________________________________________________________________________________
Of course.
The only reason to doubt climate change is if you've been a victim of the concerted misinformation campaign. The campaign that was launched by the same spin doctors that launched tobacco companies' disinformation campaigns.
They were very clear on how they did this, and it's been amply documented in the media, just not super well known still, somehow.
They tied climate change denial to a political identity, because politics is how we turn off the rational part of our brain and activate the tribal defense mechanisms. Get your tribe to attack media vehemently anytime climate change is in the media. It makes news editors very nervous about covering the topic, because of the extremely virulent attacks. Even to this day, the media avoids bringing up climate change on relevant topics because they are scared of political blowback. This is the sort of "political correctness" that ends up harming society greatly.
Media is complicit in this, not the victim. By presenting "both sides" equally in many contexts, they give the false impression that the case of the denialists is equally strong.
Just because there are two sides does not mean there are two equally valid sides. And presenting them as such is a form of bias. Quite a pernicious one.
This is common practice in all sorts of stories. Journalists are trained to solicit / include some counterpoint or naysaying voice, no matter the topic. Even if the story is otherwise uncontroversial.
>By presenting "both sides" equally in many contexts
This was the mantra of the new atheist/skeptic movement of the early 2010s - that it wasn't worth to present the other side because the other side is just wrong. Given how this mantra is applied today where 'the other side' should not be heard from or platformed or is just plain evil, I'd rather hear both sides, even if that means I get to hear about creationism or climate change denial.
I don't want the media or tech companies to be the arbiter on what is and isn't reasonable to discuss. Having Jack Dorsey or some intern at some fact check org decide for me what is and isn't reasonable is much worse than merely hearing from a creationist why creationism should be taught in science class.
I mean, do you propose equal time be given to evolution & creationism then or what? I would rather students spend 99.9% of the time on evolution and yeah I guess you can spend the 0.1% time as footnote of what crazy people believe in if you really want.
"Equal time" derives from the days of media broadcast over radio waves, where every broadcast came at the expense of some other one because there was a finite amount of broadcast radio spectrum.
It's irrelevant to on-demand content delivery methods like the internet, where you can carry everything at once.
>I mean, do you propose equal time be given to evolution & creationism then or what?
I support journalists making an effort to present both sides even if one side is unreasonable, because the alternative is they just decide for me what I should and should not be exposed to. That, to me, is much much worse.
It's never "both sides" unless someone's actively trying to push a wedge issue for political gain. It's almost always "lots of varied ways to be wrong, and one way we're pretty sure is right" and if you try to present them all, the one that's right gets drowned out in the volume of dross. Journalism must be curation or there's no point.
Do you have some cycles to spare on...
Time cube
Chemtrails
Flat earth
Lizard people
Heavens Gate
Time wave theory
Etc.
Should we give them equal time? Why not?
>Should we give them equal time? Why not?
The standard I advocate for is for journalists to make an effort to present both sides. There will always be a level of editorializing and they will get it wrong from time to time, but at least they are committed to the principle and there is underlying respect for the audience to make up their own mind.
Not like what OP and you are advocating for - where you want the media to make decisions for you what you may or may no hear because god forbid the media 'platforms' someone that may actually change your mind.
So let me ask you because I am curious: What is your limiting principle? At what point do YOU stop delegating to some doofus anchor what you should and shouldn't be exposed to?
Well, when the overwhelming majority of experts in the field agree, I think it’s best to not waste brain space on crackpot contrarian positions, especially if they are incredibly well funded from obviously motivated actors.
Seems pretty simple to me.
>Well, when the overwhelming majority of experts in the field agree
You're conflating some issues here. Experts inform policy, not set policy. Democratically elected representatives should use experts but not delegate decision making to experts. Take climate change, even if 100% of scientist believe in climate change and certain outcomes of climate change, because any climate mitigations are going to drastically impact my life and the lives of all my fellow-citizens, I sure as heck want to hear alternatives and understand the full implications. I don't want climate scientists deciding climate policy (only informing it), because the cost for stemming climate change may be too high and when balancing all the other factors, we may instead decide instead to focus on mitigating the effects of climate change.
We see this with Coronavirus policy as well. Certain public health officials only focus on stemming the pandemic (a noble goal in a vacuum), but ignore the cost associated with some of the drastic measures to stem the pandemic (like lockdowns). Put another way, even if every single epidemiologist argues that lockdown is the best way to 'flatten the curve', we may decide to do something else because we need to balance all kinds of other factors in addition to 'flattening the curve'. The Great Barrington Declaration [1], for example, which presents an alterative coronavirus policy by all kinds of public health officials makes this case and has been censored by Twitter, and others, for it. Don't you think their point of view is a worthy topic for discussion? Or is this one of those things where you are afraid of 'platforming' an alternative lest it convinces some people?
[1]
Don't be ridiculous. My preferred political party does not have a vested financial interest in those theories, so of course they shouldn't get equal airtime.
Is there any place you draw the line? Should 9/11 truthers be given equal time? Holocaust deniers? QAnon / Pizzagate conspiracists? Obama birthers?
>Should we give them equal time? Why not?
The standard I advocate for is for journalists to make an effort to present both sides. There will always be a level of editorializing and they will get it wrong from time to time, but at least they are committed to the principle and there is underlying respect for the audience to make up their own mind.
Not like what you seem to advocating for - where you want the media to make the decisions for you to what you're exposed to .. because god forbid the media 'platforms' someone that may actually change your mind.
So let me ask you because I am curious: What is your limiting principle? At what point do YOU stop delegating to some doofus anchor what you should and shouldn't be exposed to?
_Having Jack Dorsey or some intern at some fact check org decide for me what is and isn't reasonable is much worse[…]_
No one's saying that he should, so this is a strawman. Also let's not conflate social media (dumb-pipes for following anyone) with newspapers and cable "news" (editorial, selective).
>No one's saying that he should, so this is a strawman.
What are you talking about? Where have you been since 2016? Democrats and media is pushing Twitter, YouTube and Facebook to increase censorship of right-wing viewpoints.
>Also let's not conflate social media (dumb-pipes for following anyone) with newspapers and cable "news" (editorial, selective).
Social media is exerting more and more editorial control and acting more like a publisher and not a platform. I get that there will always be some of standards that not every person will like (since those companies do not want their networks to be used for crime or spam, for example), but the way Twitter and Facebook shut down the Hunter Biden is insane and I don't understand why nobody is not bothered by it.
I don’t think “both sides” is the only issue...
Another is also the politization of issues... if you first argue _against climate change_, and then you argue _against meat_ because of climate change, then I know you’re just using it to push your preferred ideology. How can I be sure you’re also not pushing _climate change_ itself just as ideology?
Note: I agree that less meat is _a_ solution (or _part of_ a solution), but unacceptable to push it as _the_ solution, instead of e.g. general carbon taxation...
They also give the false impression that the number of sides is equal to two.
I used to believe in climate change, then I studied feminism in depth. I don’t believe in climate change anymore.
I’ve learnt 3 things:
- It is possible to fake studies and blatantly ignore one side of the problem. I don’t count anymore how many studies claim that mostly women are victims of violence, and when you dive into the paper, you notice the study has been done by studying a panel of... girls mostly, and the scientist didn’t even care enough to weigh the results. This kind of extremely major problem is in all papers that conclude violence is one-sided, and those that include both genders (with seriousness, not males from prison vs women from workplace, as I have also seen) find equal violence from both genders.
- It is possible to get these papers peer reviewed, and to scale these peer reviews enough that an entire scientific field is dedicated in find proof that a hypothesis is right while never studying the opposite. In fact, a chapter of Mein Kampf passed a journal’s gatekeeping, of course after replacing « Jew » with « male ». I have been pointed to decent papers that studied genders, but they are quite rare in the domain, if you just sample from the general pool, all have incredible flaws for scientists.
- No-one applies the scientific method. It is possible to do such bad journalism as to persuade an entire country that the wage gap is 25 to 30% and that it is the effect of a conspiration against women, even though everyone can notice around them that most men would defend women even if they were wrong. The real % is generally written at the bottom of the article, in the paragraph before conclusion, so nobody reads it and the masses rest persuaded of a wrong figure. It is possible to fake an entire domain of science and have real scientists, public-domain people, governments, doctors, journalists and masses to say the same, false, verifiably false, thing, and literally beat any dissenting opinion until they shut up. The funny thing is everyone can notice around them how many fighters are ready to help protect women, so that would at least tip off that figures don’t match reality.
As a result, I had to reassess « science for the masses ». Things I’m being told by journalists that « are certain » (« It is proven: Women are more clever than men ») can be verifiably false and would still be published nationally (the source of the article about women being more clever was a scientific paper finding an upside in one category, weighing it against error distribution, and signing off with « Therefore, it is not possible to determine whether one gender is better at task type X than the other »).
If anyone wants to try this experience, try becoming expert in a domain that is in the news, and check whether scientists account for basic facts when they find « results ».
I’m sorry, it may be possible that climate change is real, it is just that we have no proof of it, except by people who also claim the feminist science is true. As such, people ask me to « believe in » climate change, and blindly trust data coming from government-paid studies that also find blatantly erroneous data about genders. And this, people, is what it costs to push false narratives.
> I used to believe in climate change, then I studied feminism in depth. I don’t believe in climate change anymore.
Wait wait wait, are you actually saying that poor quality research in field X convinced you that field Y also has poor quality research? How does this make sense?
We all know that a lot of results in the social sciences are garbage, but climate science is based by a completely different methodology. It is backed by concrete measurements, taken over decades all around the world, instead of surveys with N=12. The forecasts are made with simulations based on physical theories, tested and validated independently. And the whole field (not the government, the actual scientists) meet every year to agree on the new state of the art for climate modeling.
How is any of this remotely related to gender studies?
As a side note,
> [...] try becoming expert in a domain that is in the news [...]
How long does it take for you to consider yourself an "expert" in a field?
_How is any of this remotely related to gender studies?_
The bizarreness of linking feminism to climate change notwithstanding, I think that in the interest of productive discussion on HN, an interesting point can be found within it.
A lot of the fuel for the opposition to both feminism and climate change comes from the way both are portrayed in the media. When people are repeatedly brow-beaten with an idea, and anyone who dissents is ostracized and insulted, it causes onlookers to move _away_ from the position that is being shoved in their faces.
These techniques are sometimes misapplied in both equal rights and climate change, which ultimately hurts both causes. These techniques might strengthen an already committed base, but they polarize and antagonize everyone not already sold.
This comic [0], linked last week in a different thread [1], shows the same thing in visual form, and I think there's merit to the concept that overly vociferous opposition to idea X actually _increases_ support of idea X.
[0]
https://pbfcomics.com/comics/deeply-held-beliefs/
-- I don't know anything about the site hosting the comic, but I think the comic stands on its own
[1]
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24832003
> and I think there's merit to the concept that overly vociferous opposition to idea X actually increases support of idea X.
It’s an interesting concept, but I wonder why it applies for some ideas and not others. There are plenty of ideas with vociferous opposition that don’t seem to cause an increase—murder, elder abuse, cannibalism, human trafficking. What would cause some ideas to spread via opposition, and not others?
> What would cause some ideas to spread via opposition, and not others?
The widespread opposition to cannibalism is not publicized because essentially everyone is agreed and there is nothing to discuss. It isn't the case that Democrats are anti-cannibalism and Republicans are pro-cannibalism. There are no prominent existing supporters of cannibalism to vociferously condemn.
Climate change and feminism have factions to fight each other. Oil workers in Texas don't want to lose their livelihood. Homeowners in California don't want extreme fires to claim their homes. Women want more rapists to go to jail. Men don't want to be falsely imprisoned for an alleged rape that didn't really happen.
So you can find plenty of people to argue that climate change is over-hyped, and plenty of people willing to believe them because it serves their own interests, and therefore plenty of people on the other team to be unnecessarily vicious to those people to the point of making their own side look bad.
I can't read the flagged comment, but just the quoted part of the comment in this post seems true to me, even if your "why not these" lists are interesting.. but not a negation of the quoted idea.
Also seems to be compatible with the idea, which has gotten a lot of play in the Social Dilemma Netflix movie, that people engage harder with things they disagree with, and not so much at all with positions they do.
The part of the comment I was responding to was a link to a PBF comic:
https://pbfcomics.com/comics/deeply-held-beliefs/
I do agree it’s an interesting concept, but I think there’s more going on, too.
> The forecasts are made with simulations based on physical theories...
Note that here you're talking only about the fundamental findings of climate science, but when people talk about the effects and dangers of climate change, they talk about consequences that are often far down a causal chain (local weather patterns, agriculture, social impacts, health, etc.).
So without realising it you just attributed to all the research that is connected to climate change the same level of precision of a small subset of it, which is obviously undue.
> Wait wait wait, are you actually saying that poor quality research in field X convinced you that field Y also has poor quality research? How does this make sense?
I'm not sure that was the case being made. It's not the quality of the research, it's the quality of the journalism, which in turn demonstrates that the journalism is of sufficiently low quality as to be incapable of revealing the existence of propaganda-quality research.
Then the problem becomes that if you can't trust the media coverage, you would have to go to the primary sources. But what percentage of people have the time and competence to actually do that?
> How long does it take for you to consider yourself an "expert" in a field?
The poster is clearly referring to the Gell-Mann amnesia effect:
https://loricism.fandom.com/wiki/Gell-Mann_Amnesia_Effect
> It's not the quality of the research, it's the quality of the journalism
It's not only that. At some point you realise that even science with all its safeguards is not indifferent to the dominant, accepted belief systems. People simply align with a group and will blindly repeat anything, even self-contradictory statements, as long as it's expected by their peers. It's quite uncanny when you notice it for the first time.
That's because the safeguards in science guard against _unintentional_ error.
Peer review isn't robust against political alignment because if the author and the reviewers are all making the same false unstated assumption, nobody is looking in the direction of the error. And it gets even worse if people who do see it are penalized for saying so.
The scientific method assumes good faith, good skepticism and a willingness to admit mistakes. Without that you're doing politics, not science.
_> "I’m sorry, it may be possible that climate change is real, it is just that we have no proof of it, except by people who also claim the feminist science is true."_
This is one of the most absurd strawman critiques of climate science ever.
It sounds like you've found good reason to be skeptical about popularized anti-male research.
But I'm confused by how strong of a statement you're making about climate change:
> ..., it may be possible that climate change is real, it is just that _we have no proof of it, except by people who also claim the feminist science is true._"
Wouldn't you need to really dig into original sources to conclude that no such evidence exists?
This is very different than the tobacco companies.
It was known anecdotally for a hundred years that smoking was unhealthy, despite a very widespread cultural acceptance of it. The evidence was overwhelming to anyone with ears and eyes who knew lifetime smokers. The tobacco companies went so far as paying cardiologists to invent the so called 'Type A' personality to explain excess heart attacks among smokers.
Climate change on the other hand is much more subtle. The greenhouse effect is not an obvious on its face, one typically needs to be taught about it in school. Additionally, the natural variation both in weather and climate obscure effects. And the difficulty in measuring global historic temperature series and modelling climate needed to be invented over the past couple of decades.
It may seem obvious to many people today, but that's more than likely because they grew up in an environment of scientific consensus.
What's funny in the original article, is the the first paper cited, was GM sponsored research to indicate that the particulate pollution (aerosols) couldn't be causing the growth in polar ice caps because aerosols would have a warming effect. The true irony here is that this wasn't a warning about warming, it was sponsored research showing that GM wasn't responsible for cooling which had been observed. (Please note -- I am not claiming that there was ever a consensus about a 'global cooling threat', there wasn't. There was a limited concern that aerosols could have this effect, and luckily GM research was able to step in and show them how those fears were misguided.)
The same goons that peddled the pseudoscience that tobacco was safe are the ones that tried to convince the world that climate change wasn't real.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/tobacco-and-oil-i...
I can see how it would be comforting to have a villain, but I don't think that is true. Companies deeply linked to the petroleum industry argued against action (as, of course, would be expected). But the basic pitch of the environmentalists has never been acceptable. The idea that we should curtail the comfort of the present population in a speculative attempt to do something in 50 years is unpopular. And in total seriousness, it is rare I've heard an articulation of what that something is vs the alternative. The options I heard were we scale back our lifestyle so our children can scale back theirs, with the alternative of we don't scale back our lifestyle and then our children scale back theirs.
The environmentalist movement has avoided:
* Pushing overpopulation into the political conversation (we've roughly doubled the global population since 50 years ago. The new arrivals are largely people in dire need of better energy access). We have a lot more talks about banning coal than pushing for a 1 child policy in Africa.
* Nuclear energy. Pointing out the obvious, the most successful climate change initiative in the past 50 years has been the energy grid in France. Pro-climate-action has generally correlated with anti-nuclear.
* Talking seriously about the costs or implementation strategy. As I recall, people were saying solar was a cheap option when Germany launched their Energiewende. They now have the most expensive power in Europe.
The best argument historically for ignoring climate change has been that its supporters don't seem to be taking it seriously; they ignored a bunch of contributing factors or picked solutions based on political beliefs rather than trying to support cheap clean energy for everyone. GM and Ford are not responsible for that.
A bunch of environmentalists are idiots. But that doesn’t mean there’s no sensible plan or that it’s all speculative. In economics carbon’s costs have a name: they impose an externality on others.
The standard remedy for an externality is a tax. So, to address climate change you would:
1. Institute a tax on carbon
2. Work through an international framework like the UN or WTO to have other countries also institute this tax, and to levy tariffs on any countries that don’t.
3. Since carbon is taxed, you can lower other, less efficient taxes such as the income tax, which is a drag on productivity.
4. You can also redistribute some of the money to compensate the poor for the effective tax increase. For instance this is how canada deals with its sales tax.
There are other coherent plans but that’s a big one. Had we implemented thus tax 50 years ago, the effects would have been:
* energy efficiency is encouraged in production as there is a higher cost
* other forms of energy such as nuclear and hydro gain an advantage
* There would have been more capital available for researching other alternatives such as solar
* The economy would have remained good due to the benefits of a sharply lower income tax
Environmentalists tend to be rather bad at math and not good at thinking through economics or evaluating tradeoffs. Because everyone else abandoned the field, they produced the most prominent (and wrong headed) solutions.
But with gradual economically sensible action 50 years ago, we could have been in for a very soft landing. We could have still used fossil fuels too! They were pretty necessary, but the system I outlined would have nudged us towards a different energy base.
While I agree in principle with what you're putting forward, I think there are a couple of huge obstacles. One, good luck convincing politicians to sacrifice their projects to make room for #3. I understand the carbon tax would be more efficient, but in the short term there would a be a revenue loss, and most politicians would only care about that. Two, Without #3, the whole thing is a non-starter. It's a lofty academic idea that fits well into a forum like this; but without #3 happening, it boils down to "give me more of your money and I promise we'll fix it!", which is an unacceptable argument for lots of Americans (myself included, to be frank).
I personally hold that the best and most realistic solution is a headfirst, committed dive into nuclear energy.
Not obvious why #3 is impossible. You can forecast revenue changes from a carbon tax and revenue losses from an income tax, set rates accordingly, and adjust as you go. This is especially feasible if you have a 50 year timeframe.
Should be quite feasible to make it revenue neutral and this rob no politician of their project.
Nuclear would have been great 50 years ago! My argument is that the project I outlined above would have given market based incentive to make nuclear competitive.
If level headed people of all stripes had focussed on the problem it would have been solveable.
(Since I can’t edit my comment above, I should add for posterity: obviously not all environmentalists are bad at math or systems thinking, and some of them had sensible solutions. But we would have had better solutions if others joined too)
This sounds like a very good plan. The best part of it is that a single country can institute it on it’s own - just start taxing products and imports by carbon! A big enough country could move the needle, _and_ encourage others to take action.
Instead, the only actual ideas that actual people actually propose are 100% braindead.
Ban meat (lol), ban nuclear (lol lol), ban plastic straws (lol lol lol), ...
This style of argumentation is chilling the discussion.
Please stop with the ad hominems.
There are many overlapping problems, not only climate change. It's complex. Partial solutions are still solutions. They are just incomplete
I disagree. I think that partial solutions (or, in cases I listed above, anti-solutions) steal the enthusiasm from real solutions. Giving people the ego-boost and emotional satisfaction of solving the problem, but actually making it worse.
Perhaps we can agree to disagree without being derogatory to each other.
You will continue to see things in black and white "the problem", "real solutions".
I will continue to see a mosaic of overlapping issues.
Sorry, no disrespect meant to you personally. I just ridicule and disrespect bad ideas.
Alright. But please be aware that it is possible to chill discussion through stridency. I don't believe this applies only to me.
the ideas aren't bad though, you just don't agree with them.
Banning meat isn't something I would get on board with but it would probably be effective.
There's been a lot of discussion lately on HN about nuclear and I can actually see both sides of the debate.
Plastic straws I think you have actually just strawmanned environmentalists here as I've never seen plastic straws mentioned as a solution or contributor to global warming.
>scale back our lifestyle
Low-carbon-footprint urban lifestyle doesn't feel "scaled back." If anything it feels scaled up, intense, high maintenance, premium. Something for wild and rambunctious twenty-somethings. It leaves people yearning to settle down in "the simple life" with a big lawn, a big SUV, and a big steak on the grill.
It feels pretty much the same, except there's no second car.
The first problem is that housing stock takes a lot of modification to get to modern energy usage (essentially, 0 joules after construction). We haven't started down that road in any serious way as a society, even though the technology is commercial and past early-adopter pricing. But living in that house, it's no different to living in any other nice house -- a McMansion has a big reception hall, my passive solar house has a airlock/mudroom -- that's not a difference in lifestyle, just in detail.
The second problem is transport. At a personal level this might mean EVs, except that they are so very expensive. You might afford to replace one of the family's cars, but not all of them. Public transport would appear to be an alternative, but if you don't have access to that already, then the build time for that is over a decade. So there's going to be an uncomfortable interim of, say, twenty years. Which I suspect will be filled with bikes and e-bikes, as adding bike lanes and bikeways are minor projects. There are times when your description of personal transport as "scaled up" is very true.
There are many small annoyances from being slightly ahead of the bulk of the population. But one of the things Covid-19 has done has been to make local government is far more open to change: they've flipped from sending me letters about my vegetable garden in my front yard, to asking me if I'd be happy for their staff to tour it and collect ideas.
First off, simply because you don't like the people that support a position doesn't mean that position is incorrect.
And overpopulation? Um... because draconian population control tactics and policies are evil? China's one child policy was unconscionable.
German energy is costly not due to production costs, but instead due to taxes on energy utilization in general to subsidize a more rapid transition to environmentally sound energy. Other countries, i.e. France, have chosen to lower costs substantially. (France is unwise, IMHO. Lower costs increases utilization which offsets carbon gains, see rebound effects [0]. Germany is doing the right thing) [1]
Nuclear: Has always been on the table. Environmentalists are not a unified block. The Gates foundation is substantially funding nuclear.
Most of what you think of as "environmental support" is actually funding from petroleum based business. The whole personal recycling movement? paid for by the petroleum industry. [2]
Finally, the petroleum industry hired the _exact_ same goons that the tobacco industry did to peddle pseudoscientific nonsense. [3]
There are coherent, comprehensive, effective plans for fighting climate change. You are just unlikely to hear about in the news because they are deeply wonky. There are paths out, they are neither easy (there will be losers) nor simple (it's a complex system).
However, most of what we hear are the voices of very, very, very rich and powerful oil industries trying to muddy the waters. And lets be clear: they _will_ be the losers, if the rest of us have any hope of not either having to bear terrible austerity or the horrors of climate change.
[0]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rebound_effect_(conservation)
[1]
https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaelshellenberger/2019/02/05...
[2]
https://www.npr.org/2020/09/11/897692090/how-big-oil-misled-...
[3]
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/tobacco-and-oil-i...
_"However, most of what we hear are the voices of very, very, very rich and powerful oil industries trying to muddy the waters."_
I'm shocked, _shocked_ by your suggestion that bad actors would conduct disinformation campaigns to discredit and neutralize inconvenient truths.
What is shocking is that they play both sides.
It’s a well known phenomenon that if you give people a small, concrete thing that they have agency over, i.e. recycling their cans, even though that thing is next to useless in terms of systemic change, they will be less likely to support broad based, effective system legislation.
The bad actors pretend to be “environmental” in order to muddy the waters, sap support for actual change, and paint the entirety of the movement as ridiculous by funding outspoken lunatics.
It’s straight out of Putin’s playbook. [0]
Putin funds “anti-Putin” organizations, but only ones that are absurd and implausibly idealistic. Those likely to offend other Russians.
[0]
https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2012/05/31/putins-propaganda-m...
Ya, frankly, the effectiveness of propaganda scares me, deeply. How do I know what I know, with any certainty, if I'm so easily manipulated.
The exploitation of our cognitive "loopholes" is the best case against Freedom Speeches™. Paraphrasing: We're not rationale, so countering falsehoods with truthiness simply cannot work.
The only legal mitigation I can think of is authenticate (optionally) speech. Just like the authenticity facets of the replication crisis. Meaning show your data, cite your sources, sign your works. And then maybe over time our culture learns to discount anything unsourced and unsigned.
To start, implement a carbon tax and more appropriately cost current goods.
let people prioritize what things they find important
Ok, but do you think there needed to be a _misinformation_ campaign led by devious ne'er-do-wells to make raising taxes unpopular?
That is a mechanism to achieve the goals of the environmental movement. Not a reason to achieve the goals of the environmentalists, or an argument that it is the best path.
> Ok, but do you think there needed to be a _misinformation_ campaign led by devious ne'er-do-wells to make raising taxes unpopular?
The only sensible implementation of a carbon tax is the one in which all of the money is refunded to the population.
A program that causes everybody to get ~$1000 while only paying ~$500 in taxes because large corporations are responsible for the majority of carbon emissions would seem to be very popular, absent a misinformation campaign, since the average person would net ~$500 (out of the pockets of Exxon et al).
Squint and Canada's carbon tax dividend looks like UBI. Win / win.
Why push 1 child policy in Africa? Start with USA, where the pollution per person ratio is much higher.
Probably because the US is already on the trajectory towards 1. The birthrate today is at an all time low of 1.73 in the US. In Africa it is currently 4.6.
Fully industrialized countries already have declining birth rates and modest populations. Having more kids in places with fewer resources isn't a sustainable proposition. If you have a stable rather than exploding population, it's much easier for that population to raise its standards of living in a sustainable way.
> The only reason to doubt climate change is if you've been a victim of the concerted misinformation campaign. The campaign that was launched by the same spin doctors that launched tobacco companies' disinformation campaigns.
It's also incredibly distressing to think about what the future will look like, why wouldn't people want to put their head in the sand?
When I hear the average person deny climate change, I feel it's more to do with being afraid. At this point people look for something to validate their doubt, which is why misinformation works so well, it's convenient to believe in nonsense.
If you told people that climate change was actually beneficial to them, they'd be more likely to want to believe it. In fact this what some political figure heads are doing.
I think most people are in shock at this point that it's become real. Especially people who have been deniers for the last 20-30 years.
I think this lack of awareness or straight up apathy is just another example of the dearth of "attention energy" available to the average person today. When there's so much vying for peoples' attention on a daily basis, stimulating a concerted response (e.g. political will) is much more difficult. I'm not sure how we solve this at this point, because I don't see it naturally getting better.
It's unfortunate that there are no meaningful visual effects to climate change.
As an example, California took action to clean up tailpipe emissions because people could SEE smog.
And you can say something meaningful like "1 gallon of gasoline creates 20 pounds of CO2" but since CO2 is colorless and odorless nobody really gets it.
Most climate change activists also have tied being for climate change to a political identity. Their solutions to fixing the problem of green house gasses in the atmosphere call for wholesale changes to the current political and cultural system used in the West. If the only goal of the climate change activists was to get CO2 ppm in the atmosphere back to 300, then they should be just advocating for a carbon tax that ratchets down greenhouse gas emissions fairly quickly. Instead many of them are advocating the elimination of capitalism, free markets, and the patriarchy.
So? Just work with them on a carbon tax instead of denying the problem. A lot of these "activists" would happily take a revenue-neutral carbon tax that returns money to people via UBI. They don't have a snowball's chance of achieving all that other stuff so who cares?
Denying climate change is also tied to a political identity.
Why a carbon text, why UBI? Why do these same activists also campaign against nuclear power?
I'm assuming you meant "carbon tax"? Why? Because it's the most elegant way of putting a price on emissions.
Why UBI? It redistributes the tax collected from high emitters (likely to be higher income) to low-emitters (likely to be lower income) so progressives like it. It keeps the tax revenue neutral and doesn't allow the government to expand so conservatives like it.
> Why do these same activists also campaign against nuclear power?
Because of the long history of cost overruns, waste disposal and management issues, and the fear of a minuscule chance of catastrophic failure (not saying this last one is a rational fear).
Why fixate on nuclear power whenever climate change comes up? Why not institute a carbon tax and leave the rest to the market? Some countries (France, India, the UK) love nuclear power, and others (US, Japan, Germany) are not so hot on it. If they all have carbon taxes, each country can figure out for itself what it wants to do, and collectively embargo/tariff countries that don't have a carbon tax.
It's weird that a lot of people's default position is "I won't do anything for climate change unless we get nuclear power." Almost like they know there's very little chance of the national opinion about nuclear power changing very soon, so that gives them an "out" on taking any other action.
> _Why? Because it's the most elegant way of putting a price on emissions._
I used to agree with this, and now I don't.
A carbon tax has to be an approximation, and there are significant judgement calls on what the total carbon burden of a given product or service might be. This is a recipe for paperwork, loopholes, and a raft of unintended consequences.
Instead, I support an across-the-board carbon sales tax on everything. Use some of this to subsidize carbon-reducing technology at the point of sale. Put the rest of it toward everything else we use taxes for, and make sure that renewable research, nuclear energy, and so on, are adequately funded. UBI? sure, why not; but let's not attach it directly to a climate tax, that only confuses both issues.
There are some exceptions: it's practical to calculate the carbon burden of electricity, and handle the taxation-and-subsidy market directly in that field.
> A carbon tax has to be an approximation, and there are significant judgement calls on what the total carbon burden of a given product or service might be.
Sorry, could you explain more? I always assumed a carbon tax meant an extraction tax on any fossil fuel. For example, taxing companies per barrel of crude, per ton of natgas or coal they take out of the ground. Since practically all carbon emissions involve the use of a fossil fuel somewhere in the chain, wouldn't this capture the carbon output of any product or service?
Sure, that would be one way to do it: if there were a one world government, which could impose such a tax.
But in the world we have, it's not going to work: that tax would be imposed on only the developed world, which already has issues competing in manufacturing, due to paying reasonable amounts of money for labor, and at least some attention to workplace safety and environmentally-responsible behavior.
So you'd have to apply tariffs of some sort on imported goods, and base it on some guesswork as to the carbon footprint of the items. At which point, just giving up and charging a sales tax is better, for the reasons I described.
Couldn't countries with carbon extraction taxes impose blanket 25% (or 50%, whatever it takes to get immediate compliance) tariffs on all imports from countries that don't have the same carbon taxes? Or impose economic sanctions, freeze assets and so on? Sorry, I'm just spitballing here. Have I fallen prey to "it's easy, just do X"?
I agree this would still require a fair amount of coordination between the countries that do the tariffs. But less so than deciding tariffs on individual products based on their pollution.
> _Have I fallen prey to "it's easy, just do X"?_
A little bit? A carbon tax is workable, I've just come to favor a sales tax as simpler.
They're both consumption taxes, the latter says "ok, this is what we have to take out of the economy to pay for mitigation, lets do it as a sales tax and then pay some of it back for products that reduce carbon burden, either directly or as substitute goods for especially polluting technologies".
The more moving parts something like this has, the more opportunities there are to take advantage of that. Sales tax already exists, it's well understood, this would be fire-and-forget, and it wouldn't create a bunch of new jobs for accountants (nothing against them, but we don't want that).
> it wouldn't create a bunch of new jobs for accountants
That's the part I'm not convinced about. A flat sales tax rate for carbon will inevitably under-tax or over-tax something. Making it fairer will require armies of accountants poring over the carbon intensity of product categories. And of course companies will say "our factories/trucks/warehouses/stores run on wind power, give us a rebate". I understand the appeal of tacking a carbon tax on to an existing tax regime, but would it really be so easy or fair?
PS I've upvoted all your comments in this discussion and I appreciate you engaging with me so far. It's given me a lot to think about.
> Sure, that would be one way to do it: if there were a one world government, which could impose such a tax.
You can just impose such a tax domestically, and tariff _all_ imports from countries that don't have that tax.
The low-carbon industries in those countries will very quickly force their governments to implement a carbon tax, because such a tariff punishes them unfairly.
To be fair, this is because they have to tie their side since the others are tied as well. When one side has the support of the ruling party, you need some sort of way to rally people and, sadly, politicizing issues is the quickest way out. Many of their calls, which you summarized in an unflattering way, are also about making sure that CO2 emissions aren't encouraged and basically not allowed. Having a tax isn't going to stop them so people are calling for radical solutions. Is that a good thing? I'd say no but it's better than denying it or saying the problem is overblown, like many seem to. I'd rather people worry too much than not at all.
Can you explain what makes you think that having a tax wouldn't stop them?
If driving an electric car becomes less expensive relative to driving a gasoline car, people buy electric cars. If heating with electric heat pumps becomes less expensive relative to heating with oil, people install heat pumps. If generating electricity from wind or nuclear becomes less expensive than generating electricity from coal, people build new power plants accordingly.
Which part of the problem doesn't this solve?
I suppose this is indicative of the kind of thinking that leads someone to concern themselves with problems we are causing for future generations and millions of Bangladeshis.
"Victim?" There are also willing participants.
Extending Upton Sinclair's quote:
_It is difficult to get someone to understand something when their salary, lifestyle, beliefs, or opinions depends upon them not understanding it._
Millions of Americans are addicted to their muscle cars, SUVs, BigMacs, steaks, Costco, highly energy-intensive disposable consumer goods, and worldwide jet-setting vacations.
> The only reason to doubt climate change is if you've been a victim of the concerted misinformation campaign.
Nobody doubts climate change because the climate has and always will be changing.
They made a term to satisfy pedants like yourself. Just replace "climate change" with "anthropogenic climate change" when you see it in the news, and you'll be right as rain.
They adopted this term for the same reason all authoritarians play Orwellian games with language.
Oof. Isn't it about time for you to delete this throwaway account?
Typical NPC response
I'll bring it up because the article doesn't, but Exxon was active in climate research in the 70s and 80s, but when it became clear that politicians around the world were going to do something about it, Exxon did a 180 and then stoked up the the doubt PR machine.
https://skepticalscience.com/1982-exxon-accurate-prediction....
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/climate-consensus-97...
Tens of thousands of scientist spend decades doing the hard work of collecting data, building models, testing hypotheses and on the other side some politician or talking head with a reach of millions says: "Fake news. Scientists say that because they are getting paid to toe the party line.", often paired with "It would cause immeasurable wealth to change things and destroy the economy" without doing one damn thing to quantify or prove their claims. And yet these thought leaders are treated with respect by the press.
If a climate researcher is willing to sell their soul and lie about climate research for a $50K/year job, just imagine how much lying corporations are willing to do for tens of billions of dollars a year.
> when it became clear that politicians around the world were going to do something about it
I find it very hard to believe this was ever the case.
Here is a forceful talk by Margaret Thatcher to the UN General Assembly imploring world leaders to take seriously the threat of climate change.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnAzoDtwCBg
That was 17 years before An Inconvenient Truth, and three years before the Kyoto Protocol was written up. Thatcher was a hard core conservative, who also happened to have a degree in Chemistry from Oxford.
I actually just heard this on the radio this morning. Here in Australia, the conservative government has a "we don't know if climate change is affected by humans" feel to it. We were all quite surprised by Boris Johnson's moves on renewable energy and climate action, but the conservative party in the U.K. has historically been strong supporters of climate action.
So, during Thatcher's administration then. Did she push any significant legislation or expend any political capital to pare down fossil fuel use at all? Militaries are some of the biggest fossil fuel consuming organizations, did she cut the UK's military budget or push for cuts to NATO or the U.S. military?
Politicians are always happy to say one thing while doing another, a few examples of rhetorical opposition to climate change do not demonstrate that there was actual political will to do anything about it.
It's hard to imagine, but there was a time before this issue was politicized, and when political parties were capable of compromise and working with the other side. Our current political environment is an aberration historically.
> when political parties were capable of compromise and working with the other side. Our current political environment is an aberration historically.
Historically, an inability to work with the other side usually resulted in localized armed conflicts, or civil war.
This has been true up until the middle of 20th century, when the relative abundance that was brought on by intense exploitation of fossil fuels (and globalization as a result) pacified political interests, as they were now beholden to global corporatism, rather than the support of the local militia or the army.
Unfortunately for everyone involved, as we get off the fossil fuel needle, the political climate is only going to get worse, not better, unless we also manage to decouple prosperity from CO2 emissions at the same time.
With rare exceptions the things both political parties have been willing to work together on have been implementations of various forms of corporatist and imperialist policies. Fracking was cemented into place, and popular resistance to the DAPL was crushed, under an administration which was supposed to have all the right positions on the question of climate change. There was not some halcyon age in the 60s/70s/80s when the Republicans and the Democrats were ready to work together to dismantle the fossil fuel industry until it was all undone by a PR campaign.
The government broke up AT&T. There was a time when politicians understood their role as being the servant of their constituents, at least to a degree. These days they don't even pretend, it's all corporations and special interest groups.
Most of the funding for the thought leaders in climate science today were funded by these same corporations.
I have a relative that was doing climate research in the 70's and 80's. He was considered a radical, and ended up leaving the field because his funded dried up, he eventually went into teaching.
He'll tell you that the current models are all B.S., that's it's much worse than we've been led to believe.
Why are people looking for conspiracies where there are clearly none? Climate science is incredibly complicated and it took a long time to get the evidence to a level where we can actually consider making drastic economic changes to fight it - what did the author expect GM and Ford of 50 years ago (and climate science of 50 years ago) to do?
Seems reasonable to expect them to not actively lobby against environmental regulations.
It's not like there's a lack of historical precedent for a profit motive causing them to work against the interests of the general population. See also: Streetcars[0]
[0]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Motors_streetcar_consp...
>It's not like there's a lack of historical precedent for a profit motive causing them to work against the interests of the general population
So that makes it okay? Perhaps the thing that needs to change is our expectations of corporations.
>It's not like there's a lack of historical precedent
So what? You don't get to assume something because something completely unrelated happened.
>Seems reasonable to expect them to not actively lobby against environmental regulations.
Why is it reasonable to not lobby against environmental regulations? What if the environmental regulations are unreasonable? For example, 'The Green New Deal' is 90% batshit crazy.
50 years ago was 1970.
In 1980 Cosmos: A Personal Voyage came out. A companion book came out the next year. In it, Carl Sagan warns about the dangers of global warming.
We knew. Climate science 50 years ago was good enough to identify this as a problem.
Al Gore decided to be Clinton's running mate in part due to how HW Bush was handling environmental issues. Issues he was bringing up in Congress since 1976 when he was first elected.
Once again, we knew.
We also knew that the best time to get a handle on the problem was then.
The "conspiracies" are well documented. See, for example, season 1 of the Drilled podcast:
https://www.criticalfrequency.org/drilled
It's all out there in the memos from these companies.
Except they were still working within the constraints of climate science of 50 years ago - which was not at a level of credence where you can push drastic policy changes to the economy. That's what I meant.
Atmospheric sciences were already very advanced in 1970 and models published in the 70s were quite accurate on warming through the year 2000. Models published in the 80s and later have been very accurate up to the present day.
Reposting my comment from an unrelated thread, on this:
"I think there is too much information around for the average person to filter and process and digest. All three are important parts of living in a society and it looks to me like even with e.g. economic issues alone, it's just very hard for (to be fair) anybody to keep up.
In turn, people reach out to conspiracy theories to simplify the world around them with obvious answers and explanations."
In times of lack of leadership, it's easier to blame a mythical "them" rather than confront specific faulty, corrupt, incompetent bureaucrats. Furthermore, it provides a sense of tribal community in uncertain times. It's moot at this point because it doesn't really change anything now or in the future but reveal additional evil corporate actions.
The only things that can and must change the situation are:
1. Global GHG reductions
2. Carbon capture and sequestration (CCS), primarily from oceanic biologically-farmed sources similar to kelp or phytoplankton.
I mean, GM was producing the first "modern" EV 24 years ago (1996) - and are one of the biggest traditional auto manufacturers with both a history of producing EVs/hybrids as well as a plan to introduce a large number of EVs across their brands. It's definitely not as fast as we'd all like, but I think the indication that they know ICE is limited lifespan (for a lot of reasons) is definitely built into GM's history and future. It's no Tesla as far as EV volume, capability, and product line - but they're definitely working on it (like the slow multi-million-vehicle-production-per-year company they are). I think it's hard to argue that GM has known about this and ignored the problem, though.
Anyway, disclaimer: I work for Cruise and so I'm clearly a shill for GM, so you can just ignore a lot of what I say because I'm 100% biased.
So did we.
James Hansen testified to Congress and the IPCC was setup back in 1988.
Everyone has ignored these warnings. Now they want to point fingers to assuage their own guilt. Get real.
Yes and I was around back back then and extremely concerned.
32 years later I'm not.
I've never understood Big Auto's reluctance on EV tech. If they had spent as much effort that could have been spent on getting cars with equivalent miles per charge as miles per tank, people would buy them. What makes Big Auto so dependent on Big Oil?
>I've never understood Big Auto's reluctance on EV tech.
Clearly there is a reason.
Even today, it's obviously true that EVs have major limitations. Limitations that were more pronounced before modern-day electronics and battery technology. I'm not sure if you could release a competitive EV in the 80s (for example).
That's certainly part of it. But I think it's also the same reason Kodak invented the digital camera and then ignored it. It was more profitable to keep doing what they were doing, and they were so invested in it.
The automobile industry has invested hundreds of billions, if not trillions, of dollars into R&D for the internal combustion engine.
Kodak is a good example because it is a case of the innovator's dilemma [1], and I think that applies here too. They knew digital was the future, but growing existing markets was always more profitable and politically sustainable. To big auto, EV markets appear too small and not worth investing in compared to growing the ICE markets. Until they're not.
[1]
https://innovationmanagement.se/2017/05/24/the-innovators-di...
No doubt that is true as well. The fact that Tesla dragged the entire industry towards EVs means that there was inertia. But I'm skeptical that Tesla could have competed in the 80s, 90s or even early 2000s. Late 2000s and early 2010s was when all kinds of technologies from all over the place, made EVs much more competitive against ICEs.
To be short, it was the batteries. They were just too damn big, heavy, and expensive per amp hour for anything more than a commuter car. Tesla struggled with batteries early on and ended up building their own factory in the end.
That said, there were definitely people excited about electric commuter cars and the big automakers were disdainful of them. GM's famous EV1 that they refused to sell (only lease) because they wanted the power to destroy them the instant the government got off their back about electric cars.
There was a missed market opportunity for a startup that did electric commuter cars in the 90s and 2000s. Maybe not a huge userbase, but very loyal. Of course a small company would face the same dealership franchise headwinds that Tesla had to fight and might not succeed, especially in a world with relatively little Internet connectivity and less comfort with shopping and buying online.
Thirty, or, probably, even twenty years ago, nobody could build a electric car that could compete with ICE engines. So, why waste money making them if, instead, you can make money selling ICE cars?
That could have changed if society had (through regulations, subsidies or taxes) changed the rules, but it didn’t until fairly recently.
Even today, I haven’t seen numbers (but I haven’t looked hard, either) of _any_ manufacturer that shows they make a profit making and selling electric cars.
Tesla’s profits, for example, as far as I know, always were smaller than the money they get from selling regulatory credits (
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/23/teslas-sale-of-environmental...
).
That’s society finally saying ICE cars must go out.
Government mills mill slowly, but I think many people underestimate how much they can accomplish in the long run.
Not sure what you're saying. GM was early (earliest really) to the EV game, and has good EV tech. Excellent, even, it's just... GM cars are fairly underwhelming in other ways. Still, the Volt is the best car I've ever owned.
They just don't ship them in volume because it's not yet profitable to do so. Whatever they produce of the Bolt, they sell. They just don't produce that many. Still, not as bad as some other companies, like Toyota, etc. that have only produced EVs where required by compliance.
Unlike Tesla, they don't have investors willing to take risky bets. They have to turn a profit and pay dividends. They're a massive multinational corporation that ships many multiples of the volume that Tesla ships.
When batteries get cheap enough and the supply of them reliable enough, they will be entirely able to supply any demand that is out there.
"Sales of the 2011 Volt began in the United States in mid-December 2010"
"Volt production ended in February 2019"
Doesn't look like Chevy actually makes the Volt anymore. Also, my point was that had they invested as much in EV as they did ICE doesn't logic suggest we would have had practical EV much earlier than 2011? Take this in the light of the actual article of this post saying that GM knew ICE automobiles were major cause in climate changing conditions.
It's irrelevant that the Volt (a range extended car with both ICE and EV power sources) isn't made anymore, they only produce pure EV nows in the form of the Bolt and some newer cars coming soon.
And the GM EV1 was really the first modern electric car, produced in 1996. They killed it, and it wasn't great (NiCad batteries, weird design, etc.) but it predates anybody else's serious efforts, apart from some stuff in the 70s oil crisis that was built around lead acid batteries.
But basically GM started producing EVs as soon as lithium ion battery manufacturing chains made it possible. Thank Bob Lutz.
But I never said GM wasn't .. basically evil :-) Of course they're riding/pushing the ICE & petroleum wave, and pushing hard on it, that's what makes them money. Because for the last 100 years that's all that was practical, and it's what made them as a company. Boxes that burn dinosaur juice to move. But there was no battery tech until LiOn that could make EV feasible as any kind of alternative.
However GM's evil is subsidiary to the petroleum company's evil. Whatever bad GM has done, oil companies have done x 100.
> What makes Big Auto so dependent on Big Oil?
The fact that 99% of Americans live within spitting distance of a gas pump that will fully charge an ICE car in under 3 minutes.
I would love to ditch my family's ICE car for an equivalent EV, but because we live in an apartment, and because my wife (who drives) does not work for a fabulously wealthy tech company that has employee garage chargers [1], we have nowhere to charge it.
As chargers are slowly getting better, and slowly proliferating into garages and parking spaces, and dedicated EV charging stations, this equation changes. But this sort of thing takes decades of effort, and trillions of dollars of capital investment.
The same way that it's been the year of Linux on the desktop [2] (for the past 20 years), every year has been the year of the EV. It's going to happen someday [3], but it's not going to happen _quickly_.
[1] When I did drive to my workplace at a fabulously wealthy tech company, it had _twelve_ charging stations in a five-hundred vehicle parking lot. You look at that, and then tell me if EVs are ready for prime-time.
[2] Ironically, we've long hit, and passed the point where we hit the year of Linux in the car.
[3] Unless climate change (likely) or nuclear war (less likely) wrecks our civilization first.
Oil has historically been inexpensive and abundant and mainstream environmental concerns are relatively nascent. Further, no one knew how viable battery tech would become, and a big driver of this viability has been the booming consumer electronics market which is itself a relatively recent development. Basically the auto industry didn't have your benefit of hindsight.
Electric vehicle manufacturing is almost a different business model from ICE vehicle manufacturers. If you look at the history of car manufacturing, you'll see that the early ones would just deliver a chassis (usually with an engine and transmission). Even the body was 'aftermarket'!
Electric vehicles have no engine, and the entire drive-train is simpler, so it's now easier and more important to be vertically integrated (like Tesla).
They have lots of experience making ICE vehicles. Making an EV takes a different set of engineers and different assembly line practices and different suppliers and and and..
Part of it is that Big Auto does not include Big Auto Dealership, and Big Auto Dealership needs service revenue to continue being as profitable as it has been.
Electric vehicles are projected to have far fewer costs per mile from service compared to ICE vehicles.[0][1]
I really like only having to worry about tires and windshield wipers (and other shared mechanical equipment at the appropriate mileage).
0.
https://insideevs.com/news/340365/electric-car-servicing-cos...
1.
https://arstechnica.com/cars/2017/12/does-lower-total-cost-o...
Huge risks with little short term gain. Being first, from their POV, has no reward in this short-term world we live in. They have to change almost every part of their business, it is just easier to ignore or work against progress. I worked 15 years ago, they hope the same strategy will work today.
I grew up just minutes from GM proving grounds. A couple decades ago I was present when someone asked an executive why they don’t sell many EVs. His response was a lack of demand. At the time there really wasn’t much demand.
EVs are still not a slam dunk. Battery recycling is an issue. I’ve talked with people who handle car fleets and there are still other issues for them.
I look forward to these things being solved. I wish the innovation had started earlier so we’d be further along.
The supply chain that caters specifically to ICEs is huge and all of that will have to go when electric motors replace ICEs. The same goes for all the technology, tooling and expertise that goes into creating today's ICEs. Imagine how many people are experts at just one tiny part of ICE technology. They might have 20 to 30 years experience all of which will be worthless after a transition to EVs.
Big oil is valuable only if someone burns it. Automobiles were the perfect consumer for the stuff. I presume there are connections from the oil companies to the car manufacturers.
I think in the last two years the auto industry has come around to the idea. Electrification solves five problems for them. Solves mileage regulations. Solves pollution regulations. Solves global warming issues. Simplified vehicle design since electric drive trains are simpler and more flexible than internal combustion ones. Finally because they are more reliable also solves warranty issues.
At this point what's not to like.
If they get an administration that is very amenable if not hell bent on lowering those restrictions, will they feel the same way? Or continue as business as usual damn them effects?
Which administration? It's a global industry. California cares a lot about air pollution. Has to because otherwise the Los Angeles basin becomes uninhabitable. Most European and many other countries care about mileage[1] and enforce it via stiff fuel taxes. Lot of developing countries have very bad problems with smog. Most would leaders with the exception of the particularly stupid sort you find in the US are getting spooked about global warming. Probably auto exec's themselves are getting spooked.
[1] Really they care about their trade balance.
Simply, it's easier (and much more cost efficient) to buy scientists and lobbyists than to re-work their entire line of vehicles.
Also, I'll never understand their hydrogen stunt.
They were to threatened by EVs that they had to spend lots of money creating some nonviable prototypes so they took people's attention away from the iable tech. All that instead of just investing on EVs themselves.
When reading about Alan Mulally's career at Ford, I found it interesting that he and several other auto executives lobbied for carbon taxes. Especially compared to CAFE standards, which made them create unnecessary and undesirable car models simply for accounting purposes.
Obviously it was never going to happen at the time. The car industry was incredibly unpopular, and would never have been able to get congress to push such an unpopular tax for their benefit.
... and everyone else (who were paying attention) too. The majority of scientists researching climate change were warning about global warming (not cooling) in the 70's.
https://skepticalscience.com/ice-age-predictions-in-1970s-in...
And funnily enough, 50 years ago the only feasible solution to move off fossil fuels was nuclear. Which was then campaigned against by the green lobby, not the fossil fuel lobby. The irony is that the only reason we haven't de-carbonized is because the same people who are yelling about climate change decided to stop it.
Oil companies also knew about it by the 70's.
There was then a huge business-run propoganda campaign which has succeeded on convincing many people that climate change is not real.
It was taught in schools at least 35 years ago.
Edit: 30-35 years ago.
I remember from that time in school more about global cooling especially aerosols and a lot of concerns about over-population.
Of course smog was a concern too, but the science has definitely evolved since we were in school.
I remember it being referred to as the greenhouse effect in school books. (Maybe late 80s rather than mid 80s. Sweden.)
Wait till I tell you about Arrhenius, one of the founders of modern chemistry in the late 19th century…
I came here to write this.
For others: Svante published a paper on the effects of CO2. In _1896_. Let that year sink in.
Assume we move over to electric vehicles (like Tesla) as the default mode of transportation at some point in the future, will that solve this problem?
In other words, is our ability to generate electricity for all the electric vehicles more efficient and better for the earth than how we currently power them with gasoline?
It won’t solve the problem without more change in power generation, but it will help. Even coal power plants are more efficient than small internal combustion engines. Gas power plants are vastly more efficient (double or more) and of course wind/solar/hydro/nuclear do not have carbon emissions.
I'd rather reserve my anger, not for what corporations did 50 years ago, but for the _very little that's being done at present_. We can tear down the statues later.
Bad enough, but b look at the cars threy sell today!
Where researchers only finding warming results back then? or also cooling results? how would they know which were most reliable?
Back then it was called global warming. The fundamental force being CO2 acting as a greenhouse gas. This was well understood. In school in the early 90s it was pretty common to see greenhouse gas demonstrations at science fairs.
The question wasn't if it was warming/cooling, but simply how much impact humans were having on the atmosphere. There's a whole lot of atmosphere and humans are very small so it wasn't as clear how big of an impact we were having. Even for people who knew the math there was uncertainty in the inputs. Oil companies were best prepared to know how much CO2 were were releasing because they knew exactly how many barrels a day they were extracting from the ground. Everybody else has to go on public figures that may or may not be accurate.
I remember growing up adults just mentioned global cooling. No mention of global warming. Which gives me the impression cooling seemed the bigger concern back then. If so, that would explain this reaction by companies that either didn't think it the most likely scenario, or maybe thought it could be beneficial to fight the cooling effect.
If i can’t believe the media on politics, can you please explain to me why i should believe them on climate?
Even if the knew what where the executives supposed to do.
They have been hired to make money not to save the world.
Do your job and do it well. Otherwise you get fired.
The Vikings knew about climate change.
Icebergs they used to navigate went AWOL causing much confusion
Scientists working for them did. Imagine how many layers of middle management exist between any scientist and someone capable of making a decision at a large corporation now. Then imaging what it would have been like in 1960's, where communication was primarily face to face, and with executives, through secretaries....
Chances are, no executive capable of making a single decision about shifting away from fossil fuels or aiming towards fuel efficiency ever heard this. An army of middle managers would have funneled it elsewhere as soon as they realized it wasn't going to create profit, and was inactionable with technology of the time.
I'm not sure I buy the premise of your argument that middle managers are to blame for everything wrong at corporations (at least that's how I'm interpreting it).
And I definitely don't buy that no executive ever heard this.
Seems like cafeteria have always been a place devoid of reporting hierarchies, where real communication gets done.