I don't feel doomed be because these problems are unsolvable. I feel doomed because the people in charge refuse to solve them and people are disenfranchised and powerless to hold the people in charge accountable.
@ncedwards12345 ай бұрын
It helps to do what we can, like changing our diets and realizing we vote with our wallets. Not EVERYONE can immediately do this, but many of us can. Those of us that can, should, else we shouldn't be passing the blame up the chain til we have done our part FIRST. Then if we've justifiably passed the blame along by doing our part, and things still don't progress, there's always less peaceful solutions if necessary.
@bartroberts15145 ай бұрын
@@ncedwards1234 It doesn't help to "do what we can" if all we do just in the end leads to more emissions. Vote against fossil wallets. Campaign against fossil appetites. Have an actual effect.
@neonchronicles5 ай бұрын
@@ncedwards1234I agree this is a great start!
@neonchronicles5 ай бұрын
@@bartroberts1514I agree this is what we need to do to go the extra mile and get to a healthier future faster. Accountability is key, and corporations need to be SHOUTED at, boycotted, and made an example of to become accountable.
@bartroberts15145 ай бұрын
@@neonchronicles Corporations? They just react to the playing field given them by governments and public servants. SHOUT at the people who issue the fossil trade licenses to explore, extract, export, import, trade and exploit the bitumen, coal, gas and oil that makes up the bulk of the cause of climate crisis.
@isolationnationn4 ай бұрын
The problems are solvable. That’s why it’s depressing that nothing is being solved.
@zd13224 ай бұрын
The problems are being solved, at various rates. Don’t be such a bonehead.
@Ronald-gu3ft4 ай бұрын
They aren't.
@nizahe27314 ай бұрын
@@zd1322 Ye what changed exacly?
@duanesworld0014 ай бұрын
@nizahe2731 the decline of combustion engines, electricity produced by coal, people minds on land use. You might not see it, but it's happening
@happyEmpath4 ай бұрын
The EGO and GREED of people is not easily solved. We are no ant colony. =D
@tctommie685 ай бұрын
It's not only climate, but also the loss of biodiversity and nature.
@Roel_Scoot4 ай бұрын
Global warming and climate change is far more demanding because that is a explosive phenomenon that any sudden moment in time if unattended will grow out of control.
@robertmaloney22554 ай бұрын
Human species are the biggest cause of loss of nature
@PandoraJonesmodel4 ай бұрын
6th mass extinction
@ianhansen68404 ай бұрын
99 percent (and more) of everything that ever lives, dies out. It's part of the process of nature called entropy. It seems to apply to everything in the universe. Everything that becomes ordered and structured like organisms eventually breaks down and is recycled or otherwise disordered....
@urduib4 ай бұрын
There is now 100 times the mass of people in the world in the form of plastic
@kazstrankowski87215 ай бұрын
Why is the burden of reducing emissions on the average citizen when the majority of the pollution is created by energy generation, industry, and manufacturing? We have all been recycling for years only to find out that almost none of it is recycled. This is a governance issue...
@5353Jumper5 ай бұрын
Because citizens work for corporations. Citizens change at home, then take those philosophies to the workplace and drive change there too. Maybe even use consumer pressure for companies to do better, though actively making environmental factors part of our buying decisions, at home and at work, and in investing. This is a market economy. Changes like this need to come from the demand side. Not one person, billions of people. All of us. There is no way in this economic system that a company can make the change out of some kind of altruistic benevolence. We can not expect oil companies to stop making fuel if we are demanding fuel. We can not expect grocery stores to stop stocking foreign foods and carbon intense foods if we are demanding those foods. We cannot expect car companies to stop making fuel vehicles if we are demanding fuel vehicles. We cannot reduce global shipping if we are demanding foreign products. And we cannot expect out representatives in government to make any changes if we are not telling them how we want to be represented and how we want our tax dollars spent. Recycling is high risk and low profit, so it is not likely that the private sector will spring up a lot of new facilities anytime soon. If you want to recycle more of our waste, we the citizens need to tell our government representatives to fund recycling facilities. If we the citizens want factory emissions reduced by regulations, we need to tell our representatives to regulate factory emissions. Yes, telling one person to make lifestyle changes will not solve anything. Billions of us need to make lifestyle changes to reduce/solve this problem.
@passwordprotectedd5 ай бұрын
@@5353Jumper so you're admitting the current economic system is a pervasive failure that is doomed to self destruct, correct?
@5353Jumper5 ай бұрын
@passwordprotectedd for sure global change us totally required. That is what the citizens of the world need to demand and make happen.
@curties5 ай бұрын
because companies dont change if they dont have to and governments dont force companies to change their ways until citizens start voting for change.
@frodehau5 ай бұрын
Oil companies have bought up and closed tram lines, spend billions on lobbying (against solar for example) and on PR campaigns for among other things recycling and to blame the people or "the consumer". The power is distributed as asymmetrical as it can be. We must regulate industries much harder, and redistribute much more wealth to avoid revolts. I know, this is very unpopular among the "conservatives", but it must happen if we want to beat this.
@presbiteroo5 ай бұрын
I think the only reason people are pessimistic is because not much is being done. This would change very quickly is there was a real interest in making things better.
@happyEmpath4 ай бұрын
The Elite makes more money from ruining the planet than saving the planet... Look at the case of the "trash queen" in Sweden.
@Alessandro15f4 ай бұрын
That’s a ridiculous statement. Problems are being solved, but you can’t do that in 2 years. The development of solar and wind started decades ago and just recently became cheap enough to replace fossil fuels. Electric cars are being developed for at least 20 years but it will take some more to make them as competitive as normal cars. Governments put billions and billions every year to sustain these and so many other technologies. So it’s all good? Definitely not, most companies just do greenwashing and many countries do nothing to support green initiatives, but that doesn’t mean there’s no progress. If you look at data and state of technologies instead of the news you can see we’re getting closer to the right path
@EricMossthestrongmanexperience3 ай бұрын
@@Alessandro15fI certainly hope so
@dahanibanani83953 ай бұрын
You are so right. I would feel so much more optimistic if there were actual persons in power that are truly and honestly interested in saving our planet.
@ineuifity20 күн бұрын
@@dahanibanani8395 There are. But making an organization make any decisions is one of the hardest things to do. The more public sector, such as the government, an organization is, the greater responsibility they hold while having to overcome so many more dissenting voices. It's a miracle how anything gets done! Have you ever seen a household not fight about how money is being spent? I haven't. Now imagine an entire country where you have millions of people affected by the policy decisions. Agreeing how to live together is not easy, give leaders more slack. They're under a lot of pressure. If you aren't going to step up to the podium and take on the challenge of finding a solution that will make everyone happy, then at the very least show a little more gratitude for when things are working.
@saddlebearАй бұрын
What can I do now? I’m stopping buying stuff. I repair whatever I can. I grow, preserve and make my own food. Also, stopping buying stuff reduces electric use, fossil fuel use, transportation use, packaging waste, animal abuse, keeps money in my pocket and reduces the influence of government and corporations in my life. It’s also more fun.
@carlbennett241716 күн бұрын
That's great. We also need to think collectively, which means influencing neighbours, community, politics.
@GraceBrooks-zy3msКүн бұрын
If you haven't already, switching to a plant based diet has a huge impact. People will argue it won't matter bc *insert excuse here* but it will. It's the most impactful thing an individual person can choose. People just don't want to do it 😅
@pinealgland6592Күн бұрын
@@GraceBrooks-zy3msyess thank you, finally someone that adresses the single, biggest and easiest thing to do against climate crisis, biodiversity loss etc
@paulwheaton5 ай бұрын
I cannot control politicians, industry or billionaires. But I have chipped away at my own 30 tons of CO2. Gardening, planting trees, dramatically reducing the energy I use, and heating with a rocket mass heater. No sacrifice - everything is about making a better life AND it happens to chip away at my CO2. I think I am now in the space of chipping away CO2 for others.
@StefanoCreatini5 ай бұрын
And you have taught thousands to do the same
@crapisnice5 ай бұрын
Don't forget solar thermal heating, cooking even metal melting
@TheAhmetcanization5 ай бұрын
If you want to reduce your own thats fine. But when it comes yo others Stay away with that co2 fantasy
@paulwheaton5 ай бұрын
@@TheAhmetcanization Fanstasy? I'm actually doing it. I hope my efforts inspire others.
@johngeier86925 ай бұрын
The carbon dioxide emissions have the net beneficial effects of greening of the planet with increased agricultural yields, reduced winter heating costs, fewer deaths from hypothermia and postponement of the next glacial maximum. Climate action is an extremely costly and wasteful folly. Tremendous amounts of fossil fuels and capital are being wasted on uneconomical and unreliable renewable energy projects.
@Christian-gb8zf5 ай бұрын
We’re not incapable of developing solutions. We’re bad at implementing solutions
@Alessandro15f4 ай бұрын
@@Alan-tjjthe problem is that people act emotionally instead of using their brain when we talk about human impact on the planet. Most people or think we’re doom(silly) or you that there’s nothing to improve(silly)
@mattdonlan774520 күн бұрын
I’m tired of corporations telling us it’s our individual faults when the corporations are responsible for 80% of the problem. It’s not the consumer’s fault, it’s corporate greed.
@LynXLuvBCompleX17 күн бұрын
It's both. :/ Who consumes what the companies make? We are overpopulated and also consume too much pr person.
@porqupine-ridge16 күн бұрын
Nope. Its shared responsibility. Youre responsible.
@Prokaryotes64214 күн бұрын
No, you and me are also responsible in the way we decide to eat, dress, travel ect. Too easy to put the blame on few 100 billionaires so the rest of humanity can feel good about themselves.
@Venemoth12313 күн бұрын
Earth is not overpopulated. That's not the answer.
@shaykespeeer70405 ай бұрын
IF the solutions are NOT profitable, the wealthiest don't give a shite.
@kma36475 ай бұрын
If the solutions arent profitable, all you're doing is hurting the poor to implement them, and making more poor in the process. Welcome to socialism 101. It's a feature, not a bug.
@LimitedWard5 ай бұрын
Luckily many of the solutions proposed here are very profitable.
@Schinkeldink5 ай бұрын
@@LimitedWard which makes everything even more absurd. what matters in capitalism, if not how profitable something is. Here its ignorance and the wish everything stays the same in a world that literally lives through change. (yes, I'm an entropy enjoyer)
@petefraser50975 ай бұрын
The most profitable solution is just to tax you extra so they can "fix" the problem
@ExpensivePizza5 ай бұрын
First of all, the majority of wealthy people do care about the future of humanity. They have families and children just like everyone else. But you're right, if it's not profitable it is, by definition, not sustainable. The entire point of making a profit is so that businesses can continue to operate. It is not possible to solve climate change on hope alone. It requires a tremendous amount of resources and those resources must be paid for. And if that funding doesn't come from the private sector it'll come from your taxes. And if the government has to pay for it you can be sure of one thing, that'll be the least efficient solution, so be careful what you wish for.
@NihilBeat4 ай бұрын
Not factoring in the structural forces of capitalism as a source of overproduction and overexploitation of human and nature is really a big shortcoming of videos like these.
@anthonymorris50844 ай бұрын
Capitalism does no such thing. Capitalism is an economic mechanism that ensures supply meets demand. Period. If you truly cared about the environment you'd be advocating for less people. Over population is at the foundation of every single threat facing humanity and nature.
@Praisethesunson4 ай бұрын
They aren't allowed to ever challenge the economic status quo that our corporate overlords benefit from.
@anthonymorris50844 ай бұрын
@@Praisethesunson Everybody benefits from the corporate world. They're the entities that hire countless millions of people and provide the products and services you want and need. Where do you think you got the device you're posting with right now that you happily purchased? Where do you think the platform you're happily posting on came from? "Corporate overlords" is hyperbole.
@Praisethesunson4 ай бұрын
@@anthonymorris5084 Corporations are why the number 1 cause of bankruptcy in the U.S is medical debt and why you will never have guaranteed access to basic shelter.
@Praisethesunson4 ай бұрын
@@anthonymorris5084 You have peak serf brain
@dcartier16924 ай бұрын
Life is not possible without ecostasis. The ecostasis we enjoy today is mediated by life. If we keep diminishing biodiversity, we ARE doomed.
@nufh5 ай бұрын
During my childhood, people fixed the ozone layer issue caused by aerosol products, and at that time, there was no social media yet.
@michaelstreeter31255 ай бұрын
Ah yes, Du Pont. They *strongly opposed* the Montreal Protocol - until they snagged a global patent estate for "high-value HFC" production, after which time they supported it. They have several large settlements for infringements. We need a similar business case for eliminating oil and, if it eventuates, oil will go like steam engines. The trouble is, as George Bus said "America is addicted to oil" - meaning oil is priced in dollars and any country that wants to industrialise (and therefore to buy oil) is forced to buy USD first, which they give to SA, who recycle it by buying US treasuries. This is the problem that needs to be fixed. Silly answer - maybe just USA default? Otherwise, something everybody needs has to be priced in USD. I don't know the answer, but *your generation* has to find it.
@flammungous30685 ай бұрын
The reason we could do that was because it didn't effect the general populace at all. You weren't prohibited from buying any product but rather to industries found a replacement. Problem now is that every solution that will mitigate climate change requires people change habits, habits they like. As greatly reducing (and preferably stopping) their consumption of meat, to stop using a car and use public transport, to greatly reduce/stop flying, to not buy and consume stuff willy nilly. Properly handling climate change is going to get really uncomfortable for a lot of people in a way that it hasn't before. That's why I don't think we will be able to do it. People rather have their niceties and comforts now and doom their future than maybe have 50% of their comfort and niceties and ensure we can keep that going forever.
@KerriEverlasting5 ай бұрын
@@nufh go vegan.
@thiemokellner18935 ай бұрын
@@michaelstreeter3125 "You generation has to find it"? My a..., are you almost dead already and do not emit any CO2?
@jaxvoice7185 ай бұрын
@@flammungous3068 It is a change of methodology rather than reducing quality of life. The latter assumption hasn't held, and for the most part is unlikely to hold in the future either. We are happier and healthier after than we were before. EVs are quieter and less polluting than ICEVs. Cars can be useful, but car dependence is not freedom. Cities with good public transport and bike-friendly are more attractive than cities that aren't. Stuff is getting better and easier to use. Unless that stuff is big, heavy and made of steel, concrete or glass, it's unlikely to do much to the climate. There are some things that are hard to abate, like meat and flights. But it is possible to reduce those emissions greatly without forcing people to become vegetarians. Most flights are done by frequent fliers, to whom flying is not much of a luxury. Reducing and offsetting (i.e. taxing) is unlikely to be much of a burden.
@HMohr5 ай бұрын
She forgot to mention the greatest technology we have to tackle climate collapse: BIODIVERSITY
@annapolissolarpunk5 ай бұрын
thank you
@fargoththemoonsugarmaniac5 ай бұрын
that is not a technology
@CrioChamber5 ай бұрын
@@fargoththemoonsugarmaniac No, it isn't, but I get their point. Use natural biochemistry to produce the energy.
@amosbackstrom53665 ай бұрын
@@fargoththemoonsugarmaniac Biodiversity is a technology. It happens to be one that humans did not invent, rather, we're currently destroying it. But, we can adapt it to solve the problems that we have created. The problems that it's been solving all along, until we razed it to the ground.
@fargoththemoonsugarmaniac5 ай бұрын
@@amosbackstrom5366 no, it is not 😅 stop rebranding the meaning of words and check a dictionary or wikipedia. also you really don't have to explain biodiversity (loss) to me.
@coleorum3 ай бұрын
Instead of thinking that we need alternative methods of transport we need to be re-organising our society and infrastructure so that our primary concern is reducing the need to travel in the first place. While we desire to sustain our present way of life by finding alternatives we are doomed to failure. We have to change our attitude to life at more fundamental levels.
@igorcicimov623416 күн бұрын
Exactly, only because of the covid lockdown when people had to stay home China could be seen from space for the first time in 15+ years because the pollution cloud over the country cleared up.
@TheoWerewolf5 ай бұрын
I can't help thinking this is missing the actual problem. No one with any understanding of science believes climate change is unsolvable. It's HOW we get there and what we need to change/give up along the way, and perhaps most, how to do it within the constraints of a free market economy and a popularity-driven political system that is also pro free market to the point where it doesn't want to regulate anything. When you look at most "recycling" and green initiatives, it quickly becomes clear that they do little to stop businesses from polluting, rather they push the cost of dealing with the consequences of bad product choices to the consumer, where it has almost no real effect. Like shopping bags. We used to have free paper bags. Then businesses switched to plastic because they were cheaper per bag, but they were will free to the consumer. Then the gov stepped in and levied a nickel per bag - which the store kept. So it wasn't an incentive to stop using bags for the store - in fact, it was an incentive for the store to KEEP offering them - and since most people didn't bring bags with them, they still used bags., Next the gov banned them but allowed paper bags back in (a dodgy decision since paper has issues in land fills too) but the stores started charging as much as 25c a bag when it used to be free., That pushed the cost to the consumer either by buying paper bags or buying reusable ones - which ALSO had environmental issues (and people will still buy paper if they forget their cloth bags). Sliced cheese is another great example: single slice wrapped cheese is very efficient for the producer and the consumer, but generates tons of plastic. But it's what the consumer likes and regular sliced cheeses either sticks together, or you have to put paper between the slices, either way, wasteful and more expensive. So again, there's no incentive for the producer to find a better way. THEY don't pay for the recycling of all that plastic. The consumer does. EV cars are clearly a better option, but... ICE cars are easier to operate - they take 6 minutes to refill, there are gas stations everywhere and while they are more complicated, the reality is that most modern cars are really well built. Worse, EVs are hard to get - there's a chronic shortage and the base price is almost double that of the ICE cars. These are the actual kinds of problems that need to be solved. Good luck with that.
@DJRussellBrian5 ай бұрын
we are sending 100s of BILLIONS of dollars to China to study pollution and 4 Trillion dollars all together every year until the year 2050... Is this practical? Joe Biden said this is why INFLATION will go up but don't worry folks it will go back down. Elon Musk, the owner of Tesla vehicles knows this is not practical. He could profit VERY WELL if he went along with this because EVERYONE would have to buy electrics vehicles. Elon Musk knows we cannot switch this fast and spend this much money because this is why inflation has gone up and will continue to. We do need to take CO2 emissions seriously but this is not sustainable. Many economist professionals feel this way
@AllenHarris19815 ай бұрын
I tend to agree with this. I didn't see any real improvement solutions in the video. Platitudes and lectures on what can be done is a far cry from implementation. I am not against EVs but I don't have one for the reasons you mentioned. I can't stop by a station and recharge an EV in a timely manner. How about transitional phases like improvements in the hybrid market while infrastructure catches up. Toyota seems to make almost all of their models in a hybrid version, for example. The cost is also not double the regular model.
@DJRussellBrian5 ай бұрын
@@TheoWerewolf wow interesting your comment gets through with all those “facts” but when someone tries to comment on a “factual” comment and give you sense of it from an economic stand point, it gets deleted. That says a lot about the publisher who doesn’t allow their audience to debate
@woefienaam7945 ай бұрын
I am truly proud being one of the people that does not believe in climate change. I deserve to live a good life with the heather on and meat on my table. Everyone who tries to take that a way from me and my family is an terrible human.
@DJRussellBrian5 ай бұрын
@@woefienaam794 I’m surprised your comment wasn’t deleted
@Controversial_issues3 ай бұрын
I don’t feel hopeless because these problems are unsolvable; I feel hopeless because the ones in power just won’t fix them, and it’s frustrating to see that ordinary people are left with no real way to hold them accountable. How did we get to a point where those who can make a difference choose not to, and the rest of us are stuck watching, feeling powerless?
@hamburgler227Ай бұрын
Did you just reword someone else’s comment? “I don’t feel doomed bc….” 😂😂
@BryJovi1714 күн бұрын
5:24 there's no WAY on earth a car's electric battery lasts 12 YEARS. Our smartphones batteries only last 2-3 years at best, based on daily charging. Once a battery is charged 500 times it loses it's ability to hold as much charge as at the start. This chart is simply deceiving because car battery technology is obviously based on similar principles to smartphone batteries, just on a bigger scale involving more energy...
@SketchyRob14 күн бұрын
The truly green thing to do is maintaining our existing fleet of vehicles
@BryJovi1714 күн бұрын
@SketchyRob but rich people like buying new things 🙃
@TeslaJigsaw4 күн бұрын
EV Batteries do degrade over time (old EV's, more than new improved battery technology) but there are millions of EV's working perfectly well after 12+ years. I've met people will 300,000 mile Teslas! Most people miss that 95% of the Battery materials can (and are) being recycled into new batteries too, as this is cheaper than mining for new materials (See 'Redwood Materials' for example) Smartphone and EV batteries are very different things.
@steviek65 ай бұрын
The military isn’t mentioned in the video or in these comments. That’s too bad since war and the military have destroyed much of the lands that can be used for sustainable growth as well as much of the economic energy of human creativity. Destroying (entropy) materials versus designing and building the future answers to huge questions will be the factor that either leads to a positive future or a terrible dystopia
@crapisnice5 ай бұрын
And the creation of waste fallacy, everything thrown yo landfills
@craig00775 ай бұрын
The Military Industrial Complex is NEVER questioned about their use of fossil fuels.
@jordeahgrosko5 ай бұрын
@@craig0077unfortunately true
@jonfallis30518 күн бұрын
look at the destruction of ukraine farmland
@debyte5 ай бұрын
Human Climate Change crisis action: there is a massive difference between ‘can’ and ‘will’.
@timothyrussell44455 ай бұрын
The will is in all of us.
@Ry-lx2kl5 ай бұрын
@@debyte what's the acceptable number of deaths from skyrocketing energy prices? What is the acceptable inflation from such causes?
@bigbenguitarslinger4945 ай бұрын
@@Ry-lx2klfrom what I have seen command economies do in the past,resource deprivation for targeted groups have been used to eliminate dissent from regimes. The perception of a crisis is exactly what governments use to seize inordinate levels of power over their citizens. The death toll from starvation is a benefit to the Stalins and Hitlers of the 21rst century. All Klaus Scwab needs is a pencil mustache......
@AlignmentCoaching5 ай бұрын
@@Ry-lx2kl what’s the acceptable price you’re putting on life as we know it on your planet? We are in the midst of a mass extinction event caused by us…you want number of deaths? Just wait. Energy prices and inflation won’t mean anything in comparison.
@shutincharlie34615 ай бұрын
They are two different words....
@alexanderreina51139 күн бұрын
I think this is a great and super well explained video. Super interesting to understand more of the causes of emissions and the solutions being currently developed with the progress they've made. I wish there were more videos that explained the issues within climate change as well as this one. I would love a follow-up explaining what the best thing we can do as day to day people is with a scenario simulation. Thank you!
@GirtonOramsay5 ай бұрын
It would be great to start with using less plastic on EVERYTHING in the supermarket and remove single-use items for drinks/food in restaurants. Why not ban drive thrus while you're at it and get lazy people to actually order their food inside instead of idling in their car for 10+ minutes
@tirvine91025 ай бұрын
I agree with plastics. It's shocking how many products are unnecessary wrapped in the stuff. Industrial waste is rampant with it too, my work doesn't even have a place to recycle plastic so I take some home. Banning drive-thrus is a bit extreme, what about the increasing number of electric cars, would that encourage building more parking?
@GirtonOramsay5 ай бұрын
@@tirvine9102 definitely making it harder to recycle by not having bins at home or work. My workplace does have shared trash/recycling bins, but they just throw the whole bag in the garbage because they are too lazy to separate the recyclables... Electric cars keep basically all the problems except gas emissions. Everything driving electric cars will incur the same demand for parking like always. Apparently Minneapolis actually ban any new permitting for drive thrus, so that could be a starting point.
@theallegoryofthesheep5 ай бұрын
@GirtonOramsay Plastics is the key to everything.. We would help the planet but absolutely help us health wise. It's disgustingly dangerous to us. The corporations started using it in the 70s because it's cheaper and they can use it for everything. It has made us sick in every way. And the planet sick. WIN WIN🎉💯 IF WE GO STOP USING PLASTIC AND BACK TO GLASS!!!
@theallegoryofthesheep5 ай бұрын
Plastics are the plague on us and the planet. STOP MASS PRODUCING PLASTICS GO BACK TO GLASS AND WE WOULD SOLVE SO MANY AILMENTS for US, THE PLANET, LAND AND SEA, PLANTS AND ANIMALS. PLASTICS HAVE BEEN THE DOWNFALL SINCE THE 70'S. TELL THE CORPORATIONS~~~ STOP PRODUCING PLASTICS~~~ TAKE A STAND AND SAY WE WILL NOT BUY THEM ANYMORE!!! ~IT IS OVER~
@pouetpouetdaddy55 ай бұрын
and you replace plastics by…? wood? in few years that will a crisis of deforestation because of it. Plastics is not the culprit. But its easy to understand and medias culpabilise the population with that. Smoke screen.
@terrymayer91055 ай бұрын
You can actually use the land under solar panels for farming too. They just need to be mounted higher so you can grow crops underneath -- the solar panels protect plants from the heat of the midday sun. There's already solar farms where animals graze underneath and around the solar panels -- it's not wasted land if we do it right. The untapped roofs, canals, etc. which can be used for solar power -- without taking away agricultural land -- is huge.
@2bNot5 ай бұрын
And where will you get the "huge" amount of resources for all of that ?! When they no longer work,where will you bury them all ?
@eugeneforster30855 ай бұрын
I read where in Europe they are covering parking lots with solar panels. Bonus shade and protection from the rain for folks parking there.
@eh17025 ай бұрын
@@2bNot I notice you put “huge” resources in scare quotes, as well you might. A solar panel does not take markedly more in resources to manufacture than the glazing in the large buildings all around you. Indeed, much building cladding, and some glazing could actually BE solar glazing instead.
@2bNot5 ай бұрын
Quotation marks they are called, because I was quoting the last word of the original post. Quotation marks being used to mark a quotation. Just now my comprehensive response got erased in front of me so I give up 'discussing things'. KZbin waste of my time.
@Oldfarmlady5 ай бұрын
I do question this though and maybe it depends on the climate one lives in. Where I'm at in the southeast it very hot under our solar array during the summer months.
@nsbd90now4 ай бұрын
I sure wish y'all would quit pretending the issue is people don't know we can do something, to the issue is people realize we WON'T do anything.
@santomuro5 ай бұрын
I’ve planted at least 100 large trees in my life so far, and intend to plant thousands more once I can buy some land to regenerate. Figured that’s about the best thing I could do.
@Jadeite125 ай бұрын
Trees aren't necessary that good, plankton from what I understand is much better (remember the massive misinformation about how much oxygen Amazon forests produced, by high level individuals? claiming it was science when the science showed more like the opposite of what they wanted to say; plankton is a star in producing oxygen and trapping carbon dioxide). While you might not wanna preoccupy yourself with plankton, you could have snake plants and such (NASA research says they are good for cleaning the air), or I would assume research which trees are better to be planted. P.S.: Fighting global warming is an ideology now, they don't care much what works, they care to sound smart and good and get power. As I mentioned plankton, I don't remember seeing anywhere that they focus on how to use it, they care about what their leaders say, not what is best. Like how much money do they poor in solar panels, think about why, and how much do they look into trapping carbon technologies? Or since she mentions EVs, oh, carbon footprint, blah blah, ok, let's dismiss the environmental damage necessary to make an EV, how can you (the thought leaders of climate change fight) care so much about EVs and TESLA was not worthy to be in ESG stocks, I wonder why? Could it be cause the boss is not part of the progressives? But oil companies can be esg compliant, go figure. They just buy the carbon credits and make sure to be in good standing with the leaders that decide what is good and what is not.
@judithmcdonald90015 ай бұрын
@@Jadeite12 A personal relationship with the earth can't be measured.
@Jadeite125 ай бұрын
@@judithmcdonald9001 and water is wet. Both statements have the same degree of relevance to the topic, in my unmeasurable opinion. But thanks for bringing nothing to the conversation.
@gordonclemmensen5 ай бұрын
@@Jadeite12 You're a mean person.
@Jadeite125 ай бұрын
@@gordonclemmensen is that a measurable fact? Is the determining measure calling people out on their stupidity when they try to sound smart?
@williamupdike48635 ай бұрын
Right, on the bright side of life, she speaks correctly about solutions. Doubt everyone will remember all she said, but she is correct. Problem is that that we are not in any way keeping up with the problem side of things. Forests shrink, deserts increase, population grows, GHGs increase at much faster rates these days, and misinformation is almost everywhere. This is not easy, will be the challenge of all time to keep things livable over the next few decades.
@ElsieJay5 ай бұрын
I just had this come up in my algorithm, I'm blown away by the production quality and attention to detail in the information presented. Instant subscribe!
@livephysiology5 ай бұрын
One important point the video points out is that inexpensive will always have an appeal, regardless of what it is. One of the greatest powers of persuasion is the "power of the purse" showing people they can get the same thing at a lower cost if only they switch to some other brand, or technology.
@nickknez82945 ай бұрын
I don’t think anyone is going to do anything. People are too distracted by nonsense.
@Phantom-mg5cg5 ай бұрын
There is already a lot of change because renewable technologies are (getting) cheaper. PV and wind turbines are already the cheapest to generate electricity. Batteries are getting much cheaper making large scale electricity storage compatible and electric cars cheaper than cars with a combustion engine.
@timothyrussell44455 ай бұрын
Exactly, so it's incumbent on us to un-distract them
@PatG-xd8qn5 ай бұрын
@@Phantom-mg5cg The problem is that consumption is increasing, while it should be decreasing. Just Read the comment section. People blame the government for the problem and then go on with their life and don't change anything to it. They'll still drive their 4x4 SUV, they'll still Buy plane tickets, they'll still buy tons of cheap imported stuff on Amazon, and so on.
@johngeier86925 ай бұрын
Worldwide, over 10 trillion US dollars have already been spent on climate action and carbon dioxide emissions are continuing to increase. The widespread inappropriate and uneconomical use of renewable energy equipment (wind turbines and solar panels) is actually increasing carbon dioxide emissions. The big issue is that the current atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration and the current mean annual surface temperature of Earth are suboptimal. The carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels have the net beneficial effects of increased agricultural yields, reduced winter heating costs, fewer deaths from hypothermia and postponement of the next glacial maximum. Climate action is an extremely costly and wasteful folly. The massive misappropriation of taxpayers money and resources needs to be stopped.
@Aviator27J4 ай бұрын
That's absolutely not tr--squirrel!
@Suburp21219 күн бұрын
All of this is solvable by us humans. Great overview. Thank you.
@iloveprivacy81675 ай бұрын
Did i miss the part where she talked about the impact on the people doing the mining for all the required minerals? Cause from what I've heard out of Congo, it's horrific. And those horrors seem to be part of what enables the current "cost effectiveness" of green tech. Those gains are coming soaked in blood. There MUST be better ways of saving the planet.
@g_wylde13 күн бұрын
This is assuming that the world even HAS the required amount of metals and minerals to power a long term energy transition. Most realistic estimates think that we have enough for the first to maybe second generation of green energy tech, but not enough to keep replacing our turbines and panels beyond that. And that's IF we massively increase mining across the world and bank on finding new sources in previously under-researched places, e.g. areas of the artic or other natural environments that really shouldn't be messed with at this stage. Then there's the bad faith comparison saying that we mine for far more fossil fuels than what we'd need for renewables.... Except pulling fossil fuels out of the ground is not the same process as mining for lithium or copper AT ALL. Extracting a liquid through a big straw isn't the same as manually breaking apart rock for scraps of metal inside.... Anyone with a brain could tell this comparison is BS.
@nevrotik9113 күн бұрын
@@g_wylde Dayum....your comment should be TOP comment, not the b''''crap that is right now.
@seekthetruth3365 ай бұрын
The real issue isn’t people not doing enough, there are a lot of good people stressing and doing everything they can to help. The problem is the fundamental way our societies are built. We require people to make decisions that aren’t the best for our planet. Driving - most of North America is built for cars, and for getting to work, people need to drive. Public transit either isn’t available or is terrible. Garbage - recycling is a lie. Most items are landfill. I was and still do my best to reduce my consumption but at the end of the day, we don’t have systems in place to recycle or reuse our waste Animal products - unfortunately most the world loves meat, and that’s not gonna change any time soon. It’s built in us from our ancestral past. With the amount of people that are on the planet, it takes a big toll. So what can be done? Unfortunately not much. This planet is resilient and will exterminate us eventually. If you’re thinking about having children, think really hard about what kind of life they will have, and not about what you want. Do you best to live modestly, buy used whenever you can, reduce your waste and know that you’ve done everything in your power to make a difference.
@Valentina.Montano5 ай бұрын
Another doomsday psychopath
@seekthetruth3365 ай бұрын
@@Valentina.Montano on a scale from 1 to 10, how much did I scare you? I need the feed back for my future psychopathic comments
@davesipsy75875 ай бұрын
@seekthetruth336 - related to one of the domains; Animal Products... There is a grassroots movement gaining traction all around the world that alters the way ruminants are raised for meat production. The method is not only sustainable, but is being proven to be a powerful CO2 sink, as well as rebuilding top soils, increasing nutrient density in the meat, requiring little to no pharmaceutical interventions, improving insect, bird and other wildlife habitat, lowering or eliminating synthetic fertilizer, herbicide and fungicide use and drastically inproving water infiltration and the overall water cycle. It's called regenerative grazing. And I know for certain that it works, because I myself am a regenerative grazer of cattle.
@richyfoster76945 ай бұрын
A billion Indians would disagree about requiring meat. It is cultural , learned behaviour .
@2bNot5 ай бұрын
You do realise that the more "modestly" you live, it only makes way for more and more people, and they consume a lot and have major impacts on everything. Live large and take up as much space as you can.
@TerryBeckett-k9z4 ай бұрын
There is one aspect that is not covered in this video: the will of the business leaders. If those who hold economic power resist these changes, it will be a great deal more difficult to implement the changes suggested. Changing the minds of those in power is much more important than any options we might have.
@anthonymorris50844 ай бұрын
In a free market economy the consumer holds all the power.
@aceyage14 күн бұрын
@@anthonymorris5084Hahahahahaha. Good one.
@anthonymorris508414 күн бұрын
@@aceyage Hahahahahaha. Dumb one.
@coment5r6z45 ай бұрын
Good news doesn’t generate news like bad news
@PhrozenV5 ай бұрын
It also doesn't encourage submission to government control.
@sentientflower78915 ай бұрын
@@PhrozenVthis video isn't good news. It is at best a lost opportunity.
@CamiloSalvadorMP5 ай бұрын
The problem is capitalism, and we are barely talking about it.
@PhrozenV5 ай бұрын
@@CamiloSalvadorMP Becoming more like North Korea, Venezuela, Cuba, etc is not the solution that most people are looking for. Explain yourself.
@tirvine91025 ай бұрын
@@CamiloSalvadorMP It's also a massive investment opportunity for new entrepreneurs. These Fossil fuel companies are desperately trying to hold on to the last vestiges of power they can while they exploit consumers with record profits.
@danguee15 ай бұрын
7:10 it is worth noting that before we destroyed their habitat and populated the world with domesticated livestock, methane-producing ruminants were around in their billions producing not dissimilar amounts of equivalent CO2 to the beef
@SketchyRob14 күн бұрын
They also leave out that the majority of our plant waste and the bits we can't eat go into animal feeds. This would still rot and break down producing methane if we didn't eat meat
@bongieger78714 күн бұрын
As a geologist I find it baffling how so many people just blindly say they want nuclear while we have NO idea what to do with the waste in 99% of places. Out of sight out of mind but people, its a HUGE problem.
@simonmcglary5 ай бұрын
That’s why at the zoo I volunteer at we talk about how zoos have played key roles in returning species back to the wild from only existing in captivity. Not only do we know how to do it, we can do it, we have done it, we continue to learn how to do it better. Probably why the environmental benefits take a year or two to start kicking, but when they kick in, it’s huge! One long term conservation project, Cairngorms Connect, is over 200 years. In the past it’s been about instant return. We understand it’s about long term cumulative effect. We can do it, it can be done, we have proven methods, let’s do it!
@tradeprosper50025 ай бұрын
The Georgia Aquarium worked with a Florida group to run gardens of heat-resistant corals. Unfortunately, 2023 the 100+F temps of shallow Florida ocean areas resulted in 100% fatality of garden corals. Haven't heard if they are going on with the program, but it is likely that much of Florida will be lost due to rising sea levels.
@KerriEverlasting5 ай бұрын
@simonmcglary all animals deserve to be free. Zoos are prisons for animals that committed no crime. Ugh.
@KerriEverlasting5 ай бұрын
@@tradeprosper5002 ban aquariums
@thiemokellner18935 ай бұрын
@@simonmcglary Sounds like a prayer. Who much time, do you think we have left to get to net zero?
@mikehall30745 ай бұрын
@@thiemokellner1893 Too Late we blew it😓🙃
@georgetsagaris44705 ай бұрын
If wind and solar are so cheap then why are our electricity cost getting higher every year the more we transition?
@breft34165 ай бұрын
Electricity costs don't get higher because of transitioning. They get higher because there is less profit in transitioning and profits must never go down. It's the same with maintaining infrastructure, product safety, plastic disposal and labor These things are approached as an expense, not a responsibility.
@jayleeper15125 ай бұрын
@@breft3416most electrical systems are no longer public utilities but have been privatized and are now profit generating corporations. Any service that is privatized will see prices going up, services going down and decent jobs being replaced by low paying, dead end jobs with few benefits and high turnover as wealth is further turned over to the 0.1%
@DJRussellBrian5 ай бұрын
we are sending 100s of BILLIONS of dollars to China to study pollution and 4 Trillion dollars all together every year until the year 2050... Is this practical? Joe Biden said this is why INFLATION will go up but don't worry folks it will go back down. Elon Musk, the owner of Tesla vehicles knows this is not practical. He could profit VERY WELL if he went along with this because EVERYONE would have to buy electrics vehicles. Elon Musk knows we cannot switch this fast and spend this much money because this is why inflation has gone up and will continue to. We do need to take CO2 emissions seriously but this is not sustainable. Many economist professionals feel this way
@2bNot5 ай бұрын
@@breft3416That makes zero sense. Obviously if solar is better it will lower prices, even if profits stay the same. Basic logic.
@utubenico415 ай бұрын
The cost of energy is derermined by the most expensive compound, which is gas in Germany and nuclear in other (less fortunate) countries.
@kelvin_darwin3 ай бұрын
It’s hard to think consumerism will solve these issues, especially when big industry is required to maximize profits.
@fossaflute5 ай бұрын
I am not just afraid of driving, I am actually a planet saviour 😄
@2bNot5 ай бұрын
Plenty more people on the way to take your share and more. Seen how many planes are flying ?
@atrociousliar33145 ай бұрын
The fact that we can change and adapt has never been the issue. It's the fact that we cannot make as much money off it yet than oil and gas. It doesn't matter that it works, it does matter that its cheaper as there is less profit.
@Valentina.Montano5 ай бұрын
Yes, but as any business company has seen the potential and that's why so many projects have advanced the technology, it isn't "too expensive, let's wait" it's "too expensive, let's make it cheaper to earn more".
@DJRussellBrian5 ай бұрын
we are sending 100s of BILLIONS of dollars to China to study pollution and 4 Trillion dollars all together every year until the year 2050... Is this practical? Joe Biden said this is why INFLATION will go up but don't worry folks it will go back down. Elon Musk, the owner of Tesla vehicles knows this is not practical. He could profit VERY WELL if he went along with this because EVERYONE would have to buy electrics vehicles. Elon Musk knows we cannot switch this fast and spend this much money because this is why inflation has gone up and will continue to. We do need to take CO2 emissions seriously but this is not sustainable. Many economist professionals feel this way
@cmmoennichАй бұрын
Making plenty of money from installing solar panels, wind farms, co2 capture and sequestering solutions. We have all new areas to make money now. And then there is carbon credit sales and carbon tax transfers to other nations and all of the administrative profits that are in that new industry.
@markballard151514 күн бұрын
Getting your info from a news reporter is the most obvious problem.
@jonathanhoffman74645 ай бұрын
This video is great. I love that they show CO2 emissions per 100 grams of protein. I've seen so many studies talk about CO2 emissions per kilogram of weight, which makes no goddamn sense. No one eats a pound of broccoli, but people regularly eat 16 ounces of steak. But they have comparable protein/calorie ratios, so this is a way to actually directly compare them.
@antonyjh12345 ай бұрын
Well there's a couple of issues, she uses worldwide figures of 24%, the people who use cows to pull ploughs, use them for transport, dried dung for fuel will have to have alternatives. In USA all animals are 5%, cows are 65% of that at 3.25%. It is very hard to replace all that we get which isn't just food, it's activated carbon to filter water, gelatine to hold toilet paper together, fats that go into devices like the one you are using, medicines, asphalt, there's leather, wool, fish bladders to fine wines, rendered meat for pet food, collagen, the list goes on. It all needs a grown source to replace what is mostly fed on grass, on land we don't put any sprays etc onto. The way it is worked out is what is edible that goes to market, it ignores all the waste of crops and puts all the emissions onto just the edible, that goes for sale, considering we get much more than food from animals and there is so much crop waste, this in incredibly deceptive to the general public. The issue here is she is comparing protein of say tofu as a standalone product, ignoring that animals take all the waste, we put the waste through them and then blame them for it. Soy is great example, 82% of the human usable part of soy is taken by humans, all animals take 7% of whole bean and 1% of the oil but they take 99% of the waste, then people will say they take 87% of soy, yes they do but by weight of the total grown product, of which we can't eat. She's very misleading and whether intentionally or unintentionally, very wrong, not sure which. If oranges, grapes, any crop that doesn't make it to market then it's not calculated but all the sprays, fertilisers, irrigation still happen, just not calculated. This is of course an unfair comparison. Saying getting higher yields means using synthetic fertilisers which is where the nitrous oxide comes into play, the gas that is emitted is 300 times worse than co2 and methane is only 26. She is using her own source as in our world in data, so she is biased in this way and is funded by bill gates the largest private landholder in USA, and considering we give more of out waste to animals from crops than food we grow for them, plant based directly subsidises caged animal rearing the most.
@ygts5 ай бұрын
@@antonyjh1234I like how you start with a sensible story but then can't contain yourself anf have to dive into the bill gates conspiracy, which just takes away from the rest of your comment
@BM1982.V25 ай бұрын
@antonyjh1234 I've been googling for an hour here and can't find any of your numbers used anywhere. It seems that livestock eat both whole soybeans and soybean meal after the oil is extracted but the majority of value in that is from the animal feed so it's more like the soybean oil is a byproduct of the feed industry rather than the feed being the byproduct. Out of the soybean 70% of the value is animal feed and only 30% is the oil so if it weren't for animal feed they wouldn't grow soy just for oil because theres not enough value there. I also found numbers that animals eat 86% food that is inedible to humans but they calculate grass in that equation. That's disengenuine because grass isn't grown for human consumption anyway and that land could grow something else. If you take grass out of the equation then animals eat 26% food that is edible to humans. But they also include crops grown specifically for animals only like alfalfa. That's crop land that could be used for something else. So that's another disengenuous portion. That's an additional 15% where something else could be grown instead. So now your looking at animals eating 41% of their diet consisting of food that could go to humans. If you take the feed conversion ratios of an average of 10:1 that means animals are eating 41% of their diet as human edible crops or land that could be used to create human edible crops but only produce about 10% back as human edible meat. This is on a calorie for calorie basis. If you look at cattle where the feed conversion is closer to 25:1 that means they'd only produce 4 calories back from that. Even if you take their disengenuous numbers at face value and don't remove grass or purpose grown crops you still are left with a deficit. Animals eat 14% of their diet from human edible crops yet only produce 10 calories for every 14 they eat of ours or cattle only producing 4 calories for every 14 eaten in the case of cattle. It's not as bad when you take disengenuous numbers but still a deficit nonetheless.
@antonyjh12345 ай бұрын
@@BM1982.V2 Your opinion that grass is disingenuous is in my opinion incorrect and you seem to be missing the point of it, that we get something in return for doing nothing basically. As most grass is from non arable land meaning it can't be farmed you can see the difference in inputs that are needed. Sayings 86% of their diet is from stuff we can't eat and then having to grow something on land that isn't possible is of course the wrong way to look at things, environmentally. As far as soy, 6% whole bean goes to humans,7% to all animals, cows the least amount as it goes towards other animals more, half the worlds fish is raised fish, actually figures aren't taking into account wild caught fish but that's another story, 87% is processed into oil of which animals take 1% so we are back to the 82% is used for humans. Palm or Soy oil is in everything these days. The rest of your figures then become meaningless, the point though is it's not just diet, half the animal is used for more than food, saying we can grow what needs replacing when we don't put a lot of inputs in now means we would have to put in sprays of all sorts, fertiliser, irrigation and where I am half the land is grazing land, that doesn't get sprayed, get's irrigated from weather and gets naturally fertilised, if looking at it as energy returned, we get a massive amount back. We grow far more tonnage of crops for humans, all this waste could be composted but it then would still emit to the atmosphere, we currently pass it through animals and blame them, unfairly I think. Saying disingenuous, doesn't make it so just because you remove 86% of their diet that isn't edible to us, that's not the point, the point is they can digest it.
@antonyjh12345 ай бұрын
@@ygts And yet, he is backing her, this is not a conspiracy, this is the truth, I have gone this path over a year ago to research what she was saying.
@stephensanders18765 ай бұрын
12:42 the source is 'science, 2018' which is really difficult to find. Do you list your sources anywhere else? As a BSc grad, I want to dive deeper!
@Ashitaka2554 ай бұрын
Hannah Ritchie is a shill funded by bill gates.
@wadesmith6665 ай бұрын
One of the worst emitters of carbon in the world is the Industrial military complex; especially in the USA. One solution which has been around for the last 10 years or so, is the Dearman engine which runs on air,, and emits no carbon at all. A traditional combustian engine is only around 30% efficient, 70% lost to heat, a Dearman engine is something like 80% efficient. “And if that’s not enough, it also works for air conditioning - and as a battery that never loses capacity and is completely non-toxic. Potentially an answer to the final stumbling block for how renewable energy can power the world.”
@Masterdebater-q5c5 ай бұрын
I for one enjoyed what she had to say. The comments section is saying “How can we with public policies and the general public not caring?” But as with anything, if we care enough, we’ll make positive changes. I guarantee everyone in the comments saying nothing will ever change have ever even donated a lick of time to environmental causes but I digress. Fact is, if we want the change, we can make it, our work individually may not make a dent in it, but as a majority it sure as hell will
@TimpanistMoth_AyKayEll5 ай бұрын
There are also quite a few of us who have been slogging for decades and are pretty burned out. We keep hearing the same excuses and the same "but here's the cause for optimism!" platitudes over and over. My personal bet is that it's going to be really fucking bad - but also that this is no reason to give up the work. If only out of sheer cussedness and spite towards the people and systems who have caused and are going to cause so much avoidable suffering.
@tradeprosper50025 ай бұрын
@@TimpanistMoth_AyKayEll As a retired Environmental Engineer, Hear! Hear!
@christopherwalton13735 ай бұрын
Just care harder ? No need for an engineering degree 👍
@timothyrussell44455 ай бұрын
Well said!
@DJRussellBrian5 ай бұрын
we are sending 100s of BILLIONS of dollars to China to study pollution and 4 Trillion dollars all together every year until the year 2050... Is this practical? Joe Biden said this is why INFLATION will go up but don't worry folks it will go back down. Elon Musk, the owner of Tesla vehicles knows this is not practical. He could profit VERY WELL if he went along with this because EVERYONE would have to buy electrics vehicles. Elon Musk knows we cannot switch this fast and spend this much money because this is why inflation has gone up and will continue to. We do need to take CO2 emissions seriously but this is not sustainable. Many economist professionals feel this way
@davidbarry69005 ай бұрын
4:50 "Is an electric car better (than ICE)? Yes". Unfortunately, EVs only reduce lifetime CO2 emissions by about 20%. They are NOT going to work if you actually want to decarbonize or reach "Net zero". (Bicycle, train, and transit-oriented systems are MUCH better for CO2 reduction as a solution.) The challenge is even harder for the other 80% of road transportation emissions too, i.e. the trucking industry. Focusing on electric cars as a "solution" is like trimming a nose hair and saying that you've had a haircut.
@DJRussellBrian5 ай бұрын
It says A LOT about a KZbin publisher who doesn’t allow certain comments to be commented especially when it explains nothing but the truth
@phil20_205 ай бұрын
Good News! The work has begun!
@KevsWorld4445 ай бұрын
“Can’t fix what’s out there until we fix what’s in here”
@hascleavrahmbenyoseph71865 ай бұрын
You hit the nail right on the head. I know how to fix what is in here for all, or at least most, of mankind. We need a new profit behavior model. Profit equals protecting and enriching the environment, and sharing the sustenance that it provides for all of us. Our current profit behavior model is profit equals income minus expenses. This erroneous behavior model requires us to ignore the damages that we cause to the environment and it requires us to minimize our workforce in order to maximize profit. It's no wonder then that the earth is on fire and there is so much homelessness. Is this idea close to the kind of fix that you have in mind?
@DJRussellBrian5 ай бұрын
Agreed! we are sending 100s of BILLIONS of dollars to China to study pollution and 4 Trillion dollars all together every year until the year 2050... Is this practical? Joe Biden said this is why INFLATION will go up but don't worry folks it will go back down. Elon Musk, the owner of Tesla vehicles knows this is not practical. He could profit VERY WELL if he went along with this because EVERYONE would have to buy electrics vehicles. Elon Musk knows we cannot switch this fast and spend this much money because this is why inflation has gone up and will continue to. We do need to take CO2 emissions seriously but this is not sustainable. Many economist professionals feel this way
@BenSullinsOfficialАй бұрын
Love this
@liberty-matrix5 ай бұрын
"There are huge non climate effects of carbon dioxide which are overwhelmingly favorable which are not taken into account. To me that's the main issue that the earth is actually growing greener. This has been actually measured from satellites the whole earth is growing greener as a result of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. So it's increasing agricultural yields, it's increasing the forests, it's increasing all kinds of growth in the biological world and that's more important and more certain than the effects on climate." ~Freeman Dyson, Institute of Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.
@seanpalmer69955 ай бұрын
Yes, smaller stomata are evolving as it becomes easier to access CO2 meaning less water loss and therefore greater drought resistance increasing growth.
@jonb54935 ай бұрын
This piece of Freeman-Dyson-ism is thoroughly debunked BS. CO2 increase is harmful. End of.
@DrSmooth20004 ай бұрын
guy at Duke said CO2 is worth it for the crops Methane HFC troposphere Ozone is what is dragging
@upsignerman4 ай бұрын
Look into the nutrient collapse if you want to see the actual effect of CO2 fertilisation on the biosphere
@DrSmooth20004 ай бұрын
@@upsignerman you mean the altered C:N ratio and growing too fast for mineral absorption? Never heard it called the collapse if so
@leonballoni43715 ай бұрын
if the goal is to reduce the co2, we should be creating incentives for mass public transport (eletric, and else) and not eletric cars...
@BM1982.V25 ай бұрын
Why not both? We can increase the infrastructure and incentives for public transit but at the same time recognize that there will always be a need for personal transit so both are needed and both are helpful.
@bengorman52145 ай бұрын
I think EVs, in the near term, have a greater potential to reduce CO2 waste, and of course pub trans is the long-term solution. But people won't just jump to pub trans, it has to be made available and cost-competitive. Given how the U.S. turned its back on pub trans decades ago, that investment will take a long time. Meantime, we need to reduce CO2 emissions ASAP and EVs are the way to do that.
@Bertinator-nm9ld5 ай бұрын
At least in the US, trying to rework the entire country's infrastructure for mass public transit will be drastically more expensive than incentivizing electric vehicles, and would therefore require a much bigger political push. So it's less feasible. Not to mention the challenges that come with America's significantly lower population density than other places where mass transit is more prevalent.
@breft34165 ай бұрын
@Bertinator-nm9ld it's all about where the money is spent, not how much. Money is literally given in tax breaks, then loaned back by buying bonds. Or loaned to a country to buy stuff, very often weapons and bombs. It doesn't matter if the currency is in gold, paper or a key stroke on a computer. It's all make believe or be forced to believe. The math is very incongruous and easily manipulated to create or destroy beliefs by merely talking about it. "It costs too much, we can't afford it, giving free money to the unemployed is inflationary, giving subsidies to big oil keeps gas cheap, the rich don't have enough money to buy down the national debt, Social Security will be bankrupt" are all bs phrases that can be proved or disproved mathematically and with or without reason. The only tangible is where the money is spent.
@Bertinator-nm9ld5 ай бұрын
@@breft3416 Ok, but you're going to have to spend a LOT of political capital in order to redirect all the funds for those expenses to your project. Do you have a rough idea how many trillions of dollars your plan will cost? How extensive is it? How much funding can you realistically pull away from other projects, without losing all political support for your plan? How much are you ultimately going to fund by issuing new debt? The financial aspects of such a project are not sexy to talk about, and they're easy to ignore, but they will also stop you dead in your tracks if you don't have a plan!
@dant4071Ай бұрын
The tone of this video makes it feel about 15 years old. Drastic, high risk tech solutions are what is needed now. There is no appetite for doing anything. Global emissions will continue to rise.
@mrunning10Ай бұрын
There is ONE solution, around now for over half a century, that fixes this fucking mess. You are the problem by voting for politicians funded into office by fossil fuel MONEY. YOU.
@jlrva38645 ай бұрын
The problem with electric cars is 2 fold. First, most people who need transportation and don't have access to mass transit, can't afford electric cars. Next, after 10 years, the car battery has to be replaced and the spent batteries are dumped in landfills. Further more, Toyota has said they won't invest any more into electric cars because the economics are not good. Other car companies are taking notice as well.
@fofopads44504 ай бұрын
Lithium is expensive to refine. Is obviously goung to be well received for recycling. Toyota is on the way of becoming the Kodak of cars. Japanese are clever, but Toyota is not gonna make me depend on an ever scarcer fuel that will be even harder to obtain for regular people. I cannot make or store fuel, hydrogen or oil based. I can charge at home with my own power. Only a dimwit would think about dumping a massive lithium battery into a landfill.
@Emloch4 ай бұрын
Also, a second battery resets the energy footprint, Furthermore, electric cars, at this point, cannot replace the ICE. While electric vehicles may be ideal in and around major cities, they are from ideal in remote areas; especially in the colder areas of the world. Not too mention, the long-haul transport industry.
@rahko_i4 ай бұрын
Oh geez...This "the battery has to be replaced every 10 years" it getting quite old already and it's been debunked a million times already. The batteries will probably last longer than the car around it. We already have plenty of cars that are over 10 years old and they are running perfectly fine. And that's 10 years old technology. Modern batteries are even better.
@rahko_i4 ай бұрын
@@Emloch Right! Imagine if a country in the cold areas of the world like Norway tried to use electric cars! Nobody would buy them! Oh, wait...
@Emloch4 ай бұрын
@@rahko_i Norway, huh. They don't know what cold is.
@HoopsKevinski.5 ай бұрын
2:40 She left out 🧂🔋 salt battery* as its abundance would dwarf entire chart, lol! * Same energy density as LFP, plus greener, nonexplosive, faster charging, fast chargeable to 100% and far better in extreme temps.
@danguee15 ай бұрын
Currently pie-in-the-sky. *_Hopefully_* it will become a reality someday soon.
@HoopsKevinski.5 ай бұрын
@@danguee1 Just the opposite; they're only putting salt batteries in ultra cheap models like VW/JAC E10x & BYD Seagull rn to protect LFP investment. NMC is otw out.
@timothyrussell44455 ай бұрын
They are still developing that technology, but it does have great potential.
@erickortenbach43554 ай бұрын
Very very informative. Thank you!
@ncedwards12345 ай бұрын
Comment section is teaching me something. It's not that we can't because it is impossible, but that we won't because people are convinced enough to buy into it. @BigThink any chance y'all can do more persuasive tactics to convince us that hope is reasonable. It's a little self-fulfilling after all, and the crowd just ain't sold as of yet.
@jumboridesagain73365 ай бұрын
It’s not about convincing people it’s about capital.
@mobilityproject34855 ай бұрын
@@jumboridesagain7336 No. That's only because we pssed away our power by treating each other and our children badly. When over 70 % of your population has PTSD, it's a wonder that anything still works at all...
@Ry-lx2kl5 ай бұрын
Hope is 100% reasonable is you stop believing the fear mongers. We've been wrong over and over and over about climate. The models are spotty at best. The fear mongering is to divert capital, much of it our taxes, to their corporate cronies. A little secret about C02. It makes plants thrive. Double the C02, double the yield, and double the oxygen production. As a bonus bonus, plants can thrive at higher temps with more CO2. It's almost as if the earth is self correcting. Even without that tidbid, the margin of error on the data is greater than the catastrophic results they predict! The goals of climate change activists are admirable, their solutions are not.
@tarquin1612345 ай бұрын
It's nothing to do with convincing. What it comes down to is, will you stop driving your car and take public transport? Most people will not, and many will actually get aggressive when confronted on this, and will then turn to denialism. We need to all make personal sacrifices in the short to medium term, to get climate stability and wait for technology to sustainably give us back what we've given up. There is this whole woke idea that the carbon footprint is an evil invention of the fossil fuel companies; it isn't evil; you're the one burning the oil, so stop burning it.
@3komma1415926535 ай бұрын
Most people are like, "it's the factories and big corpos not me", ignoring that those corporations produce for average people mostly. Half the people fall for the lies that it other people who pollute the world, but not themself. Mind boggling.
@davidbarry69005 ай бұрын
4:00 "cost of solar and wind is cost competitive" ... and yet, increasing their share of the grid power has made electricity grids more fragile and expensive in EVERY jurisdiction that has gone down this route. There is a certain threshold percentage of "renewable" (Solar/wind) power (maybe 20-30%?), beyond which it is simply not economically viable to safely and cheaply add more, at least not with today's grid power storage technologies and economic models. "Renewables" are actually only cheap as long as someone else pays to provide the battery or peaker power backup to cover fluctuations in production. (Nuclear isn't without challenges in this area too, mainly because it has difficulties ramping production up and down to meet demand requirements, which is why it was often paired with Hydroelectric power facilities when the original generations of nuclear power plants were built.)
@circulareconomyfornutrient48324 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing
@davidzhang23194 ай бұрын
Arent we the ones buying products that corporations produce?
@brothermayihavesomeloops70482 ай бұрын
Fuck, someone gets it.
@FromTheWoods885 ай бұрын
Nuclear power is clearly the best way forward. Especially because forget to mention that the mining aspect of the materials needed for solar and batteries is coupled with actual slavery in mines in places like Congo. Please read the book or the summary of Cobalt Red.
@bengorman52145 ай бұрын
See my reply to an earlier comment, above. We can't built nukes fast enough, even if, in the future, they may well be the best possible energy source. And you're unfortunately conflating various unrelated news items: solar PV modules---the least expensive and most installed source of power on the U.S. grid for several years now---do NOT rely on rare materials. They're mostly made of aluminum (frames), silicon (cells), and conductors like copper and aluminum, maybe some silver. Battery technology is evolving so rapidly that who knows what will be most in demand in a few years? Tesla has already started making batteries without cobalt (there was such a hue and cry about it in recent years), and Apple has committed to use only recycled cobalt starting in 2025. Cobalt, once the darling for cathode construction, is being supplanted in manufacture. But anyway, it's a problem of TIMING. We can't "nuke" our way out of this, though we can and should rely on nuclear down the line.
@FromTheWoods885 ай бұрын
@@bengorman5214thanks for taking the time to get back to me with a reply. However I think you focus too much on what companies plan to do in the future vs what is happening today. The big problem you seem to forget is two fold. 1) The mining of silver, copper and silicon needed for the whole world to run off of solar (not the panels itself, but the mining of the materials is not scalable to the size we need). 2) Even still, one of the biggest problems we have today is not the generation of solar power but storing & distribution for which you need better grids and say it with me: batteries. Great that some companies are reducing their need for cobalt, but this barely a dent in overall global needs. Nuclear is and remains the clear winner: given circumstances.
@bengorman52145 ай бұрын
@@FromTheWoods88 Again: timing. You use the mature resources & technologies that you already have to bridge the gap to what you ultimately need. We (certainly in the West) cannot build out the fleet of nuclear that we would need in time to avert the worst case warming scenarios. We CAN, however, build solar AND STORAGE BATTERIES very rapidly, almost immediately, to meet the need of present generation shortfalls, in developing & developed countries alike. Look how fast India & China are installing PV now. (Granted, they’re both building coal-fired power at a scary clip too, but that merely demonstrates the urgent need for power for their rapidly changing demographics). Do you actually believe we can expand nuclear anywhere near that rate? I don’t think even authoritarian China could manage that!
@FromTheWoods885 ай бұрын
@@bengorman5214my friend, first and foremost let me say that I love this conversation where we actually are trying to (hopefully) understand each other. Second, we don’t disagree that solar and batteries are not a possible option for current energy demands and needs, as is nuclear. The reactors they built current day are much smaller, cheaper and faster to create so yes they are a viable option. Moreover lik I said in my previous comment: the global south is being too much exploited for resources to drive this big green revolution of solar and batteries. Granted you need some of their resources for nuclear as well, but much less. So it is not a matter of just can we use solar instead of nuclear, but what requires the least amount of resources especially taken into account how and where it’s mined.
@judderman19894 ай бұрын
I work as a Civil Engineer in wind energy and I have to pretend I work as something else to people I don't know and am very frequently lambasted by people I do know since the general population absolutely hates renewable energy. The main obstruction to progress with decarbonising the planet is public opinion
@HealingLifeKwikly4 ай бұрын
Maybe you are hanging out with right-wingers or live in a very conservative place, but lots of people I know love renewable energy and want more of it.
@judderman19894 ай бұрын
@@HealingLifeKwikly I live in Scotland which is pretty left wing and for the most part progressive. People just don't like them since they industrialise wildernesses and the public engagement is very poorly managed/completely ignored
@HealingLifeKwikly4 ай бұрын
@@judderman1989 Interesting. Thanks for the clarification. I'm American, and we're heavily split along Republican-Democratic lines here. There aren't even a majority of Americans yet who agree/know that humans are the main force causing global warming and climate disruption. Obviously, wind is often a tougher sell than solar for the reasons you noted. Is there much use of heat pumps in Scotland? The larger issue is that renewables or not, this industrialized civilization is hopelessly unsustainable so either we wake up and largely de-industrialize societies and adopt simpler lifestyles or catastrophic ecological and societal collapse in inevitable. As a researcher writing a book about the ongoing unraveling of the web of life, I am stunned/scared by how many people are fixated narrowly on the climate crisis and don't realize that the central problem is humanity's vast ecological overshoot. Take care.
@bobleclair56655 ай бұрын
5:18. After 2 years driving an EV,, you’ve paid off their carbon debt. How long do you have to drive to work to pay off the car debt and your carbon debt for charging the EV ?
@oceanmangg4 ай бұрын
Exactly
@oceanmangg4 ай бұрын
EVs are only great at keeping the pollution outside of the cities/ centers but many downsides like battery issues etc
@bobleclair56654 ай бұрын
@@oceanmangg in the early 1960s in Chelsea, Boston, Massachusetts area, they had electric buses ( overhead wire). It cost 20 cents to ride and that’s with transfers to the subways of Boston with all its extensions. As long as you stay under ground, you could ride all day. That was one of our play grounds as a kid in 4th grade, that’s how I learned how to get to those museums. 20 cents, $0.20. Even as a young kid,, I could afford that. Later in life, early 1970s, I visited Florida and went to Disney World and for $13 ,you got a day pass and ride on the monorail,,, now that was amazing, beautiful and clean. It took up no land to speak of and you rode above everything, taking in the beautiful greenery below. What happened, I thought that was our future. And that was from a man named Walt and a mouse named Mickey, Hal Holden and Bombadier , Canada
@potpieiscool5 ай бұрын
Saying transport takes up 1/5th of the energy needs (edit:Co2 emissions), when the percentage shown on screen is 14%, is at best confusing. 14% is actually closer to 1/7
@shaunowebdevo5 ай бұрын
Where did the presenter say this?
@bevanfindlay5 ай бұрын
I think she was approximating to make it easier to understand. It's also worth noting that there are several ways to approach how we measure and attribute emissions. For example, quite a large part of fuel-related emissions are the "well to tank" processes (i.e. the mining, refining, transport, and leaks of the fuel system) - are these transport-related, because it's cars using the fuel at the end, or industry, because it's the fuel industry generating them? Depending on how you approach these "upstream" supply chain sources, you can get very different results for each sector. Similarly, would the energy needed to build a car be transport or industry? Hope this helps.
@BM1982.V25 ай бұрын
Isn't it 1/5th of the energy needs and it produces 14% of our emissions. Those 2 figures are separate numbers and are both accurate. The pie chart is showing emissions while she was speaking energy usage.
@danguee15 ай бұрын
@@bevanfindlay "approximating"........
@danguee15 ай бұрын
@@shaunowebdevo 4:15
@buckwrabbit92764 ай бұрын
Annnnnd once again this Lassies assessment is Flawed !!!!!
@gulfmarine88574 ай бұрын
What are your credentials? Other than misplaced capital letters 😂
@PolarBear_Gaming_More5 ай бұрын
5:12 Carbon Brief is not a world recognized science fact based entity. They are a newspaper at best. Their graph is not backed by any solid information outside of their lens
@tylerlormand56445 ай бұрын
u dumb
@violetphase18 күн бұрын
Yeah I've seen others talk about ICE vs. EV carbon footprint and what I've heard elsewhere is that it takes like 10-15 years for an EV to cause less emissions, just because of how costly the batteries and other tech is compared to a normal combustion engine.
@technician07c335 ай бұрын
What a propaganda piece. In 5 min she spit some rational information and between put some bollocks. It's hard to finish watching. I heard nothing about restructuring our cities to be less power hungry, less heat storing. Nothing about that sun and wind are not constant which demands dynamic balancing of the lack of energy generation at a constant level of network load. Big talk for children to indoctrinate further audience. Just waste of energy and time. Maybe she should talk how much she and producing crew wasted energy to produce this pamphlet. Fast forward to the end of film and i saw only npc talking about WEF propaganda.
@sydburd3 ай бұрын
this information is amazing! make this more widely spread
@squareyes19815 ай бұрын
The whole transport section of the video is quite poor. As an environmentally concerned gearhead (there are many of us) the EV section was paper thin relying on the most superficial, one dimensional measures. EVs are dead on infrastructure alone. The economics kill them. The energy mix kills them. The evidence is more like we are past the peak electrification of cars. Peter Zeihan concisely lays out why EVs are, and always have been, a non runner on infrastructure alone
@marcelouellet19565 ай бұрын
The planet has greened by nearly 20% in the last 20 years. That is positive change brought on by co2
@Richard4824 ай бұрын
Mostly due to tree planting projects and increased agriculture.
@roysigurdkarlsbakk384212 күн бұрын
Very concrete, informative and good speech! And I really adore your dialect! Best wishes from Norway (where we've probably getting closer to solving the transport issue as most people are moving to electric cars these days)
@Joseph2day3 ай бұрын
Yes, I hear in all of the comments the same frustration that I have, but I agree with the vibe of Hannah. We must win. Failure is not an option, there is no planet B. There is a common false dichotomy that we should try to avoid: personal action vs change in the laws. I get the frustration with taking personal action, but I try my best to do it anyways. I ride my bike and a monster truck splashes me with mud, not fun, but I do believe that some people get motivated to ride their bikes when they see me out there. I know this because I would often feel guilty driving when I saw someone else biking to work. Yes, I believe that personal action can help more than just by your contribution. Laws, yes we should vote. We should also, if we have the ability to, conduct peaceful protest when we feel it will be helpful. We should not do it just to hype anger, but rather to show solidarity. Peaceful and non confrontational I believe is the key most of the time. I do not hate on those who take it farther, but I fear alienating potential future allies who have just not yet figured things out. Echo chambers love to paint environmentalist as radicals, of course they will do that regardless what we do, but many people who are against us are not leaders with an agenda, but just ordinary folks who listen to greedy thought leaders with an agenda. Those ordinary folks can be brought to our side, but only if they are not hardened against us. We should try to bring those folks over gently.
@davidcox89615 ай бұрын
We need to redefine what 'human progress' means !! If it means the destruction of our life support systems can that be truly considered progress ??
@DJRussellBrian5 ай бұрын
we are sending 100s of BILLIONS of dollars to China to study pollution and 4 Trillion dollars all together every year until the year 2050... Is this practical? Joe Biden said this is why INFLATION will go up but don't worry folks it will go back down. Elon Musk, the owner of Tesla vehicles knows this is not practical. He could profit VERY WELL if he went along with this because EVERYONE would have to buy electrics vehicles. Elon Musk knows we cannot switch this fast and spend this much money because this is why inflation has gone up and will continue to. We do need to take CO2 emissions seriously but this is not sustainable. Many economist professionals feel this way
@iceescape4 ай бұрын
Former Exxon executives admitted that they knew fossil fuels were causing catastrophic climate change since the late 1970's. In the 1980's, they started pumping money into think tanks and advertising to manipulate the public into thinking climate change might not be real and that recycling was a personal responsibility. The industries get rich and shifted the clean up cost/responsibility over to the consumer and local governments.
@jennifersmith48644 ай бұрын
What catastrophic climate change? I don't see any. Of course recycling is a personal responsibility. Like if I sell you a carton of milk, am I also responsible for recycling the empty carton?? I think not. If I sell you a gallon of gas which you demand, & burn, how am I responsible for cleaning up the co2 you generate? BTW industries are in business to make a profit by meeting consumer demand. That goes for any industry.....if they couldn't make a profit, they wouldn't do it --- would you work for nothing?Oil companies just meet world wide demand for oil. If there were no demand, & if you couldn't make a profit selling oil, there would be no oil companies. So, find something to replace it with.
@thiemokellner18935 ай бұрын
Have you ever wasted a thought on the problem that while reserves of materials like lithium increase initially (but invariably decrease to the end) the first reserves to get depleted are those easiest to mine. That means, over time the price for the material will go up and/or the energy needed to mine will increase. I reasd somewhere that there is a huge quatity of lithium and gold "solved" in the ocean water. If so, why no one has ever taken up the hassle to extract the gold?
@Valentina.Montano5 ай бұрын
Ignorance talking, technology gets better and prices fall. This scarcity mentality is really annoying.
@2bNot5 ай бұрын
Don't worry, the ocean is a major next target for exploitation and further degradation.
@evaldaszmitra73224 ай бұрын
Really good video, going through each source and putting forward a solution. One thing I wanted to elaborate on is the less cement in buildings. The way to solve it is to build more traditional architecture, which uses arches as supports. Then you can just build out of rocks, chiseled into regular sized blocks. Modern architecture requires long, straight, load-bearing structures that can only be achieved by using steel or reinforced concrete. Arches also make it so you don't need as much rebar throughout the building, which in turn allows the building to theoretically last thousands of years.
@jazzypoo79604 ай бұрын
They're all good ideas, but our species doesn't have the will to fix the problem.
@theresabu30004 ай бұрын
It will be require more workers - that are also more skilled. I do love older houses - renovating them might be another way. Or using other recyable materials that also last a long time. I love wood houses - or timber-framed with rammed earth. The waste from buildings we tear down and can't use again, but won't disintegrate is also worrying. In urban areas - houses with good noise canceling might be preferable, but we can also think about buildings that can withstand extreme heat or have good ventilation and shade for windows.
@atariplayer36865 ай бұрын
Thank you Hannah for the great information you provided 🙂
@aunceter5 ай бұрын
The rural community, in the US & elsewhere tend to take their ownership with out much concern for community, and the consequences of their land use in environmental and climate related matters. It makes the efforts to coordinate water management, slow deforestation for instance etc. quite difficult with this political polarization.
@vancity875 ай бұрын
I guess you grow and / or raise your own food... of course not.. if you did, you might actually understand other peoples perspectives instead of insulting people you don't even know.
@ErieRadio5 ай бұрын
Interesting perspective. And a large blanket statement. I’m curious how you formed that opinion. My experience living in a rural area is that the people care deeply about their land use and impacts on that land. Many have conservation easements on their properties preventing subdivision in the future, work with foresters to ensure the health of the wooded portions of their land, are very concerned with any erosion issues as good quality top soil is very important and is a significant expense to build or repair if lost, several personal friends have their land willed to conservation organizations since no family want to continue to farm it (if the land is a farm) - one friends property isn’t a farm, just a large property, but surviving family has moved away and doesn’t want to be bothered with it in the future, all mentioned are concerned with water run off and water retention. But that land is in private ownership. Land held by large companies for corp agriculture I have not seen much commitment or environmental concern.
@principesalvadordorango14464 ай бұрын
If people went vegan, sooo many of our problems would be largelly reduced
@hbullock11 күн бұрын
It isn’t that we are incapable, although it could be argued we are already too late. It’s the fossil fuel industry has too much money / influence, and their disinformation campaign keeps enough people doubting that enough political will to act is impossible to muster. At least here in the United States of Idiocracy. The harsh reality is inability and unwillingness amount to the same end result.
@jonathanrichter42565 ай бұрын
The problem with solar and wind is NOT having enough windmills or solar panels to generate energy. It's batteries and transmission, and the rare minerals those require.
@DJRussellBrian5 ай бұрын
THAT and the fact we are sending 100s of BILLIONS of dollars to China to study pollution and 4 Trillion dollars all together every year until the year 2050... Is this practical? Joe Biden said this is why INFLATION will go up but don't worry folks it will go back down. Elon Musk, the owner of Tesla vehicles knows this is not practical. He could profit VERY WELL if he went along with this because EVERYONE would have to buy electrics vehicles. Elon Musk knows we cannot switch this fast and spend this much money because this is why inflation has gone up and will continue to. We do need to take CO2 emissions seriously but this is not sustainable. Many economist professionals feel this way
@mewtwoinchernobyl4 ай бұрын
"One never notices what has been done; one can only see what remains to be done." - Marie Curie
@david-olivierpham33643 ай бұрын
No words about reducing aviation? 😅
@jlrva38645 ай бұрын
Most of her comments have the macro view and are somewhat overly simplistic, while many are not realistic regarding actual implementation. For example, expecting people to give up meat and dairy products in order to prevent something bad from happening in 50 to 100 years from now is not realistic. Besides, beef and dairy per capita consumption is already declining anyway in developed world due to health concerns which is a more immediate and relatable concern. Also, her comment about reducing land use for agriculture is myopic. In fact, agricultural research has already made great strides in improving yields and more improvements are on the way.
@DrSmooth20004 ай бұрын
EU has good policy. Pastured and less of it
@planta3115 ай бұрын
Who's this person, so knowledgeable and so inspiring. Her Scottish accent is also music to my ears
@kevinherbert42565 ай бұрын
She is a fool spouting emotive bs...
@joelechols879Ай бұрын
Take action and support political parties who support environmentalism!
@joseluisvazquez51265 ай бұрын
Technology is always the solution, politics and central planning NEVER is.
@bill66565 ай бұрын
China just started the worlds first Thorium Reactor. What the "News" wont tell you about thorium. An appropriate sized TMS Reactor can be made in a factory, shipped by truck and erected to directly replace the coal end of a power plant. It can use the coal ash as a resource of the Thorium. I think the reason it has not been used or even researched, is because of the lobbying power of the huge Uranium and weapons industry.
@Thomas-gk424 ай бұрын
Thank you, full agreement
@jimmoses66175 ай бұрын
"The main driver of climate change are human emissions...". What, then, drove the Medieval warm period? The Little Uce Age? The Minoan Warm Period? The very warm 1930s?
@Aviator27J4 ай бұрын
This video wasn't meant to get into that, but scientists have identified various reasons for these warming periods, including changes in solar and volcanic activity, changes in ocean circulation, etc. The data on current climate change makes it pretty apparent that we've been altering the planet since about the Industrial Revolution and we're changing the climate faster than any known natural cycle (assuming we aren't talking about a massive volcanic eruption, asteroid impact, etc). I mean, the oil industry has known about the warming since the 1970s, and while estimates and forecasts change with increased data collection and improved models, those initial reports were pretty spot on 50 years ago.
@Ian-k4q5 ай бұрын
Can you imagine farting dinosaurs? Climate change huh
@TheRunpoker4 ай бұрын
Great and encouraging video
@2bNot5 ай бұрын
If driving an electric car "pays for itself in two years", then why are they so expensive and who pays when they are scrapped or the batteries get old ? I don't believe the hype.
@anthonyjones11795 ай бұрын
There was nothing to back this claim up, I've seen other videos were after 10 years an EV is still behind on CO2 emissions, mainly because in Australia we burn fossil fuel to make most of our electricity.
@Richard4824 ай бұрын
You still have to buy the car in the first place. As for paying for itself after two years, I'd recommend doing your own calculations on that. Do people usually pay for their cars to be scrapped? I though scrap yards pay the car owner?
@2bNot4 ай бұрын
Tried to reply. Got erased by YT.
@Richard4824 ай бұрын
@@2bNot That might happen if you include links in the comment.
@2bNot4 ай бұрын
I think it's because I got involved in defending Palestine, and that brought on a battle with censors of some type. Functions loss. Cannot "like" for example. Replies blocked to particular people, but general comments work fine.. Vanishing comments, many of them a lot of work, "error" messages, says "reply added" but it's not, ones that do post, are silently removed later..It's a game, and a test, and a way that these people, or AI, apply theories, strategies, etc. and study the patterns or psychology, of human behaviour and mind control. I never do links, but good thinking. I might not be exactly right, but I can see many ways in which we are being manipulated, filtered, homogenised, disempowered, and put on notice. When I feel my freedoms being eroded or denied, I wonder about humanity, it's future, it's worth, its purpose.. It's future is self-inflicted, that much we can be sure of...
@mcx38725 ай бұрын
Just finishing listening to your book ‘Not the end of the world’, great piece of work! Put a lot of scary topics into perspective for me… thank you.
@TonyNguyen460Ай бұрын
nice video, makes me optimistic about the future!
@drdarren6665 ай бұрын
Adaption is needed not sensationalism
@Deedeedee2145 ай бұрын
There are no solutions, only trade offs. Why is it that every good idea needs to be funded with money taken by force? Most of the noise comes from the same academic halls that less than a hundred years ago told us about the enlightenment and urgency of action concerning eugenics.
@angierox69644 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@vinz98105 ай бұрын
You didn’t take into account that the lifespan of an EV is so much worse than those which are combustion driven. If you need a new battery after five years you can’t calculate with ten or even more years🤔
@Richard4824 ай бұрын
A new EV comes with a battery warranty of at least seven years. The channel autotrader has several videos of a Tesla with 430,000 miles on the clock and 72% left on the battery.