[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: "Looking back" from 2050 AUSTRALIA 2050 Its 2050 and heres where we stand
The data-based conclusion by the US National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has shown mean global land surface and ocean temperatures through the first decade of the 21st century were the warmest on record (since 1880). This, together with the retrospective linking of global warming and the increased incidence of severe weather events (from 2009) across the planet had, by the early 2020s, pretty much convinced all citizens and responsible heads of major companies, institutions and governments that anthropogenic climate change was both real and dangerous. The need for immediate action was further emphasised by the oil shock of 2018 and by the massive, recurrent disruptions in food supplies (and consequent political destabilisation) that resulted from unpredicted flooding, snow storms, and droughts exacerbated by extreme temperatures and forest fires. Though much of the substantial ocean rise we are experiencing now, in 2050, was still in the future, it was already obvious that continued inaction and business-as-usual approach was no longer an option. Fortunately, as soon as appropriate carbon pricing schedules were adopted globally, a number of research-based developments in alternative energy generation that had long been funded by enlightened governments and philanthropic organisations were available for scale-up and implementation. But it was still a tragedy the world had to wait until 2022 before any major consensus was reached; and even then, full implementation took a further decade. The fact this could have happened 30 years earlier remained in everyones consciousness, but theres no sense thinking in terms of coulda, woulda, shoulda". Now, in 2050, weve long since capped the natural gas wells and the only carbon-based fuels are those derived from algal/microbial systems that take in as much CO@2; as they give out. Following the total depletion of accessible oil that happened suddenly with increased prosperity in China and India, the production of plastics switched to coal-based systems, with an increasing contribution from biopolymers. We were also extraordinarily fortunate that the various genome projects, starting with the draft human genome in 2001 and initiatives such as Craig Venters sampling of all life forms in the upper surface of the oceans, had given us an enormous spectrum of new molecular strategies for converting sunlight (and CO@2;) directly into energy. Then, with the full exploitation of geothermal, tide, wind and solar for electricity generation and storage (using hot salt or water pumped up hill) that followed the massive expansion of national grids, the planet was finally in reasonable shape as far as renewables were concerned. Some energy strategies have been less successful. Though the physicists are still in agreement that nuclear fusion could be made to work, any commercially viable option still seems to be at least 20 years off and there looks to be no immediate way of heating/ cooling some regions of the northern hemisphere without the continued use of nuclear fission. Still, the hard-won political stability we now see in what was once called the Middle East has removed any serious threat of nuclear conflict, and the fact that the necessity for global sustainability and equity dominates thinking and practice has made our world a much safer place. Once we had agreed universally that the true values for humanity were compassion, generosity, happiness and educated awareness rather than mindless consumption and self-serving greed, the nature of society was transformed. We still have enormous issues to deal with given the extraordinary environmental degradation and resource depletion that marked that latter 20th and early 21st centuries, but there is a clear and positive way forward. We should wish.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Tatarewicz, farmfriend (#0)
An interesting collection of mis and dis information. While we have some severe environmental problems Glowbull Warming ain't one of them. 1. If you factor out the heat island effect of large cities, use readings from only good and verifiable stations, and don't cherry pick the data to support a faulty premise the first decade of the 21st century was on average cooler than the last decade of the 20th century. 2. A major consensus has been reached but it is not politically acceptable to the forces pushing for a Carbon Tax to further vacuum the wallets of the serfs. 3. Peak Oil is a fraud. Venezuela has TRILLIONS of barrels of oil, and the North American Continent has vast reserves that are being kept off of the market. Oil is produced abiotically by natural geologic processes. We are literally floating on petroleum. The quantity is so vast that even if we maintained our current level of consumption the reserves already known and proven are enough to last another several hundred years. 4. A practical fusion design NOW exists. A professor in Italy has developed a practical cold fusion design and it is now in the stages of being adapted to commercial use. We are entering an era of UNLIMITED energy. The Glowbull Warming kooks are operating off of a hidden agenda and Glowbull Warming is nothing more than a Trojan Horse hiding the real agenda which is total planetary control of all living men, women, and children.
There are no replies to Comment # 1. End Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|