India Wants 'Phase Down' on All Fossil Fuels at COP27 (bloomberg.com) 46
India is leading a push for the COP27 climate summit to conclude with a decision on phasing down all fossil fuels, a move that would expand the focus from just coal, but is likely to raise strong concerns from oil and gas-reliant countries. From a report: Indian negotiators formally called on the Egyptian Presidency of climate talks for the expanded language to be included in the cover text, a political statement of how countries will seek to tackle the climate crisis, according to people familiar with the matter. The push stems largely from the coal-dependent country's desire to not be singled out for its dependence on the dirty fossil fuel. The request is likely to put India at odds with other countries within its "Like-Minded Group of Developing Countries" negotiating bloc, like China and Saudi Arabia, who have typically acted as a brake on more climate ambition. There will also probably be concern that India's push is an effort to muddy the waters in reducing fossil fuel use globally, by making it harder to track and compare progress.
And I want to lose weight in 2023. (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe I will, maybe I won't... but best not look at historical precedent.
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I've lost 15kg since 1 Jan this year.
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Great job taking my "I lost weight" comment and turning it around into another climate debate, dude. How do people live around you?
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That's good. You need to have a goal. Even if you don't achieve it there's only one thing certain if you don't have a goal: you definitely wouldn't achieve it.
Re: And I want to lose weight in 2023. (Score:2)
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I'm over 50. My blood sugars are fine. My cholesterol is... actually, fantastic. My blood pressure is "slightly elevated" (12x / 8x) with x between 4 / 9. Clean scan across the board, including the dreaded colonoscopy.
I'm healthy. Just fat. :)
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50s is still relatively young, so you have a good chance of not having developed any major issues yet.
But if your weight is high enough that you think about it, then not having developed major issues generally won't remain true through your 60s, 70s or
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The good news is that given historical precedent among the males in my family, I don't have to worry about my 80's.
I'm already avoiding the biggest single killer among them... I've never been a smoker. Heart disease is lurking in the shadows, though... unannounced, but quietly biding it's time...
Russian oil (Score:4, Insightful)
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Germany is winding down Russian imports while Mondi immediately jumped in to bail out his bro
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Germany is winding down Russian imports while Mondi immediately jumped in to bail out his bro
The funniest thing about this is that the German experience should be a lesson for India. The Germans also thought that Russia was their friend and that they could use trade with Russia to bring it into the sensible future where invading other countries is pointless and worse than just trading with them.
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Actually we rationalise why everyone deals with the devil: Infrastructure takes a while to change, and while oil is a perfectly fungible resource, the transportation of it from seller to buyer is not involving both shipping (internationally strained), and facilities to receive said ships.
The only thing worth rationalising here is that past policy by the west was to enrich struggling countries with the view that by boosting their economy and giving them a taste of what we have, they will default to forming s
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"Somehow people rationalize why Germany has to deal with the devil. "
Who does this?
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India is a developing country. They are where we where back when our emissions were sky high.
Asking them to forgo or delay development isn't realistic or fair. What we need to do is help. Make low emission technology cheap and available. India is developing a domestic renewables industry, but there is more we can do to help.
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India is developing a domestic renewables industry, but there is more we can do to help.
There is plenty we can do. The biggest thing would be to provide investment money for India's Thorium based nuclear project. This way they will have a fall back to make up for the unreliability of renewables. It makes sense for India to go this route as there are lots of easy to extract thorium deposits in the country. Current plans are for India to be 30% powered by thorium-based reactors by 2050.
Go India!
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Yes, a tariff per kWh of carbon emitted during the item's production will quickly make low emission technology cheap by comparison.
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Where the oil comes from is irrelevant to the AGW factor, so while yes they should stop that, it doesn't have anything to do with this.
Re:How to [not] bankrupt a nation... (Score:4, Insightful)
Spend an increasing portion of your annual budget subsidizing alternative energy sources without a financial return on investment.
You do know that the amount of the annual budget spent subsidizing alternative energy sources is so small in the US that you can't see it with a microscope against the $6.27 trillion dollar budget.
Multiply it by ten, multiply it by a hundred, it's still a sliver too small to notice.
You're worried about the US budget, pay attention to the big stuff, not the tiny stuff.
What India wants != What India does (Score:2)
Best way to understand India is to compare it to the Brownian motion [wikipedia.org] of ions in an electrolyte with a very mild electric field.
The leadership applies 2 micro volts between cathod and anode but most of the ions are hardly affected, they do their own random stuff.
Do they even have real winters? (Score:1)
Re:Do they even have real winters? (Score:4, Insightful)
You know that it snows in northern India, right? They're bordered by the Himalayan mountains.
Then build nuclear (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Then build nuclear (Score:4, Insightful)
Some of the new designs for nuclear power stations promise to address some of the more suspect aspects of current designs and while the management of of nuclear waste is still a big issue it is trivial compared to CO2 reduction.
Right now I see nuclear as a way to buy time and if they can get it right it may have a place long term for base load power generation. If they can ever get fusion power to scale I see that as a better base load option.
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My poin
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You have an incredible amount of trust in the many demonstrably dysfunctional governments around the world.
In any case, it would be an economic disaster for India. They really can't afford it. Developed nations barely can. The UK's Hinkley C increased in cost by £3 billion *this year* alone.
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Hinkley C will low electricity costs? It's currently guaranteed at around 5x the price that offshore wind gets for the energy it will one day generate. While it gets more expensive, wind gets cheaper.
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What are you talking about? Average electricity costs in the UK are much higher than the strike price for Hinkley Point C. It was higher before the Ukraine war, and is much higher now. So HPC will actually lower costs dumbfuck. Maybe you should stop worshipping on the alter of LCOE considering how dishonest it is.
Wind is intermittent dumbfuck. So you actually want to continue burning fossil fuels
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You seem to be confusing wholesale price with the strike price.
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Except that the consumer won't pay less, they will pay more. They aren't even trying to hide it, the justification was that we "need" it even at the higher cost.
Who let the PHB's out, woof woof (Score:1)
"Phase Down" has MBA marketers written all over it. With enough synergy and influence-oriented strategic teamwork, their goal is within the vicinity of the stakeholders' reality circle.
Sustainable future (Score:2)
They have set a target of using 100% dried cattle dung for fuel by 2025. President Biden had John Kerry deliver a congratulatory letter in response to the announcement.
Good luck India (Score:2)
Screwed priorities in India (Score:3)
Screwed priorities in India
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Population control (Score:1)
Slash and burn (Score:2)
Their pollution is now mostly farmers clearing their fields like they've done forever. Lots of choking smoke and CO2 emission. No fossil fuel, though!
They could be making biochar out of it and sequester C for a thousand years, and improve the soil besides.