#14 One Thing That Will Guarantee Climate Disaster

Published: June 27, 2018, 3:07 p.m.

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While the U.S. announced intention to pull out of the Paris Climate Agreement is bad news, it seems to have inspired a lot of carbon-reducing promises at other levels across the country. And that is good news. Dana and Dave lament the biggest hurdle in the path to a survivable climate \\u2013 the fact that economic growth is the number one public policy goal around the world. In many cases it is the one thing policymakers won\\u2019t sacrifice in efforts to curb the growth of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere.

We seem to be putting all our eggs in the technology basket, hoping we can run an ever-growing economy on more and more solar, wind, geothermal and hydro power and use technology to shrink that mushrooming global economy\\u2019s carbon footprint. Some economists think we can do that. Many scientists do not. Ozzie Zehner, in his 2012 book Green Illusions, noted several studies that indicate we might need to change our ways beyond just switching power sources.

\\u201cAlternative energy is not a free ride, just a different ride...and there\\u2019s no reason to believe it will offset fossil fuel use in a society that has high levels of consumption and is growing exponentially.\\u201d\\xa0 \\u2013 Ozzie Zehner

\\u201c\\u2026many of us, like Koningstein and Fork, have been asking the wrong questions of renewables. We\\u2019ve been demanding that they continue to power a growth-based consumer economy that is inherently unsustainable for a variety of reasons (the most obvious one being that we live on a small planet with finite resources). The fact that renewables can\\u2019t do that shouldn\\u2019t actually be surprising.\\u201d \\u2013 Richard Heinberg

The most optimistic economists believe we can \\u201cdecouple\\u201d economic activity from environmental impacts. A number of realities intrude into that daydream. For a more thorough exploration, see the links below.

The GrowthBusters team also wonders why few, if any, climate-focused environmental groups are pushing citizens to modify their own lives to shrink their carbon footprints. We also remind ourselves that we face limits to growth in many areas beyond our climate\\u2019s capacity as a carbon sink.

Plus, in the earth-shattering sustainability news department, did you know the cardboard core of your roll of toilet paper is recyclable? And, finally, Dana explains to Dave why she is a pescatarian.

LINKS:

Paris deal: a year after Trump announced US exit, a coalition fights to fill the gap

The decoupling delusion: rethinking growth and\\xa0sustainability

Ozzie Zehner\\u2019s \\u2018Green Illusions\\u2019 Ruffles Feathers

Study suggests choice between green energy or economic growth

Our Renewable Future

Can the world thrive on 100% renewable energy?

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