes it's in addition to, but the common argument is that humans are a small player in the world. We're not. That misconception should be assaulted by facts at every opportunity and then left to die in a dark alleyway.
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You seem to have talking about doing something confused with actually doing it.
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China is currently investing a lot more in renewable and nuclear energy than the USA.
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The Senate must ratify any Treaty. (Score:2, Insightful)
How Does the United States Ratify Treaties?
"The President...shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur..." Constitution of the United States, Art. II, Sec. 2
[http://www.childrightscampaign.org/why-ratify/how-does-the-united-states-ratify-treaties]
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Perhaps it's just a trick: Obama: I wanted to ratify but the evil congress didn't let me.
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Bush. The Bush regime is the one that broke new grounds in "executive orders", Obmam actually took it easy on them for a long time before he realized the Republicans were do-nothing obstructionists who were loyal to party but not country.
And you forgot to complain about the kill-lists and the incessant drone attacks... I guess extra-legal kil
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False. While he did limit his number of 'executive orders', he issues more 'executive memorandum' than anyone else. What's the legal difference between the two? Not a thing, but parrots like you can keep saying he didn't do as much and blame the GOP despite the underlying facts not supporting your argument.
Re: The Senate must ratify any Treaty. (Score:1)
Correct, and since this wasn't ratified by the legislative branch it's nothing more than a gesture by the executive branch...same with China. This is a handshake, smile, and photo-op...that's it.
Careful there! (Score:1)
I have recently heard that several colleges and private institutions consider quoting the US Constitution to be hate speech and a microaggression. Someone's sensibilities might be offended!
Systems Theory for Losers (Score:3, Informative)
Anyone who has ever done the classic experiment of heating ice water while recording the temperature increase will know that the word "already" has no place here.
The temperature dynamics of the earth's biosphere are a Rube Goldberg contraption. It's not even clear that adding heat couldn't lead (for some period of time) to a temperature decrease.
For example, let's suppose that the gas trapped in the permafrost was not methane, but a methane-like gas that promotes a net global cooling (under the condition of maximal sustained release); however, the net cooling effect is not evenly distributed, the permafrost at the poles continues to melt, this entrenched source of anti-methane is ultimately exhausted, and then the earth's temperature begins to warm again, now in a rapid rebound.
This story is not even a huge change in the particulars as we found them.
Just imagine if scientists were presently gasping in alarm at a global cooling of 1 degree C which presages (in accepted theory) a rapid rebound in the other direction. Then we'd be writing (perhaps correctly) that we've already experienced a fatal 1 degree C of cooling en route to an impossibly dire 2 degree C global warming.
The word "already" is being used here to cue the naive reader into the lazy presumption that we can cast off the nefarious ashes of system theory, and bust out instead narrative compass and straightedge.
No. We. Can't.
The US has not joined the climate accord (Score:3)
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What he said is correct. Because generally speaking the Senate comprises half of Congress.
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Without Senate passage the accord has no binding authority in the USA. The House has no constitutional role in treaty ratification.
Not true at all.
The House has no role in the constitutionally-defined form of treaty ratification, but that's not the only kind there is, and not even the kind that is used most often. The US engages in three different kinds of international agreements, all of which look like treaties to the rest of the world:
1. Sole-executive agreements. These are cases where the treaty commitments fall within the scope of the president's authority. The most common example is Status of Forces Agreements (SoFA), where t
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Maybe we need a new Congress. Trump is working on that one.
Treaties and accords are nice, but we can make progress even without them. Obama's "Clean Power Plan" essentially puts the EPA in the business of enforcing a cap-and-trade system. The hang up there is legal challenges, not congress.
this is STUPID (Score:2)
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Right. Time to attack. You can lead the ground troops.
Here's an idea: why don't we let them figure out that they've been killing themselves with air pollution, and they really need to clean up their act. It could be they'll even start doing some pilot plants to do research into nuclear technology where the United States has dropped the ball. Oh, and it could be they'll start playing around with manufacturing photovoltaics as well.
Re: this is STUPID (Score:2)
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Thats hillarious.
Go ahead and do that, and see how people react when everything they buy, I mean almost EVERYTHING will go up in price by 6 to 20% (depending on your tax).
Re: this is STUPID (Score:2)
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They account for 33%, while adding 50GW coal plants EACH YEAR (and only 33 GW of AE, which are very inefficient there).
And America is is the bottom 1/3 of polluters when Co2 per $ GDP. China is in top 3.
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The choices are made by Businesses and Gov. As such, GDP is the ONLY measure that will work to bring it down.
Also, America is not even in the TOP 10 of the worst per capita.
Re: this is STUPID (Score:2)
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In addition, if America was that bad as you think, then this tax would actually help make a difference.
BUT, the fact is, that America is in the bottom 1/3 of the emitters / $ GDP. China is in the top 5 (3?).
THis is emissions and GDP from 2006. [wikipedia.org] At that time, America was at its worst and then it was about middle of the road. Now, we have dropped out emissions while growing our GDP.
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Only possible if we go nuclear (Score:5, Insightful)
When it comes to carbon footprint the top two on energy produced per greenhouse gasses emitted are hydroelectric and nuclear. Wind and solar are close behind. So close that if anyone wants to argue with me on this I'll call them all equal, perhaps I'd even grant wind and solar a 10x lead because even then nuclear is so much better than coal and oil. Geothermal is up there somewhere too but, like hydro, it is highly location dependent. Wind and solar are still location dependent but much less so. There are few places we cannot put nuclear.
Then there are lives lost per terawatt hour produced. Nuclear gets 0.04 lives lost per TWh produced, and this includes Fukushima, Chernobyl, and deaths by mining uranium. Rooftop solar has 0.1, wind has 0.15, hydro has 1.0 (mostly due to China, 0.1 otherwise), with the world average around 47, mostly due to coal, oil, and natural gas. Again, even if we take the nuclear number and multiply it by 10 it is still not bad compared to the rest.
When it comes to costs I'll take average numbers from the EIA because I feel like it and I found their numbers real quick. Nuclear is $95.2/MWh, conventional coal is $95.1, hydro is $83.5, peaking natural gas is $113.5, combined cycle natural gas is $75.2, wind is $73.6 onshore and $196.9 offshore, Solar is $125.3 for PV and $239.7 for thermal. Nuclear doesn't have a 10x advantage here but If someone wants to argue the numbers I'll grant a 2x advantage since then it still beats out the unreliable wind and solar in many cases. What I will not do is allow claims that wind and solar prices will improve but nuclear will not. If we grant that future technology improvement grants a better price for one energy source then we should be able to assume an equal gain on any other energy source. This is especially true if discussing any technology that turns heat or mechanical motion into electricity since nuclear power uses those just as much as wind or solar thermal.
Then it comes down to whether or not we can actually build it all. I saw a comparison on these energy sources based on a cubic mile of oil. This comparison spreads the construction over 50 years, and if we assume a 50 year lifespan of these power sources then it turns into a continuous rate of construction. We'd need one new 900MW nuclear power plant every week. 200 new 18GW hydroelectric dams every quarter. 1200 new windmills every week with 1.65MW capacity each. For PV solar we'd need to cover 250,000 roofs per day with 2.1kWh capacity each.
Here's where I think the final nail in the coffin on the idea that we can replace coal with wind lies. To replace coal with wind worldwide would require 10 billion tons of steel and concrete, and current annual production is 1.5 billion tons. Wind requires over 500 tons of steel and 1000 tons of concrete per MW installed, about ten times that of nuclear, coal, or gas. I got most of these numbers from the EIA and from Morgan Stanley.
I've heard people claim it is impossible for us to produce one new nuclear power plant per week worldwide. I call bullshit because nuclear power takes no more resources than coal or natural gas and we are currently building them at a similar rate. Arguments against nuclear on costs in lives and dollars also go out the window to anyone that does an honest analysis. Comparing nuclear to wind on resources required makes nuclear look so much easier. I tried to do a similar analysis on solar but my calculator doesn't do numbers that big.
I've largely ignored issues like reliability, location restrictions, etc. that count against wind and solar because I don't have to go there to make my point. If someone wants to argue about nuclear being unreliable but wind and solar can be predicted then I'll go there, but you'll lose.
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Two points
1. I cannot put my own nuclear plant beside my house. I can put solar panels on my roof.
2. There is an idea to diversify our sources of energy. Please stop talking in absolutes like "replacing coal with wind".
Re:Only possible if we go nuclear (Score:4, Insightful)
1. I cannot put my own nuclear plant beside my house. I can put solar panels on my roof.
That's true but if you and some like minded people get together to pool your money you'd have that nuclear power plant, which would give twice as much energy per dollar. This is not a plan for the individual since an individual is not producing those solar panels, it's a large corporation made of many people pooling their resources.
Also, I'm not arguing that you should not be able to put solar panels on your roof. What I'm pointing out is the comparative costs of these energy sources, in dollars, lives, and CO2 released into the air. If you want solar panels then you need to know what you are getting into. Don't put up solar panels because you think you'll save humanity from itself, you won't. Don't put up solar panels thinking you'll save money, unless you live in a highly optimal location. Do it because it takes you off the grid and independent from it, or whatever else you might be trying to do.
2. There is an idea to diversify our sources of energy. Please stop talking in absolutes like "replacing coal with wind".
I mention the case of replacing coal with wind because that is what I've seen people claim we can do, or at least replace coal with a mix of wind, solar, hydro, or whatever else is "green" where wind is a large portion of that. Take the numbers I've found and scale them as appropriate to fit your vision of the future and see what you get. Even if we assume we can replace 10% of "dirty" energy with wind we'd still have to double our annual output of steel and concrete to meet the demand that much wind power would create.
I see a future where nuclear makes up something like 50% to 80% of total energy demand. The rest would be a mix of wind, hydro, natural gas, and a small bit from solar. We will not rid ourselves from coal for a very long time but if CO2 reduction is the goal then nuclear power is the best choice we have right now.
It is possible that some future technology will make nuclear look bad by comparison but we don't have that technology yet. If we wait for that technology to come then we are just making a bad problem worse. I'm not a big believer in CAGW because that is a trio of things that have to pile up just so for this to be a problem we can fix. First we must have global warming. The globe may be warming, or it may not, we don't know what the future holds. We've already seen a 15 year "pause" in warming and the "pause" may end soon, or it may not. If there is global warming then we must still prove that human activity is causing it. This may be something easier to prove but then it comes to the last part. We still don't know if this global warming can be considered "catastrophic" or not. We might see many places become inhospitable but the world already has many inhospitable places, there's a chance we'd be just moving them around. That would suck for many people but people can move and at the rate it's happening people might barely even notice. It's possible that we'd make the world better for us.
Even if catastrophic anthropogenic global warming does not happen I believe we still have many reasons to move to nuclear power. The air quality in China is a good example on why we should do so.
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You can also ride a bike, eat less meat, buy less manufactured consumer crap, and take it easy on the heating and air conditioning.
If your idea is that the tiny percentage of well-heeled, enlightened consumers willing to experiment with rooftop solar is going to save us from global warming, I beg to differ. The kind of effort we need at this point isn't just a "manhattan project", it's not even a "space race", it's more of a "world-war II build-up", and good luck getti
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Then we'd have to go through this 1,749,999 times every week for all the other roofs that would need to be covered to make up for the loss of one coal plant. Or, we can replace that one coal plant shut down every week with one nuclear power plant every week..
That's a lot of people up on roofs installing PV panels. No wonder PV fails compared to nuclear on deaths per terawatt hour. That would be a lot of people up on a roof and a lot of chances for people to fall off and break their neck.
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That's a good stat to have at hand, where's it from?
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Deaths per terawatt hour produced, by energy source:
http://www.nextbigfuture.com/2... [nextbigfuture.com]
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A nuclear plant takes a lot more concrete and steel than a natural gas plant. A NG plant can range from a small building containing a single turbine upwards. The nuclear plant will contain the reactor dome, fuel storage, control area, and if there isn't a large source of water nearby, a cooling tower. And the reactor dome will use lots of specialized concrete to deal with radiation and contain any possible releases. Of course new ones now have to handle attacks such as an airplane being flown into them.
T
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Do your figures for wind and solar include government subsidies?
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How does nuclear look if you change the metric to "lives significantly damaged"? It's hard to find stats but Fukushima alone is at least 300,000 by conservative estimates.
Does your costing include accidents? Fukushima decommissioning alone is looking at being around $100bn, and the compensation costs have not even got to court yet.
It also depends on the country. The UK's nuclear is way more expensive, and there are not many places it can be built. Offshore wind actually compares pretty well already.
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How many of those 30K "lives significantly damaged" were the result of Fukushima, and how many were the result of the Earthquake and Tsunami?
However, it should be noted that more people have died, just in the USA, just in the 20th century, than even your worst case for nuclear (counting "significant damage" against "death") worldwide....
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***sighs*** Way too early in the AM.
Insert "mining coal" after "have died" in the previous post....
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All of them. I was only counting the people displaced by the evacuation zone and directly effected by the nuclear disaster. About 1,000,000 more were the result of the earthquake, about half being evacuees.
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How does nuclear look if you change the metric to "lives significantly damaged"? It's hard to find stats but Fukushima alone is at least 300,000 by conservative estimates.
The Fukushima reactors that were damaged were old designs that were months or even days from being retired and dismantled. We don't build them like that any more. It's like you are saying we should stop building automobiles because you just read Unsafe At Any Speed from 1966.
It's impossible to compute "lives significantly damaged" as how would one define "damage" or even "significant"? An easy metric is deaths because death is a very final and binary state. From that we see with nuclear power, even with
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You are comparing a single solar power plant from Chile to a single nuclear power plant in the UK. Is that a fair comparison? I stated averages in the USA and even so I'm sure we can find outliers that can make the comparison favor of any energy source we choose.
Let's put that aside and take it from another angle. I've been told for years that I am somehow obligated to pay higher utility rates in order to reduce my impact on the environment. If that is true then nuclear still wins in this comparison in
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If you can build solar more cheaply than nuclear, then you can replace more coal for the same budget, meaning more lives saved.
Sure, "if", but we can't. At least not yet. Nuclear is cheaper than solar right now and safer than solar right now. So if the goal is to save lives then we should be building nuclear power plants right now.
I pointed this out from the start but it seems I must repeat myself. If we can assume that solar will get cheaper in the future due to technological advancement then we should be able to also assume that nuclear power will get cheaper due to technological advancement.
You are also comparing a privately
Problem solved (Score:1)
I'm really glad everything is solved now and we won't have to listen to climate change alarmists any more. Congrats guys. You can stop spending your time on prophetic doomsday storytelling and go out and do something productive now -- if you can somehow find a way to produce anything of value without using any energy.
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Treaties vs. Executive Agreements: When Does Congress Get a Vote?
http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/... [wsj.com]
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Speaking of Trump, climate change, and the Chinese, we have Trump's famous tweet [twitter.com] that explains his position on the subject with atypical clarity.
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Yes, put our country back to work, let the market decide which technologies are efficient enough to take on coal. Why is our government only choosing energy production that only works when it's sunny or windy? Why is Bill Gates funding nuclear technology advancement in China and not here? Government shouldn't be picking winners and losers.
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Yes, put our country back to work, let the market decide which technologies are efficient enough to take on coal. Why is our government only choosing energy production that only works when it's sunny or windy? Why is Bill Gates funding nuclear technology advancement in China and not here? Government shouldn't be picking winners and losers.
And furthermore:
- Canned talking point
- Canned talking point
- Unsubstantiated "fact"
- Canned talking point
- Political dog whistle
Re:Trump will reverse it (Score:5, Insightful)
coal and oil are subsidized. there is a huge federal fund to pay for coal workers health problems which should be paid by the customers via higher prices. same with oil where the government leases land and passes all kinds of laws in case oil companies get sued after a spill
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And who pays into those funds? The oil/coal producers.
The funds exist so the producers cannot declare bankruptcy and walk away. This is not the 1800s any more, there is a bit of control for the secondary effects.
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Removing all subsidies to fossil fuels was on the table at Paris but, surprise, voted down.
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Also, don't forget the humble Felis Catus.
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Research the 1937 Pitman_Robertson Act. It is a 11% federal excise tax on firearms, ammunition, bows and arrows. This generates between $177 and $324 million dollars a year for wildlife consonvertation. Hunters are the best conservationist. Without animals and habitat you have no hunting.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Trump, our savior!
I know you're trolling (Score:3)
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Yes, reduced demand in China is the single largest contributor to the ongoing bankruptcies in the coal industry. However, on the electricity generation front, coal is being displaced by cheaper options like combined-cycle natural gas, wind, and solar. This means that coal is unlikely to make a come-back. Those supported by the coal industry would be wise to ignore Trump and get on a different career path.
I used to be very pessimistic that society could reduce its fossil fuel use, but the shift away from coa
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It was being shipped to China to make steel.
Coal used to make steel ("antracit") is more rare and expensive than brown coal used by electric power plants.
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Err why am I trolling? This is what he said http://www.ecowatch.com/trump-... [ecowatch.com]
Quoting his press release https://www.donaldjtrump.com/p... [donaldjtrump.com]
Cancel the Paris Climate Agreement (limit global warming to 2 degrees Celsius) and stop all payments of U.S. tax dollars to U.N. global warming programs.
[...]
Save the coal industry and other industries threatened by Hillary Clinton’s extremist agenda.
Trump is a genius (Score:1)
He'll make sure that america stays on coal and gas, just so that the coal miners still have work and don't have to adapt to progress. Great, isn't it?
Trump will invent a new type of energy system to get us off of coal once and for all. That's pretty smart for a politician!
(For those following at home, I projected something wonderful onto my candidate, then praised him for it. The OP projected something stupid on my candidate, then scorned him for it.)
Instead of all this projection, shouldn't we stick to what the candidates actually say and do?
Tell me about *your* candidate. What has she actually done? No projection or words, what has she actually done th
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She isn't Donald Trump.
Unfortunately, that has to be enough for me.
I'll never support that racist prick.
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And you call Trump a racist.
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Instead, you choose to support a sexist and racist woman? Or are you voting for Green or Libertarian and their incredibly short sighted and pandering platforms?
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Well, she hasn't had a chance to do anything - Why, she was only First Lady of the United States for 8 years, A US Senator for another 8 years, then Secretary of State for 4 years... How is she supposed to have effected any change in the world?
(For those that want to push back on her time as First Lady, I direct your attention to
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If he's saying "energy revolution" he invites you to project "trump is making america use green technologies". But he is proposing exactly the opposite: http://www.ecowatch.com/trump-... [ecowatch.com]
Quoting his press release https://www.donaldjtrump.com/p... [donaldjtrump.com] , he wants to:
Cancel the Paris Climate Agreement (limit global warming to 2 degrees Celsius) and stop all payments of U.S. tax dollars to U.N. global warming programs.
[...]
Save the coal industry and other industries threatened by Hillary Clinton’s extremist agenda.
And for the coal workers: At one of his rallies in west virginia he has said this [slate.com]:
Let me tell you: the miners in West Virginia and Pennsylvania, which was so great to me last week and Ohio and all over, they're going to start to work again, believe me. You're going to be proud again to be miners.
I don't know whether it qualifies as "projection" if you are just quoting his words as he says so much, but show me the quote where he said the thing about the new energy
Re: Trump will reverse it (Score:2)
Re:Trump will reverse it (Score:5, Informative)
The US 'formally' joining the Paris Accord is based on Obama's claim that it's not actually a treaty, and therefore doesn't actually require Congressional ratification, despite the fact that that it incorporates compulsory actions on the part of the signatory countries, and is therefore a treaty.
Well it doesn't have any penalties. JFK could say "we will send a man to the moon by the end of the decade" without any legal problems of binding Congress and future presidents because it's no more than a statement of intent. The Paris accords are pretty much the same, we promise to work to reduce climate change. If we don't... we don't. Nothing has been explicitly regulated or banned, no money has been explicitly promised, it's basically a statement of good intentions put to paper. It's a symbolic agreement with less teeth than the Kyoto protocol exactly so it can pass anywhere, like the UN declaration of human rights even though they're regularly violated in many countries of the world.
Beside the point (Score:2, Offtopic)
The US 'formally' joining the Paris Accord is based on Obama's claim that it's not actually a treaty, and therefore doesn't actually require Congressional ratification, despite the fact that that it incorporates compulsory actions on the part of the signatory countries, and is therefore a treaty.
Well it doesn't have any penalties.
Is that the relevant point?
You don't think that agreements should be ratified when they don't have penalties?
You're saying it's okay for the president to speak for the country and make agreements without oversight?
Could there be any bad consequences down the road if we let it pass this one time?
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Is that the relevant point? You don't think that agreements should be ratified when they don't have penalties? You're saying it's okay for the president to speak for the country and make agreements without oversight? Could there be any bad consequences down the road if we let it pass this one time?
Well, it'd hardly be the first time (source) [americanfo...ations.com]:
Presidents often have chosen to exclude the Senate in making some controversial and historic international pacts through the channel of executive agreements, among them, the destroyer-base deal with Great Britain in 1940, the Yalta and Potsdam agreements of 1945, the Vietnam peace agreement of 1973, and the Sinai agreements of 1975.
If you can end WWII with a few executive agreements, a fluffy climate promise seems like small potatoes. It's constitutionally controversial, but there's also tons of small practical agreements made here and there with other nations. It was probably never the intent that the president had to run back to Congress to get their permission to give an embassy an extra parking spot. It's actually an odd coupling, Congress can declare war but the President can apparentl
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Is that the relevant point? You don't think that agreements should be ratified when they don't have penalties? You're saying it's okay for the president to speak for the country and make agreements without oversight? Could there be any bad consequences down the road if we let it pass this one time?
Well, it'd hardly be the first time (source) [americanfo...ations.com]:
You kinda left out this part:
Controversy surrounds the legal authority of the president to make executive agreements. The practice of unilateral presidential accords with foreign nations conflicts with the constitutional emphasis on joint decision-making, and with the Framers' understanding of the reach and breadth of the treaty power, which Hamilton described in a letter under the pseudonym "Camillus" as "competent to all the stipulations which the exigencies of national affairs might require; competent to the making of treaties of alliance, treaties of commerce, treaties of peace, and every other species of convention usual among nations. And it was emphatically for this reason that it was so carefully guarded; the cooperation of two-thirds of the Senate with the president, being required to make any treaty whatever."
The BEST defense of Obama that you can muster is "others have done it too!!!!"
REALLY?!?!!
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It does have the effect of making a country's leadership look bad if they do not join the majority or joining, if they fail completely to make improvement.
Like the other guy posted, Donald Trump [slashdot.org] can be seen an example of someone who if elected does not intend to work towards the goals in this Accord. How does that make him look? Like a conspiracy loon, on top of other things.
https://twitter.com/realdonald... [twitter.com]
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You have a really low opinion of Hillary Clinton-- oh wait, you're assuming a Republican sweep? Heh.
If Trump is elected, no one is going to be worried about looking like an Obama-lover... it's more likely two-thirds of the country would be trying to secede and take Britain's place in the EU.
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Try envisioning an economic boom from a massive economic stimulus from an infrastructure build-up on a scale comparable to the WWII effort.
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It sounds like these people would welcome a global economic collapse, or at least a Western economic collapse, as a shortcut towards reducing major sources of GHGs like industrial/power generation activities and population numbers through attrition from the resulting wars, mass starvation, and domestic rebellion/violence/riots within the various affected developed nations that a major global economic disaster would precipitate.
Strat
As opposed to global economic collapse due to effects of global warming? Billions to trillions of dollars spent on adapting as coastal cities slowly go underwater, millions of climate refugees seeking new places to live, wars over resources as water supply and agricultural areas change.
Energy is mostly a fungible resource. Whether you produce it with fossil fuels or renewable energy it's still the same thing. It's time to let go of the past and look to the future.
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Energy is mostly a fungible resource. Whether you produce it with fossil fuels or renewable energy it's still the same thing. It's time to let go of the past and look to the future.
What replaces fossil fuels must have comparable energy densities and portability/replenishment/refueling cycle times and ranges.
What many fail to factor seriously enough is the effects of energy price increases on the poor and working-poor.
The effects of rising energy costs can be measured in lives lost among the most vulnerable. How many grannies freezing to death and babies starving per kilowatt/hour are you willing to pay for pushing energy costs up by pushing alternative energy sources that aren't yet m
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What replaces fossil fuels must have comparable energy densities and portability/replenishment/refueling cycle times and ranges.
You're thinking in terms of transportation which accounts for about 28% of our energy use (in the USA [eia.gov]). Most stationary applications can use electrical power and it doesn't matter how that's generated. Even in transportation electric cars currently have the range for about 90% of most people's driving and with battery technology improving year by year the range continues to improve.
Solar and wind power are competitive on price with other forms of power generation and they continue to get cheaper. It's ju
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Yes, I agree. I generalized greatly. My post was starting to get long. Posts on an internet forum are a clumsy & ham-handed way to discuss an extremely complicated and nuanced subject.
In an effort to promote clarity, I try to keep posts relatively brief and as a result have to stay away from 'going into the weeds' too far when covering multiple aspects of a subject, as the 'wal
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A trace component that is actually REQUIRED for life as we know it on this planet no less.
Fuck the climate religion.
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No, no trouble. They'll just have their nonsense called out. By your weird logic drowning is impossible as we need water to live. You don't seem to understand some rather basic science.
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