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Obama Unveils Major Climate Change Proposal

An anonymous reader writes: Two years in the making, President Obama formally unveiled his plan to cut power plant emissions today, calling it the "single most important step that America has ever made in the fight against global climate change." The "Clean Power Plan" includes the first ever EPA standards on carbon pollution from power plants. CNN reports: "Under the plan, the administration will require states to meet specific carbon emission reduction standards, based on their individual energy consumption. The plan also includes an incentive program for states to get a head start on meeting standards on early deployment of renewable energy and low-income energy efficiency."

413 comments

  1. Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Expect the first half of the posts from the, "the world is ending, fix global warming/climate change/AGW down!" crowd.

    Expect the second half of the posts from the, "drill, baby drill, economy and jobs, save the middle class, solar is too expensive, burn more coal" crowd.

    And nothing will be changed, resolved, or decided.

    1. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Daemonik · · Score: 0, Troll

      You forgot the people posting from podunk coal towns with no other industry who could give a crap if the world collapses as long as they get to keep their jobs and live in their tiny little racist enclaves until then.

    2. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You forgot the people posting from podunk coal towns with no other industry who could give a crap if the world collapses as long as they get to keep their jobs and live in their tiny little racist enclaves until then.

      Not at all, that is the second group of "drill baby drill" people.

      Of course, don't forget the extreme libs in San Fran who are as equally deluded as the people in West Virginia are... just in the other direction... They think if everyone just drove a Prius and lived in a little 1,000 sqft eco home the world would be a happy place...

      Both groups are wrong...

    3. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by satch89450 · · Score: 0

      Then there will be the sliver of comments about developing additional sources of zero-carbon sources of energy. Traditional fission reactors have their own pollution problems. Fusion is still too experimental; no one has yet to demonstrate a scalable method of doing that. But there is another power metal: thorium. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      I'm not saying that solar and wind are pie-in-the-sky. Those sources of renewable power have their place. We should not shut the door, though, to additional options. Just as we need diversity in our population, we need diversity in our power solutions.

      Plus, don't count out Bell Lab's favorite project goal: "And then something wonderful happens."

    4. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm not saying that solar and wind are pie-in-the-sky.

      Neither am I... I live in Texas and we're now one of the largest wind producers in the US, making some 9% of our power from wind last time I looked.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Now... Wind DOES cost more than coal and natural gas, no matter what the AGW people want to say. I buy my power from a competitive marketplace, I can pick from dozens of different power suppliers, and wind costs more than coal does.

      To be specific, I just signed a new contract for power for my business, I'm paying 6.2 cents per kWh for the first 2,000 kWh and 6.8 cents after that. That is the total delivered price and it is a fairly even mix of coal, natural gas, and nuclear, with about 6% of the total being "renewable".

      If I wanted all wind power, then the price goes to 9.1 cents per kWh for the first 2,000 kWh and 9.6 cents after that.

      Of course, a nice carbon tax could fix that in a hurry, if that is what we as a country wanted to do.

    5. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, Obama has already silently been trying to shut the door on nuclear, or at least letting H Ried pull the strings. Even solar has pollution problems when it comes to manufacturing.

      The job simply can't get done without fission reactors in the mix unless you depend on hope of some tremendous breakthrough, which is not strategy at all. Unfortunately, too many are married to the idea that the only solution is solar and windmills, and those folks will also prevent us from making the real gains in carbon free emission that we need to make a difference. We need a lot of solar, a lot of wind, and a lot of nuclear. Gas can help fill the gaps. Any other path is one to failure.

    6. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Then there will be the sliver of comments about developing additional sources of zero-carbon sources of energy. Traditional fission reactors have their own pollution problems. Fusion is still too experimental; no one has yet to demonstrate a scalable method of doing that. But there is another power metal: thorium. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      True...

      But at least with nuclear, you can burn the left overs in another reactor or you can at least put them in a box.

      Yes, we haven't had the best record of that in the past, but that doesn't mean we can't change that, we just have to be willing to do so. You can't put the output of a coal or natural gas power plant in a box, no matter how hard you try.

      Keep in mind that if the "waste" from nuclear is radioactive, then it also can be used to make power. The only time nuclear anything is really "spent" is when it is no longer radioactive.

      We have VERY old reactor designs dating back 40 years, we have not been keeping up with technology. If we really wanted to, I imagine we could build some much better reactors, but the NIMBY and "oh my god the nuclears!" people won't have it.

    7. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was expecting something about cows

    8. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 1

      And nothing will be changed, resolved, or decided.

      When does anything on /. get changed, resolved or decided? We are fortunate that the world isn't run by the comments on forums like here.

      Although now I write that, I'm not quite sure that this is true considering the inability for our leaders to solve these sorts of problems to date due to political backlash. What was supposed to be a funny quip just got depressing.

    9. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by reboot246 · · Score: 0, Troll

      How about the group that thinks it's lunacy to destroy the world's greatest economy for a difference of .01 degree of improvement?

      If the United States cut its carbon emissions to zero, it wouldn't make much difference at all. Other countries don't seem to interested in committing economic suicide.

    10. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Crashmarik · · Score: 2

      You know it's hilarious that people in SF act like they have a leg to stand on when it comes to telling other people how to live

      http://www.businessinsider.com...

      $1000/month to live in a shipping container and that's Oakland.

    11. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Perhaps when people come to grips with the fact the physical laws of nature don't give a flying fuck about anyone's favorite economic system or political ideology, we can move on to solving problems. But I suppose it's always easier to believe that whatever deity you worship, be it Yahweh or the Invisible Hand, will save you, and just go on as if nothing is happening.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    12. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2

      Although now I write that, I'm not quite sure that this is true considering the inability for our leaders to solve these sorts of problems to date due to political backlash. What was supposed to be a funny quip just got depressing.

      Yep, that is more or less how I feel. Our leaders seem more interesting in yelling about why the other side is wrong than in solving anything.

      The Republicans and Democrats appear to have given up trying to work together. Government will remain a mess until that changes.

    13. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, Obama has already silently been trying to shut the door on nuclear, or at least letting H Ried pull the strings. Even solar has pollution problems when it comes to manufacturing.

      That's ok. Let the Chinese or someone else screw up their corner of the planet so others can be smug about their small carbon footprint.

    14. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Even solar has pollution problems when it comes to manufacturing.

      While nuclear power plants grow organically without generating any pollution, and then run without generating any waste? A solar power plant easily offsets the pollution required to build it over its lifespan. I can't see how this is relevant to the discussion.

      And people aren't fixated only on one or two power sources, as opposed to the ones who trot out the line "there is one solution - nuclear".

      It has always been about creating a workable mix. Even Hillary Clinton's recent proposal was to only generate 33% of America's electricity by 2027.

    15. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Modding today so posting as an AC

      Nuclear has it's issues too. It is suitable for long stable loads, but it's not very good at throttling up and down with demand. At specific points in the fuel cycle, throttling is really not advised (usually near the end). Xenon poisoning of a reactor is a problem as you use up the fuel and if you suddenly throttle down when the reactor Xenon level is too high, you cannot restart the reactor. Therefore you want to run your nuke at a set power output for days, months, years if possible and avoid any quick throttle movements in order to get the best utilization of your fuel.

      Electricity consumption varies greatly throughout the day and time of year. You must ALWAYS match supply with demand because it must be generated the instant it's used. Having nuclear plants which don't like to be throttled, means that they are really only useful for "background" load (I.E the minimum daily load) and not peak. Background load is like 10% of peak. Meaning we will need 90% capacity from other sources that we can throttle. You don't throttle solar or wind (the sun shines and the wind blows when it wants), so we really need significant throttled power generation capacity and that's fossil fuels for the most part (Hydro Electric, geothermal work too but both are limited resources).

      Nuclear is part of the solution, but fossil fuels are here to stay until we can come up with some kind of efficient way to store electric energy...

    16. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pfff. 40 years? Over 60 is more like it.

    17. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Rasperin · · Score: 1

      That is a flaw, agreed, but you could always use one of many options during times of overage: Energy storage options. I actually never thought of the flywheel (when originally considering responding to this I was going to bring up massive capacitors but actually that flywheel idea seems very impressive).

      --
      WTF Slashdot, why do I have to login 50 times to post?
    18. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      Humbug. Europe has coal towns that historically were so run-down that anthracite was considered a gemstone:
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    19. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 0

      While nuclear power plants grow organically without generating any pollution, and then run without generating any waste? A solar power plant easily offsets the pollution required to build it over its lifespan. I can't see how this is relevant to the discussion.

      Nuclear plants easily offset air pollution as well, even more-so that solar. That must be the part you don't get.

    20. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by jblues · · Score: 1

      According to Wikipedia we can expect the price of coal to rise and the price of wind to drop, so that they'll meet in the middle within 10 years.

      "Grid parity also applies to wind power where it varies according to wind quality and existing distribution infrastructure. ExxonMobil predicts wind power real cost will approach parity with natural gas and coal without carbon sequestration and be cheaper than natural gas and coal with carbon sequestration by 2025.

      Wind turbines reached grid parity in some areas of Europe in the mid-2000s, and in the US around the same time. Falling prices continue to drive the levelized cost down and it has been suggested that it has reached general grid parity in Europe in 2010, and will reach the same point in the US around 2016 due to an expected reduction in capital costs of about 12%"

      --
      If it acquires resources on instantiation like a duck, then its a shared_ptr<Duck>
    21. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the United States cut its carbon emissions to zero, it wouldn't make much difference at all.

      World carbon emissions...the US is approximately 15%.

      If that doesn't make a difference, then those other countries will be committing ecological suicide.

    22. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by riverat1 · · Score: 2

      But there is another power metal: thorium. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      I'm not aware that anyone has yet built a financially viable thorium reactor despite at least a couple of attempts. Once someone demonstrates that is possible it may find more acceptance.

    23. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Daemonik · · Score: 3, Informative

      No, I live in a coal state. My description was completely accurate.

    24. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nuclear plants easily offset air pollution as well, even more-so that solar. That must be the part you don't get.

      If you think that we can discount the pollution caused by nuclear plants, why did you mention the pollution caused by solar plants then? You say that I don't get it, but you were the one that brought up this piece of FUD in the first place. You were being completely disingenuous and deliberately misleading by bringing up non-problems with one technology while ignoring that exactly the same non-problem exists with another.

      With the exception that you had to qualify your statement by saying air pollution rather than all pollution (like I said) because you know that nuclear power DOES actually produce a hazardous waste.

    25. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      Of course, a nice carbon tax could fix that in a hurry, if that is what we as a country wanted to do.

      with the costs going up across the board as it is, we dont need any new taxes. especially here in NY

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    26. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      howcome i read she wants all homes solar powered by 2027?

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    27. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by ganjadude · · Score: 0

      blame regulations for that not willpower

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    28. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by riverat1 · · Score: 2

      Unfortunately, Obama has already silently been trying to shut the door on nuclear, ...

      If that's true how come at least 4 nuclear power plants have been approved by the Obama administration?

      Vogtle Units 3 & 4 got $8.3 billion in Federal loan guarantees.

      Summer Units 2 & 3.

      Nuclear renaissance in the United States.

    29. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by khallow · · Score: 1

      If that doesn't make a difference, then those other countries will be committing ecological suicide.

      Economic suicide doesn't work that way especially if the US's reduction turns out to be useless no matter the reason. It's the countries that make the pointless sacrifice that will be suiciding not the ones that don't.

    30. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 1

      I know what you mean, although at least this is a story about one side making a proposal to combat climate change. It's better than hearing more stories of yet another research organization having their funding cut in a bid to muzzle the scientific community and stifle the debate.

      But if it all counts for nothing because neither side can agree then this proposal will just be one big waste of time.

    31. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      Few are saying "there is one solution: nuclear". Many are saying any workable solution must include it. Eg: electric cars with panels + nuclear powered grid/charging stations.

    32. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 1

      howcome i read she wants all homes solar powered by 2027?

      You didn't. You read that she wants to have 33% of all energy from renewables which is enough to power all the homes. This was not about the ludicrous notion of attempting to segregate domestic and industrial power and then wholly supplying one if those networks with renewable energy.

      The headline was misleading, possibly in an attempt to turn the people who only read the headlines against the idea. I guess it is a good lesson of why you shouldn't just read the headlines.

    33. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 1

      There are enough people who do say it though, which was why I brought it up. Generally they pop up when there is any mention of building a renewable power supply, as if they shouldn't build those and just go nuclear.

      But I agree, it is all about having a mix.

    34. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or use the extra power to pump water from where there's too much to where there's too little.

    35. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 0

      Nuclear plants easily offset air pollution as well, even more-so that solar. That must be the part you don't get.

      Read the post I was responding to, then read mine. Then is should make sense to you. If not, I'm not sure I can help you.

      As far as waste, yes, nuclear spent fuel waste is certainly a downside, but it can easily be managed or even re-used. There is no other clear air technology that can reliably generate the build of power we'll need to make a difference. Wind and PV have proven to be supplemental, and have their geographical limits. The choice is to have nuclear waste to manage or recycle, or to not significantly reduce CO2 contribution on a global scale. So yes, I was specific about air pollution because that is really what matters to fight AGW.

    36. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      thanks for the context. I havent had time to read up on it as of yet.

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    37. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by khallow · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The Republicans and Democrats appear to have given up trying to work together. Government will remain a mess until that changes.

      It could be worse. They could be working together.

    38. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 2

      If that's true how come at least 4 nuclear power plants have been approved by the Obama administration?

      If you'll check your history books, the loan guarantees that made those possible were forged before Obama. And, more directly to your point, Obama and Ried appoint Jaczko to chair the NRC. There, he specifically tried to stop the licensing of those plants, but his arguments were proven to have no basis.

      Jaczo was incompetent, and eventually it was so bad that he was run out. Appointing such an incompetent person to a post as important as the NRC chair is won of the most reckless things Obama has done, IMHO. While politics drives the chair choice in many agencies, the NRC had always had a person with appropriate expertise and insight at the helm in the past, regardless of who was president. We got Harry Reid's political ponyboy.

    39. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by unimacs · · Score: 1

      We seem to be having a very hard time managing the waste now. Nobody wants it anywhere near them. Just because it's technically and theoretically easy politically. Like it or not, that matters too.

    40. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by unimacs · · Score: 1

      Argh. Should read: "Just because it's technically and theoretically easy doesn't mean it's politically easy".

    41. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's funny that you turn that into some screed about religion, which has little or nothing to do with this story, when the biggest elephant in the room is why people are too scared to embrace responsible use of nuclear power, given that it's the only realistic way forward right now.

    42. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by nehumanuscrede · · Score: 1

      Does that 6.8 cents include the transmission line costs or no ? If it does where in Texas you living ? I would guess the Austin area where rates stay low to ensure the legislators don't have to pay too much for their electricity.

      The lowest I have found near the coast is 9 cents / KwH.

    43. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by unimacs · · Score: 1

      So nobody should do anything?

      Electrification is a major requirement in order to have a significant impact on green house gas emissions. That means electrification of transportation for example. However, if your means of producing electricity is dirty that doesn't help. Reducing emissions from generating electricity is a logical step in solving the larger problem. It is not the only step.

    44. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      We seem to be having a very hard time managing the waste now. Nobody wants it anywhere near them. Just because it's technically and theoretically easy politically. Like it or not, that matters too.

      Yes, it is more of a political problem than a technical one. But that changes with leadership, people educating themselves, and calling out the FUD mongers. In addition, most people don't know the difference between cold war nuclear waste and commercial spent fuel. The former has a host of nasty challenges, the latter is quite inert, stable solid material that is technologically easy to manage.

    45. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a truck-ready thorium plant available from DBI
      which is being evaluated by Thorium Power Canada

    46. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rarely do I see someone advocating for ONLY nuclear. I'd certainly like to see it as base load, in load following mode, with wind and solar as supplementary. Please don't call them renewable. That just smacks of a basic lack of physics education, especially with respect to thermodynamics. They're all fusion powered and that is definitely not "renewable". Renewable implies that I can take a thing and reuse that same exact thing, in total, which would imply free energy and thermodynamics being wrong.

    47. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by weilawei · · Score: 2

      You are full of shit. Load following works fine in nuclear reactors of appropriate design. Modern plants make one or two large changes per day, and are required to be able to cycle daily between 50% and 100% of rated capacity with a rate of change of 3-5% per minute.

      Many are rated for several percent change per second.

      You are waaay out of touch with technology. Read that report. Look at how often they cycle the power. Load following works fine, and they're required to be able to make these swings for 90% of the fuel cycle--at any point, unplanned.

    48. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a known fact that a solar powered world would produce 63 thousand times the waste of a nuclear powered world.

      Just saying...

    49. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Harlequin80 · · Score: 1

      That is so unbelievably cheap!!!! I knew the US was cheaper for power than Australia but.... WOW.

      See here - https://www.dews.qld.gov.au/en...

      Fixed charge 106.72c / day tje 29.845c/kWh peak, 21.125c/kWh shoulder, 16.262c/kWh off-peak.....

    50. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by WindBourne · · Score: 0

      sorry, but wind is cheaper than coal, and with the next iteration of wind generators, they should be cheaper than nat gas.
      EIA, and others all show this. You can not show ANYPLACE where Coal is actually cheaper than wind.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    51. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      with the costs going up across the board as it is, we dont need any new taxes. especially here in NY

      You misunderstand how a carbon tax would work.

      It would be revenue-neutral, which is to say the money collected by the tax on carbon would be used to reduce the tax load of the population as a whole. All the money collected would be given back to the taxpayers.

      As such, costs would actually go down for everyone except people/businesses who emit a lot of CO2.

      Heavy CO2-emitters would pay more, of course, which would give them a clear economic incentive to find less CO2-intensive ways of doing business, which is the point of the exercise.

      It's a great example of the sort of "market-based reform" that Republicans used to champion as an alternative to command-and-control strategies, back before they went batshit.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    52. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      And those prices have NOTHING to do with the costs of wind. It has EVERYTHING to do with making PROFITS from idiots.
      Utilities through out the nation are adding wind to replace coal. In particular, they are doing it because the electricity is much cheaper than coal.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    53. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by TimSSG · · Score: 1

      sorry, but wind is cheaper than coal, and with the next iteration of wind generators, they should be cheaper than nat gas. EIA, and others all show this. You can not show ANYPLACE where Coal is actually cheaper than wind.

      But, the cost of Batteries is expensive. And, the Wind generators maint. costs are NOT cheap. Remember to figure in the cost to take down the wind generators when they no longer can be maintained. Tim S.

    54. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Lodlaiden · · Score: 1

      I'm almost finished with the bovine mounted methane based reactor. I just need one more government grant to finish off my renewable energy prototype.

      --
      Suborbital [spaceflight] is the special olympics of spaceflight. - Rei
    55. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by jcr · · Score: 0

      How does this contempt you hold for the people around you serve you in your daily life? Does it make you feel better about yourself to proclaim your moral superiority?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    56. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      That may well be true, there are various forces at work there...

      But even if so, I have a hard time picturing a grid powered 24/7 by 100% wind power.

      Maybe it is possible, but it strikes me as much more doable with coal than with wind.

      For what it is worth, I don't OBJECT to wind, I just am curious as to how you'd provide 24/7 power with wind to everyone.

    57. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2

      It would be revenue-neutral, which is to say the money collected by the tax on carbon would be used to reduce the tax load of the population as a whole. All the money collected would be given back to the taxpayers.

      If it would ACTUALLY work like that, I'd be its biggest supporter.

      But you and I both know that is never how it works.

      If our government could balance the budget, I'd be 100% on board.

    58. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      sorry, but wind is cheaper than coal, and with the next iteration of wind generators, they should be cheaper than nat gas.

      Maybe, maybe not... but if I can't buy it for less, then it isn't cheaper right now...

      When power providers start selling wind for less than natural gas and coal power, then it will be true...

    59. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      And people aren't fixated only on one or two power sources, as opposed to the ones who trot out the line "there is one solution - nuclear".

      To put that in context, that is the response to the question of baseload. I've never heard anyone not include renewables in the mix, but you need a base-load, and currently Coal and Nuclear are the only viable candidates.

    60. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      with the costs going up across the board as it is, we dont need any new taxes. especially here in NY

      You misunderstand how a carbon tax would work.

      It would be revenue-neutral, which is to say the money collected by the tax on carbon would be used to reduce the tax load of the population as a whole. All the money collected would be given back to the taxpayers.

      As such, costs would actually go down for everyone except people/businesses who emit a lot of CO2.

      Heavy CO2-emitters would pay more, of course, which would give them a clear economic incentive to find less CO2-intensive ways of doing business, which is the point of the exercise.

      It's a great example of the sort of "market-based reform" that Republicans used to champion as an alternative to command-and-control strategies, back before they went batshit.

      If a carbon tax costs nothing, then it isn't doing anything either. The whole idea is to move people from lower cost but more carbon intensive energy source to higher cost but less carbon intensive energy source. If it is revenue neutral and doesn't change behavior, then it isn't doing anything. If it is revenue neutral and does change behavior, then it is costing something as it is incentivizing people to use more expensive forms of energy. Perhaps the value of the carbon emission reduction is greater than the cost, but the cost is there. And trying to set a value to the carbon emission reduction is very difficult considering that the climate sensitivity to greenhouse gases has a large amount of uncertainty and the economic sensitivity to climate change requires analyses that would have even more variable outcomes.

    61. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by non0score · · Score: 1

      Given healthcare costs going up due in part from pollution, we just need to slap these costs onto radiation/toxic gas/sludge/CO2 producing coal fire plants and you'll see those figures fly right up. I don't think we even need to get to carbon taxes before these coal plant operators go belly up.

    62. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      29.85 cents per kWh? Ouch, you're getting killed there...

      At that price, I'd install solar tomorrow, it would make total sense!

      I also don't have time of day use pricing, my price is the same 24/7. It helps that I'm sitting in the middle of a thousand oil and natural gas wells, power is very cheap in Texas because of that.

      The irony is that we produce 9% of our state power in Wind and also make more power from wind than any other state in the US. Solar is a very, very small number here however, token really.

    63. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Does that 6.8 cents include the transmission line costs or no ? If it does where in Texas you living ?

      Yes, it does...

      It is from Gexa Energy...

      You can go to Powertochoose.org

      Put in my zip code of 75057, pick Texas-New Mexico PDC, sort by "more than 2,000 kWh", and you should see it third down the list.

      http://www.gexaenergy.com/UI/H...|1640|1005|16311

      I don't know if that second link will work, but give it a try, it is a link to a PDF EFL (Electricty Facts Label).

      The price of the energy is 3.72 cents per kWh and the price of the delivery (transmission) is 3.24 cents per kWh. There are two monthly charges, $14.95 from the power generation company and $8.65 from the power delivery company and a $25 credit for any month I go over 1,000 kWh (which is every month).

      If I were to use 4,000 kWh, my monthly bill will be about $277. It might end up being another $10-15 more once the local city tosses a tax or two on there, but those are usually no more than $15, give or take.

      So it is less than 7 cents per kWh total. That is insanely cheap and it is why solar makes NO sense for me...

    64. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason that the nuke people are pushing so hard right now is because they know this is the last chance they've got.

        Over the next decade as grid level storage takes off the 'baseload' argument will have it's legs chopped out and they'll be left arguing for a technology with a long track record of over promising and under delivering. Simultaneously, they'll also be stuck trying to get the public to pay for sealing away untold tons of waste for untold numbers of years from reactors that have outlived their useful lifespan as it's not just the fuel that's a waste product, it's the reactors themselves along with a good chunk of the building that needs to be sealed away.

      Politically they have another problem: How can you tell countries like Iran that they can't build a nuclear industry ('cause you don't want them to have a bomb) when you're all in?

    65. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True that. I would be interested to know how many people actually believe in their comments vs. how many are trolls and how many are actually being paid by various interests to 'manufacture controversy'.

    66. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Harlequin80 · · Score: 1

      Solar makes huge sense, especially since I am in Brisbane, Australia and get massive amounts of sun. They also do feed in tariffs here which for a period were stupidly generous.

      The rates I quoted there are also industrial rates hence the variability. Most residences are just on a single tariff which is fixed and average around the 25c/kWh. I have a 5kw solar system and often have a credit balance on my electricity bill. Prior to that though I could easily have a $1000 per quarter bill.

      As for energy availability, I sit in the middle of the largest coal exporting region in the world, where they have just built 2 huge LNG compression and export ports because we have so much gas and lets not mention one of the largest deposits of uranium in the world as well......Yet that is my power price.

    67. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      The choice is to have nuclear waste to manage or recycle, or to not significantly reduce CO2 contribution on a global scale.

      Or, simply raise the cost of energy such that people can't afford power 24/7 and must do without power for many things and/or pick a day or two (or more depending) a week where they use no power at all.

      Another possibility is to institute local centers paid into like a club where a neighborhood shares the cost of a communal food freezer/refrigerator and communal televisions/computers and do away almost completely with individual ownership of energy consuming devices & technologies.

      That seems like the general path we've been set on with these policies.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    68. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For some reason, I don't trust when claims are made that anything will go back to the taxpayers.

      The average joe gets screwed coming and going.

      Someone pays more, big business and those who game the system earns profit and income, and very few will pay less for the service.

    69. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Nuclear plants easily offset air pollution as well

      Nuclear plants easily spew air pollution as well, when their lids blow. After Chernobyl and Fukushima, one must be stupid to build more fission ractor based powerplants. Furthermore, the deep underground burial of long term radioactive waste is insanely costly.

    70. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heavy CO2-emitters would pay more, of course, which would give them a clear economic incentive to find less CO2-intensive ways of doing business, which is the point of the exercise.

      But what they really do is pass the cost on to the consumer, who then moves to a rival, and then the company asks for gifts of cash to stay functional ("too big to fail") and then the taxpayer pays the company to run until it becomes profitable again, at which point it continues getting the cash as well as the earnings, everyone loses except the CEO and board.

    71. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you should factor in the other costs that are being passed on to the general public. Coal smoke pollution causes respiratory illness, amongst other things.

    72. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      Nuclear has a long history of irresponsible use. People are not afraid of it just because. They don't trust their government and/or private sector contractors not to cut corners and put people at risk.

    73. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      What's sad is that both sides miss the point. The current plan outlined by Obama is weak and pathetic and sad. It's mostly 'changes' that would have happened due to economics anyway (the USA is already moving away from coal) and, even if the plan is implemented fully (which it won't be, and you know why) it is only going to achieve a fraction of what's necessary to combat climate change in the near future.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    74. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Beck_Neard · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually the coal towns are the ones bearing the brunt of the coal industry's wrath. After all the coal is extracted, nothing is left but huge dumps with virtually no employment to speak of. Same with the fracking boom. It's just that they lack the vision to see this while the money is still flowing.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    75. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given the amount of hot air Congress produces, perhaps we can use that to generate power.

    76. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Beck_Neard · · Score: 2

      The reason no one's talking about thorium is that, frankly, thorium sucks. Sorry to break it to you this way. Thorium solves none of the problems we have with current fission reactors. Nuclear reactors are clean but extremely expensive sources of energy. They are expensive because of containment, maintenance, waste disposal/processing, and decommissioning. Thorium solves none of these problems. The much-touted "less waste!" point that LFTR advocates so often talk about is a distortion of truth; LFTR merely brings the waste reprocessing plant into the reactor itself, making it even more expensive.

      No one has ever given a realistic cost estimate for LFTR. The reason is that any realistic cost estimate would most likely be EXTREMELY AND HORRENDOUSLY EXPENSIVE. I wouldn't be surprised if a 1 GW LFTR cost $10 bn or more to build. This is after initial R&D costs, btw, and assuming a large number of plants with amortized costs.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    77. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Bartles · · Score: 1

      Have you taken a look at Detroit lately?

    78. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just am curious as to how you'd provide 24/7 power with wind to everyone

      there is ALWAYS wind. no wind over an area larger than say (1000miles) is a physical impossibility.

    79. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by jblues · · Score: 1

      Sounds plausible. Does it have to be wind though? There's also solar, the emerging home battery banks, hydro, geothermal and thorium based nuclear fission and so forth. Hopefully, in future, fusion.

      --
      If it acquires resources on instantiation like a duck, then its a shared_ptr<Duck>
    80. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      SO raising the cost of energy is the simple solution? Its simply ignoring the fact that wind and solar are geographically limited, and many countries simply can't afford to do anything remotely similar to what Germany has attempted. And despite their huge investments, when they shut down their last nuke their net gain will be close to zero. And they are already slowing down investment in renewables. Had they kept their nukes running, and built 3 more, they would be way ahead of where they are right now, and would have spent a tremendous amount less, which could be used to help other countries reduce emissions.

      The whole world has to play. The whole world has to pay. Its simple when that is ignored.

    81. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Daemonik · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I've always wondered, if you hate Social Justice Warriors, does that make you a Social Injustice Warrior? I mean, that's a weird thing to stand proudly behind, social injustice.

    82. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be honest, we barely listen to our leaders. This means that most of the yelling and screaming is a product of our imagination fulled by news snips that are presented as confirmation bias. We stereotype politicians today worse than we stereotype race, religion or gender.

    83. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Yes, we haven't had the best record of that in the past, but that doesn't mean we can't change that, we just have to be willing to do so. You can't put the output of a coal or natural gas power plant in a box, no matter how hard you try.

      Well, actually you can, it's called carbon capture, but anyway, back to nuclear...

      While it's all great in theory, it doesn't work in practice. If you want it to work I think you would need to demonstrate it commercially. Someone like Elon Musk, but doing it for nuclear. Building a viable, profitable commercial scale thorium reactor and running it. Really revolutionizing the industry. It's unlikely to happen, but that's what it would take.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    84. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I live in a coal state. My description was completely accurate.

      No it wasn't. You omitted "inbread".

    85. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      You know you've found a Tolerant Caring Liberal by how much they hate anyone not like themselves.

      Wrong. A Conservative will eat your baby. Liberals eat their own babies.

      It shows how totally diametrically opposite they are and why it's essential that you must be one or the other, since there can be nothing in between.

    86. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The SJWs don't get to define what is justice.

    87. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by jecblackpepper · · Score: 1

      What GP meant was overall it's revenue neutral, but for those who emit large amounts of CO2, it represents a big tax increase. For those who emit no CO2 they get a large tax decrease. Overall the same amount of tax is collected as today. This provides a massive incentive to for big emitters to reduce their emissions. Over time, as the emissions reduce, the tax system will need to adjust to ensure that the total amount collected is the same, so when everyone is a low emitter their tax share will slowly get higher.

    88. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by GrantRobertson · · Score: 1

      False dichotomy much?

    89. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by JackieBrown · · Score: 1, Troll

      Well, acknowledging you are racist is a great start to improving yourself, Daemonik. Now you just need to work on being more tolerant and you will be happier.

    90. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      Here's my local power company's tariff. Under GS-2 non-demand billing, it looks like you'd pay 8.173 cents/kWh in the summer and 7.452 cents/kWh in the winter including all charges for generation, distribution, and transmission. There's a $21.17 monthly charge, so your 4000 kWh use case would be $348.09 in the summer and $319.25 in the winter here in the Old Dominion.

      Demand billing gets you $342.71 summer, $285.19 winter.

      I didn't do the math for Schedule 10, but that might be even cheaper.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    91. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      communal food freezer/refrigerator

      Not sure of your historical knowledge on this point but meat lockers were a common thing in the early half of the 20th century. They still exist but tend to offer limited locker services but most often offer full butchering, processing, and freezing services. There are also ways to preserve food that don't involve freezing or refrigeration but canning and drying seems to be more of a lost art now.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    92. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Rob+Bos · · Score: 2

      British Columbia implemented a revenue-neutral carbon tax in .. 2006, I think, or thereabouts. It's been a while. It's been used to reduce income tax. It's been super effective, our carbon emissions have gone down by quite a bit.

    93. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They already are, where've you been?

    94. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Nidi62 · · Score: 2

      I've always wondered, if you hate Social Justice Warriors, does that make you a Social Injustice Warrior? I mean, that's a weird thing to stand proudly behind, social injustice.

      Could just make you an Antisocial Justice Warrior

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    95. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by khallow · · Score: 1

      So nobody should do anything?

      Pretty much. Keep in mind that "doing nothing" here elevates billions of people out of poverty and gives us considerably more wealth with which to adapt to climate change such as it is. When fossil fuels get more expensive to extract we can do the electrification thing.

      I think it's a deep flaw of the current climate change concerns that they can't demonstrate that the solutions would be better than ignoring the problem.

    96. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by whistlingtony · · Score: 1

      You should come to my toxic and overcrowded urban sprawl sometime. It's pretty nice. You should see me run a business that I don't seem to care about. I'd give you my EBT card but I seem to have never had one...

      It's really easy to hate people you've never sat down to dinner with.

    97. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      Thorium solves none of the problems we have with current fission reactors.
      I'm not even sure where to start - here's just one example.

      If you watch the videos re: LFTRs, you'll see that most of the design of a conventional reactor is there to deal with the possibility of a primary coolant pressure loss and the resultant massive steam release. This is an enormous risk in all existing power plants. A LFTR runs at essentially atmospheric pressure and with no phase change, so there's no need for a massive high pressure containment vessel.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    98. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by towermac · · Score: 1

      Carbon Capture is yet another argument for nuclear. If the alarmists are right, it's already too late for us. Well, too late if we assume only natural processes to capture existing atmospheric CO2.

      Real carbon capture, as in, mining the atmosphere for CO2, is the answer, but will take a whole lot of power. Perhaps close to the amount of power generated when it was released in the first place.

      So, the only way to actually reverse AGW would be to suck CO2 out of the atmosphere faster than we put it in. Think of the amount of non-carbon electricity that would be required for that. A lot.

      Nuclear is the only thing we have that could possibly do that.

    99. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only if you operate under the assumption that all SJWs are correct actually fighting for justice, rather than their own agendas.

      I like to think of it more as being a Social Justice Warrior Warrior. ESS-JAY-DOUBLE DUB

    100. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      What's sad is that both sides miss the point. The current plan outlined by Obama is weak and pathetic and sad. It's mostly 'changes' that would have happened due to economics anyway (the USA is already moving away from coal) and, even if the plan is implemented fully (which it won't be, and you know why) it is only going to achieve a fraction of what's necessary to combat climate change in the near future.

      I keep making that point and the pro-AGW people keep ignoring it.

      It is only of those "Inconvenient Truths"! (See what I did there?)

      The sad reality is that if the AGW people are right, then we're already on a sinking ship and nothing we do is going to stop it. I've looked at the numbers, the pages on NASA about the CO2 levels, the rate of growth. I've also looked at the CO2 output by India, China, Russia, the US, etc.

      Nothing we do is going to change it by enough to matter, it will keep right on growing. The changes that WOULD be required to stop it, we aren't going to make.

      Give or take, we'd need to cut worldwide CO2 output by about 40%. Not to some 2000 or 2005 level, but outright, between the current level and ZERO. That isn't going to happen.

      Obama's proposal is to cut to 32% below 2005 levels. That isn't remotely enough, and it is just the US. The whole planet has to do it, and we have maybe 30ish years to do it in.

      So if AGW is correct and if 2 degrees is the limit, then we're already done. We might as well just prepare for what is coming, because Obama's proposal won't change the date at which 2 degrees happens by enough to matter. It is, once again, just using a bucket brigade to try to bail water out of the Titanic. Sure, you're "doing something", but the outcome will largely be the same if everyone just sat around drinking tea and singing songs.

    101. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Most residences are just on a single tariff which is fixed and average around the 25c/kWh. ... Yet that is my power price.

      Yes, because you have a socialist government that taxes the crap out of everything.

      Not a crime, if that is what you want, but way too many people never make the connection between the cost of goods and services and the social benefits they enjoy.

      Note: My wife is from Brisbane, born and raised in Nambour, I've been there several times, lovely place...

      Everything is stupid expensive there and it isn't all because of distance. After all, tons of stuff Americans buy is made in China and it is cheap as chips.

    102. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      West Virginian here. Don't be so quick to assume that all of us are backwoods morons. I personally applaud the lessening of our dependence on fossil fuels, AGW or no. On the contrary, fuck you people who continue to root for "cheap" coal power from far-flung places where you don't have to deal with the very real, deadly consequences of providing that type of fuel. Chances are that you never have to see, smell, breathe, or hear any of the lovely things associated with developing coal mines and burning the resulting product to provide electricity. So, if you don't have to deal with the externalities of the power source, do us all a favor who DO and kindly shut the fuck up.

      For those West Virginians who DO continue to support coal, well... those stereotypes do exist for a reason, and do apply to a sadly high percentage of the state's population. Can't fix stupid.

      For anyone who doesn't have to cope with the externalities of coal on a personal, daily basis, I invite you to move to the area and see how quickly your tune may change once you realize you have to check against government records to even enjoy the nature around you to make sure you're not venturing into some poison or potentially walking over a partially collapsed, obscured mine. Enjoy breathing the fine particulates that permeate the air so thoroughly that we can't even begin to have an honest conversation anymore about what we as citizens want to breathe, because due to corporate pressure, the full picture is completely kept under wraps.

      Even if AGW had never been an issue to come up, I'd have gladly supported the thorough and merciless gutting of the oil and gas industry in this state and beyond. The only problem is that it's not happening fast enough.

    103. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by budgenator · · Score: 2

      I think you are the one that misunderstand how a carbon tax would work; the heavy CO2-emitters would not only pass along the tax, but increase it by their profit margin, so a dollar increase in taxes would likely result in an price increase of $1.20 at each stage of the supply chain. Only naive Liberals think businesses pay taxes, rather than pass them along.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    104. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by samwichse · · Score: 1

      No, it just ironically makes you an anti-SJW SJW.

    105. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The trick is to keep changing your contract every 12 months or else you get slammed paying 14cents per kWh. I believe slamming is illegal, but it happens quite often. Also, choose the contract in the early to mid spring when rates are the lowest and lock-in for a year. NEVER let the contract end or begin in the summer or else you get fucked for the entire year. It becomes a costly PITA to break the cycle in 3 and 6 month intervals to get back into the spring renewal slot.

    106. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I think it's a deep flaw of the current climate change concerns that they can't demonstrate that the solutions would be better than ignoring the problem.

      I'd like to see you try to demonstrate that ignoring the problems of global warming would be better than doing something about it.

    107. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      No one expects this to fix the problem by itself or to be the final answer. As they say "The longest journey starts with the first step."

      Ultimately CO2 emissions need to go to a net zero. That's the only answer. That won't cure the warming that's already in the pipeline but it will stop it from getting even worse as time goes on. There is no clear top limit to how bad global warming could get so it makes sense to prevent as much of it as we can.

    108. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      No one expects this to fix the problem by itself or to be the final answer. As they say "The longest journey starts with the first step."

      That is true, but if the goal is to walk from America to Australia, you might want to rethink the whole plan.

      Ultimately CO2 emissions need to go to a net zero. That's the only answer.

      I agree, believe it or not... But from what I've read on NASA's page, about 50% of the CO2 we emit doesn't get absorbed into the water or the plants...

      If we have to cut our total CO2 output by 50%... well, that just isn't going to happen. If anything, it will keep growing, abit more slowly...

    109. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      World carbon emissions...the US is approximately 15%.

      If that doesn't make a difference, then those other countries will be committing ecological suicide.

      It wouldn't... I get it, that is hard for you to understand, but it really wouldn't...

      First, about 50% of all CO2 must be cut to stop the increase of CO2 in the air.

      Second, other nations are continuing to output more CO2, if we removed our 15%, the rest of the world would replace it within 10 years.

    110. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      That is true, but if the goal is to walk from America to Australia, you might want to rethink the whole plan.

      As a whitewater rafter I know how to row so I'll amend that to say "The longer journey starts with the first step or first oar stroke." :)

      Looking at the CO2 problem holistically in the active carbon cycle the carbon is balanced between the atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere (with a small piece in the geosphere). The balance between them remains about the same so if you cut carbon emissions by 50% that doesn't mean the water or plants continue to absorb at the same rate they do now but the rate adjusts in all areas so the balance between them remains about the same. So around 45% of CO2 emissions will continue to stay in the atmosphere even under a reduced emissions scenario.

    111. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      The whole world has to play. The whole world has to pay. Its simple when that is ignored.

      That's true only if the goal is *not* to create an almost "Hunger Games" type of scenario where there are only the rich, privileged, ruling-class and an impoverished, heavily-regulated & controlled, serf-class.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    112. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      That's true only if the goal is *not* to create an almost "Hunger Games" type of scenario where there are only the rich, privileged, ruling-class and an impoverished, heavily-regulated & controlled, serf-class.

      Strat

      That makes no sense at all. And seems completely irrelevant. We can't make real headway in reducing carbon emissions if we don't consider the economic situations of all the countries that can't afford to implement high cost solutions.

    113. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      As a cynical liberal, you obviously don't know what you're talking about.

      Businesses have only a very limited ability to pass costs to their customers. The reason is that the cost, in fields where there is competition, is pretty well set by a fairly standard supply-demand curve. If it becomes more expensive to produce something, the supply curve changes, but there's no bloody way a business can pass along costs and add their profit margin to it (unless you're talking about a contract specifically written that way).

      If a business could just pass its costs onto its customers, then it could just raise its prices now and make more money. Do you think businesses in general keep their prices low and their profits low, for some reason? My observation is that they like profits, and set prices to their best guess on what to charge to make maximum profit.

      Besides, if there's different ways to produce something, that produce varying amounts of carbon dioxide, the tax shifts production towards the methods not using as much carbon dioxide, reducing the amount of tax paid anyway.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    114. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      As our tech gets better and better, we'll be able to find new ways to reduce CO2 emissions, and if it's increasing slowly enough we can use other means (such as trees) to reduce CO2 in the air. Therefore, the rate at which things get worse matters.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    115. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      As our tech gets better and better, we'll be able to find new ways to reduce CO2 emissions, and if it's increasing slowly enough we can use other means (such as trees) to reduce CO2 in the air. Therefore, the rate at which things get worse matters.

      Sure it does, if the assumptions you've just made are true.

      They aren't.

      We're adding way too much CO2 per year for any slow reduction to help.

      http://climate.nasa.gov/

      We're adding a pretty steady 2 PPM CO2 to the air every year.

      We recently passed 400 PPM CO2. The various sites estimate that anything between 450 and 500 is the tipping point.

      So we have between 25 and 50 years, at our current production rate of CO2, before we're beyond the point of no return.

      To stop the rise, we'd have to cut nearly 50% of the worldwide CO2 production. This just isn't going to happen.

      If it takes 25 years, 50 years, or 100 years, we're still in trouble.

      The changes proposed don't make enough of a difference to change the outcome.

    116. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      As a whitewater rafter I know how to row so I'll amend that to say "The longer journey starts with the first step or first oar stroke." :)

      Yes, but while that is a cute reply, you know the reality is that you are not going to row a raft to Australia.

      Let me give you a simpler example... Take off in a 747 with 80% of the fuel to fly there, and say "well, it is a start, we'll figure it out when we're on the way."

      Sounds really stupid, doesn't it? It is, as is doing half-assed measures that don't change the outcome of AGW.

      If it is indeed a problem, then we need to take drastic steps. But even drastic steps become a problem because you'll get pushback from a lot of people around the world.

      China is building a new coal fired power plant every month, they have 50 under construction right now.

      In the past 5 years, China has added as much CO2 output as the entire USA.

      The problem is much bigger than what Obama is proposing.

    117. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by budgenator · · Score: 1

      electric cars with panels + nuclear powered grid/charging stations.

      To get a car charged in a reasonable amount of time, you'd need a solar panel about the size of the Walmart's parking lot on each one!
      A tesla battery is 56 kWH, the daily average irradiance for the Earth is approximately 250 W/m2//hr = 6 kWh/m2. a solar cell is 15% and that's generous so

      (56kW/hr / 250kW/m^2/hr) /0.15 = 1,493.33... m^2

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    118. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Rowing from Oregon where I live to Australia is not something that feels totally out of the realm of possibility to me but at 63 years old it would not be something my doctor and family would be happy about.

      I don't think your 747 analogy works. It's like saying if we can't figure out how to do it in one step it's not worth starting. But the challenge of reducing and eventually eliminating CO2 emissions has a lot of different parts that will require different solutions and there is no need to wait for all of them to be available to get started.

      China is building a new coal fired power plant every month, they have 50 under construction right now.

      I see people saying this a lot but I've never seen any solid evidence that it's still true. In 2014 and so far in 2015 China has actually reduced its coal use by a significant amount. China coal use continues to fall precipitously. Maybe they're replacing older inefficient plants with newer ones or maybe they're not using so much for home heating, etc. but any drop in coal use by them is a good thing.

    119. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Harlequin80 · · Score: 1

      In comparison to the states a lot of things are expensive and our tax rates are definitely higher. Though it may surprise you to know that Australia's Tax to GDP ratio is the 5th lowest in the OECD - http://www.treasury.gov.au/Pol... .It is however not just tax that makes the difference in the costs. Australia is a small market of only 23 million people, this means those costs which hardly change between selling 50 and selling 1,000,000 are higher per product. In addition business that are domestically based have had, until recently, very little competition. It's not like you can drive across a border. The net effect has been poor levels of efficiency and supply line control.

      That said the taxes do make things more expensive, but to be honest I am quite comfortable with that. We are no where near as socialist as say France, but we are no where near the US either. A big one for me is the universal healthcare, and the safety net welfare system that Australia has which the US doesn't.

      I have been to the US a number of times and I am always struck by the number of disaffected people. There is a section of the US population which do amazingly well for themselves and a section that just look lost. It is those people who just look lost that I find sad. I'm sure that opportunities exist for them to better their lot in life, but I'm not convinced they know how, and without some kind of support they never will.

      A final consideration is that median salaries are higher in Australia, $57,980, than the US, $26,695. So is something costs $1 in the US it really needs to be $2 in Australia for the real costs to be the same. PPP comparison between US and AUS is currently 1.4 so if you are earning in Australia it will tend to go further because you are earning more.

      In the end it is all about choices and a large part is probably what you are brought up with experiencing. I grew up with the idea of universal healthcare and universal high quality education as the norm. It was only as I got older that I realised that not everywhere else in the world was the same.

    120. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by jcr · · Score: 1

      Was that an attempt at a retort?

      Better luck next time, kid.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    121. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by khallow · · Score: 1

      I'd like to see you try to demonstrate that ignoring the problems of global warming would be better than doing something about it.

      First of all, ignoring the problems of global warming is doing something about it. It is adapting to climate change.

      Second, there has been consistent bias which exaggerate the costs of global warming, while downplaying the costs of mitigation strategies and roundly ignoring the current improvements in human welfare and capability.

      For example, what advocate of renewable energy was predicting that Germany and Denmark's energy policies would result in a doubling of electricity prices for most? It's supposedly a modest reduction in CO2 emissions (since some of the gain is offset by increased burning of coal, locally and in other countries), with an unpredicted high cost.

      There are similar problems with renewable subsidies in Spain which have been cut back in recent years due to their high costs and unintended consequences.

      Similarly, there has been a lot of dishonest attribution of other problems to climate change. For example, a few years back the Syrian civil war was attributed to climate change while ignoring the single relevant factor, the enormous mismanagement of agriculture in Syria which would have resulted in the current disaster no matter what the climate was doing.

      Then there was the classic story about how ocean acidification was killing off oyster spat (the young) while ignoring that they were probably describing a phenomenon that IMHO has been going on for millions of years on that coast.

      The exaggeration of global warming's harm is another case. It is routinely ignored that the predictions are for sea level rise over centuries not decades. It's a lot less credible claim to be worried about moving say, two billion people to higher ground, when it is known that the two billion people in question will have moved, naturally, numerous times in that period anyway.

      And the geopolitics are ridiculously exaggerated. Most boundaries of the world haven't been stable for a century, but it's assumed that they will be for the next century. For a commonly used example, it's just silly to assume that Bangladesh can never, with a century or more lead time, make a deal with India to protect its citizens from the effects of a rising sea level.. Diplomacy can be very slow, but it's not that slow.

      Here, I think we have a hard case to make that people who live on the coasts would even notice the gradual sea level rise!

      Finally, here there is the ignorance of the growing wealth of the entire world. We have numerous examples of this. Most of the world is better off than the developed world was in 1900. Therefore, it's reasonable to expect that most of the world is on track to be better off than the developed world was in 2000 (especially if they should choose to forgo the two world wars). That means that the costs of adapting to unmitigated climate change is carried by remarkably wealthy societies.

      Finally, there is the obvious observation that there are far bigger problems than climate change out there. I think it would be the peak of hubris to impose terribly costly strategies to slightly mitigate climate change while making the real problems much worse! Curbing CO2 emissions don't help with poverty, overpopulation, corruption, destruction of farmland and habitat, etc. Some of these problems are even made worse.

      And it's worth noting that if you solve the worst problems, then global warming is easy to adapt to, while if you were to fix global warming without fixing those other problems, you'll be in the midst of global disaster. When it comes to triage of global problems, climate change just shouldn't make the cut. It is not something we should be throwing vast resources at.

      And that leads to the case for non-action: namely, the harm of

    122. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Rowing from Oregon where I live to Australia is not something that feels totally out of the realm of possibility to me but at 63 years old it would not be something my doctor and family would be happy about.

      It might not seem it, but I think it would be... You couldn't carry enough food, you can't outrow the currents, you would not survive the weather you'd encounter.

      It is hard enough to do in a proper large sailboat with wind power, trying it with arm power is just suicide.

      I don't think your 747 analogy works. It's like saying if we can't figure out how to do it in one step it's not worth starting. But the challenge of reducing and eventually eliminating CO2 emissions has a lot of different parts that will require different solutions and there is no need to wait for all of them to be available to get started.

      Try this one then... Hiking to the top of Mt. Everest... It can be done, clearly people do it... Lots of people die in the attempt... Would you start that "journey of a thousand steps" without a plan for the last hundred? Every climbing expert in the world would call you a fool if you did.

      All I'm saying is that if we don't have a plan to cut CO2 by enough to stop the climb of CO2 in the air, then perhaps we should look at other options, such as adapting to the new world we're making.

      Does it really matter if we move the date we pass 500 PPM from August 2065 to October 2065? Yes, it is a change. Is it enough of one to matter? At what cost? If it takes the next 22 years and tens of billions of dollars just to do that, so what?

      What would it take to double the time to 500 PPM? What would it take to push that date off into the far future? I submit that it would take actions that we just aren't going to take. We aren't going to turn off all the AC units, we aren't going to change our whole lifestyle. And we can't control what the whole world does anyway, so even if we wanted to, it doesn't really matter.

    123. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      I see people saying this a lot but I've never seen any solid evidence that it's still true. In 2014 and so far in 2015 China has actually reduced its coal use by a significant amount. China coal use continues to fall precipitously. Maybe they're replacing older inefficient plants with newer ones or maybe they're not using so much for home heating, etc. but any drop in coal use by them is a good thing.

      http://instituteforenergyresea...

      http://www.reuters.com/article...

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/...

      http://www.climatecentral.org/...

    124. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Except for the first one those articles are all from the beginning of 2014. The picture has apparently changed a bit since then. As I said coal use has started to drop in China and I see no reason to think that trend won't continue. The Chinese government is well aware of the issues around anthropogenic global warming and are doing some things about it, more than the US at this point.

    125. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      All I'm saying is that if we don't have a plan to cut CO2 by enough to stop the climb of CO2 in the air, then perhaps we should look at other options, such as adapting to the new world we're making.

      Any reason why we can't work on both at the same time?

    126. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try this one then... Hiking to the top of Mt. Everest... It can be done, clearly people do it... Lots of people die in the attempt... Would you start that "journey of a thousand steps" without a plan for the last hundred? Every climbing expert in the world would call you a fool if you did.

      My first step on that goal, should I wish to undertake it, and I very sincerely don't, would be to get a book on doing it, or even a book on mountain climbing. That would involve a trip to the library or bookstore.

      So anybody that called me a fool would be the fool themselves, because I'd be starting it in a reasonable place.

      And I wouldn't especially worry about the last hundred steps in terms of a plan for mountain climbing though, since they're the ones as you approach the base camp.

      They shouldn't be an issue.

      Analogies, metaphors, allegories and idioms, figurative speech is often ineffective, for a variety of reasons.

      Often it contributes little to a discussion, except a distraction.

      Which is why, for example, I'm telling you not to bother with any remarks about how the climate science stuff needs to be on the book-finding step, we're well past that anyway, so in advance, I'm advising you to skip that step, should you have been tempted.

    127. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Except for the first one those articles are all from the beginning of 2014. The picture has apparently changed a bit since then.

      Fair enough...

      If they do indeed make a major change, then that is wonderful... :)

      Now on to Russia and India!!!

    128. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Any reason why we can't work on both at the same time?

      No reason at all... but I don't think that conversation is even being had at the moment and I think that is the mistake...

      Also, sometimes if you try and do two things, you end up doing neither well...

    129. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would have to be battery storage. Have you read much into the latest developments? Some pretty interesting stuff in the works, far more interesting than Musk and Lithium. Ambri is one I keep a google alert on, they have started testing at real sites this year. Here is an article on the large drops in price expected from new technology, the site itself seems to be well researched and haven't found anything too left/exaggerated in their articles RenewEconomy.

      They are an Australian focused site, where I am from, and sadly now the leader in climate denial as well as anti-renewables (especially wind power, our Treasurer and Prime Minister have both been saying coal is the saviour of humanity and good for us while wind turbines are extremely ugly) our mining sector has a huge strangle hold on our politics, we have some of the biggest raw materials in the world and ship a large percentage of them globally but only gain 4-6% of our GDP from mining while they employ less than 0.5% of our population, but somehow manage to convince so many people they are the reason we avoided the GFC and without them our economy would collapse.

      We are also one of the few places in the world where you can go off-grid with solar panels and batteries today and re-coup that investment within 5-8 years with warranties of 10+ years. Our warranties are probably the best in the world too, Apple originally fought to avoid our laws on that and lost, but they more than made up for it by tax evasion though.

    130. Re: Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right you are so intelligent that you know for sure that every father and son who works in a coal plant must be racist...Your statement is based on assumptions which form the basis of most liberal talking points:

      1. Only whites are capable of racism
      2. Only whites commit hate crimes againt blacks
      3. Only whites work in coal plants.

    131. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      That's true only if the goal is *not* to create an almost "Hunger Games" type of scenario where there are only the rich, privileged, ruling-class and an impoverished, heavily-regulated & controlled, serf-class.

      That makes no sense at all. And seems completely irrelevant. We can't make real headway in reducing carbon emissions if we don't consider the economic situations of all the countries that can't afford to implement high cost solutions.

      It makes a great deal of sense *if* one is able to disconnect themselves from political/ideological loyalties and dismiss political talking points by the pro-AGW crowd. Even if one were to totally remove *all* of the US's CO2 emissions, it would at best result in only a few tenths of a degree change over a century at best.

      This is not about global warming. This is about redistribution of wealth on a global scale. It's about creating an unelected global governance and destroying national sovereignty.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    132. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Do you understand what 'commodity pricing' means? It means prices and profits are low and price reflects cost for the entire market.

      Never work for a company that has to accept commodity pricing. You won't enjoy it. They are mostly run by marketers.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    133. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      His main idiocy is his baseload to peak ratio. The most industrial, hot and shitty area still doesn't even come close to having a 10% baseload.

      He has just been looking at graphs that don't have their origins at 0 and has apparently never read 'How to lie with Statistics' or 'How to lie with Charts'.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    134. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      "Everything I know about nuclear power, I learned from watching LFTR videos."

      > you'll see that most of the design of a conventional reactor is there to deal with the possibility of a primary coolant pressure loss and the resultant massive steam release.

      Not really; containment of pressure is just one concern out of many. Even if pressure loss wasn't a concern, you'd still need to protect against leaking of radioactive material, explosive/radioactive gases (hydrogen, xenon, etc.) and attacks/accidents. US laws mandate a containment structure strong enough to withstand impact by a passenger jet. You'd still need a huge containment building for your LFTR. Worse, it would need to contain not just the reactor core, but the fuel reprocessing system. It would probably be bigger, not smaller, than a PWR reactor building of equivalent power.

      > This is an enormous risk in all existing power plants.

      All? Nope. British nuclear power plants don't even use steam in the primary coolant loop. They're still expensive. Actually, far more expensive than PWR. Passively safe reactor designs have been around for decades.

      PWR remains the least expensive and most practical form of nuclear power. Yet, it's still the most expensive widely-deployed way of producing electrical power.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    135. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      "Everything I know about nuclear power, I learned from watching LFTR videos."

      That's disingenuous - I've been following the nuclear power saga since the 70's. I majored in physics (ended up w/ a minor) and I've also been inside the control room and containment vessel of an actual commercial PWR and toured a couple of research swimming pool reactors.

      LFTRs just happen to be the latest 'new old' idea that's been brought back to the fore. LFTRs may not be the wave of the future, and that's ok with me, but at least someone, somewhere is thinking out-of-the-box and is concerned about the viability of nuclear power beyond our rather over-complicated existing PWR's.

      Once-thru fuel cycles, one-off designs, and using a high pressure phase changing primary coolant is just silly. We need to graduate to more sophisticated and more intrinsically safe designs. We don't still use carburetors in (most) cars - fuel injection is more efficient and cleaner. We don't use turbojet-only engines on jet aircraft, we use turbofans - again, much more efficient and cleaner. Nuclear power needs to have its own renaissance, preferably sooner than later.

      You'd still need a huge containment building for your LFTR. Worse, it would need to contain not just the reactor core, but the fuel reprocessing system. It would probably be bigger, not smaller, than a PWR reactor building of equivalent power.

      I'm not concerned with the physical size of the building, I'm concerned with keeping the 3000 PSI corrosive genie in the bottle. A building capable of withstanding a jet impact is a lot easier to build than one that also has to contain a flash-to-steam event.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    136. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      > That's disingenuous - I've been following the nuclear power saga since the 70's. I majored in physics (ended up w/ a minor) and I've also been inside the control room and containment vessel of an actual commercial PWR and toured a couple of research swimming pool reactors.

      None of that is actual knowledge or expertise about nuclear power. Last I checked, you don't learn about the nuclear industry doing a physics degree. At best, you learn how fission works and maybe a bit about the very basics of how to sustain criticality. I did a MS in engineering before taking up engineering science for a PhD. I haven't worked in the nuclear industry either but at least I have engineering experience. (No complaining about comparing credentials; you're the one who brought them up first).

      > LFTRs just happen to be the latest 'new old' idea that's been brought back to the fore. LFTRs may not be the wave of the future, and that's ok with me, but at least someone, somewhere is thinking out-of-the-box and is concerned about the viability of nuclear power beyond our rather over-complicated existing PWR's.

      I have no problem with people thinking about new ways of using nuclear power. Actually, I enthusiastically support them. I don't even think LFTRs are a terrible idea per se, even though they remain far from being practically demonstrated. But the reality remains: Nuclear tech is expensive. LFTR is probably going to be extra expensive. The economics of power generation do not favor nuclear power.

      > Once-thru fuel cycles, one-off designs, and using a high pressure phase changing primary coolant is just silly.

      Why? Once-thru fuel cycles are the most cost-efficient. Deep geological storage is the safest way of dealing with waste. Reprocessing is expensive and unsafe.

      When choosing a coolant there are a huge number of factors to choose from. It's always a trade-off.

      > A building capable of withstanding a jet impact is a lot easier to build than one that also has to contain a flash-to-steam event.

      Steam is actually a lot easier to contain, in many ways, than hot molten radioactive salt. You can just use a thick stainless steel vessel. No known material has been demonstrated to be capable of containing the LFTR salt over the long time periods required. MSRE suffered from dangerous levels of corrosion and thermal creep. This made it very dangerous to approach and they had to fill the entire reactor building with concrete after a few years. Prove to me that a LFTR design that meets regulations for nuclear safety is going to be cheaper than a comparable PWR.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    137. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      > I haven't worked in the nuclear industry either but at least I have engineering experience.

      I'm not gonna complain, but I'd like to point out that just having 'engineering experience' doesn't make you an expert either.

      > Nuclear tech is expensive. LFTR is probably going to be extra expensive. The economics of power generation do not favor nuclear power.

      > Once-thru fuel cycles are the most cost-efficient.

      > Prove to me that a LFTR design that meets regulations for nuclear safety is going to be cheaper than a comparable PWR.

      Sometimes cost isn't the most important issue. Safety should be, and I think you'll agree that even the most recent PWR/BWR reactors have much more intrinsic safety in their designs than the old-school PWRs that have been running for 40+ years.

      Look at solar power (something that I'm not really a fan of) - it used to be heinously expensive, but thru research into cell design and improvements in manufacturing, it's really come down in cost to where it's actually cost-effective in some situations.

      > Once-thru fuel cycles are the most cost-efficient.

      Yes, given that the waste is sitting, unprotected, in casks on-site. That's like an old-school coal power plant operator saying coal ash is cheap to dispose of - let's just blast it all over the surrounding counties. If you don't have to pay to dispose of it properly, then of course it's cheap.

      > Deep geological storage is the safest way of dealing with waste.

      No one has any idea where or how much building a facility to deal with all that wasted fuel will cost, and exactly how well it'll stay in containment for 10k years. The real answer to the waste issue is to not generate it in the first place, and what you do generate should have the actinides burned away to limit the half-lives to less than 1,000 years or so.

      > No known material has been demonstrated to be capable of containing the LFTR salt over the long time periods required.

      Again, I'm not wed to LFTRs or even MSR's - I'd be just as happy with a gaseous primary coolant. I want a strong negative void coefficient and other intrinsic safety features instead of the way we have it now. I want the physics to work for us, not against us.

      It sounds like you and I are on the same page with regard to nuclear power - it's important, and needs to be a part of the solution. I say let's take the time and spend the money to start fresh and look at ideas that may have been discarded before but now may make sense. Let's also revamp the NRC - it's so caught up in regulatory capture with PWRs that it can't even begin to assess the safety of any other design.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    138. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      > Sometimes cost isn't the most important issue. Safety should be

      It's possible to get carried away with safety. I think that a minimum standard of safety should be established and then designs should be compared based on that standard. PWRs - especially modern PWRs - are safe by any reasonable standard.

      > Look at solar power (something that I'm not really a fan of) - it used to be heinously expensive, but thru research into cell design and improvements in manufacturing, it's really come down in cost to where it's actually cost-effective in some situations.

      Not a good analogy. Solar technology benefited from semiconductor advances. Solar panels can be mass produced. You can't mass-produce reactors - not cheaply anyway. Not all things can be made cheaper through mass production. The economics of nuclear actually favor huge, multi-gigawatt, one-off constructions. That's another thing that LFTR proponents often get wrong. Small modular reactors are a step backward in terms of both cost and safety.

      Nuclear technology has had 7 decades now to become cheap. It's actually become more expensive over time! (This was due to the realization that, "oh crap, those old reactors were really unsafe!")

      > No one has any idea where or how much building a facility to deal with all that wasted fuel will cost, and exactly how well it'll stay in containment for 10k years.

      Multiple analyses of this have been carried out. Deep geological storage is by far cheaper than reprocessing. Yucca mountain was a reasonably good site; even better sites are available. The opposition is mostly political rather than based on any sound rational reasoning.

      > The real answer to the waste issue is to not generate it in the first place

      Then you've effectively made nuclear technology impossible in practice. It is literally impossible to not generate waste. You might be able to not generate high-level waste, but you'll wind up generating more low-level waste than before (this is what reprocessing does; this aspect of the process is rarely discussed). Nuclear is messy. You will always have lots of waste. The physics dictates this.

      > it's important, and needs to be a part of the solution.

      Meh. Nuclear has so far failed to impress me. I'm open to funding new ideas and proposals. But existing PWR designs are more than enough to meet the niche that nuclear is best suited to (clean baseload power generation near large population and industry centers) and solar is more than enough to meet all the rest of our needs. Thorium solves none of the real issues we are facing and it's unnecessary.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    139. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      The adaption conversation is happening right now as the effects of AGW start to manifest themselves. It might not always be obvious to those directly involved that AGW is a factor. One obvious case of adaption is Miami Beach spending $300 million installing pumps to combat the effects of rising sea levels. That will buy them a few more decades of viability.

    140. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to try and rebut all of that. If you're young enough I think you'll find your sanguine disregard of the effects of AGW will come back to bite you in the butt. Good luck.

    141. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by khallow · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to try and rebut all of that.

      Good move. You would fail if you tried.

    142. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      I'm assuming that renewables are only temporarily going to be more expensive. Cost of solar panels, etc.. has been steadily dropping. Once energy plants recoup some of their initial infrastructure costs, they can probably lower the price down to just maintenance costs, which I assume aren't going to be much higher than a traditional plant.

      And then combine that with setups like free solar panels for your roof (http://www.solarcity.com/) and a Tesla PowerWall battery (http://www.teslamotors.com/powerwall) which can charge up when electricity is cheap (if the sun is shining or the rates are low), then power your house with that free/low rate energy during peak times... and I'm pretty sure that the future is going to be friendly for consumers.

      It is no wonder that every business involved in energy production (Oil companies, coal companies, established energy providers, etc..) are pushing so hard against renewable adoption. Because the end game is probably a lot less profit for them.

    143. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      And then combine that with setups like free solar panels for your roof (http://www.solarcity.com/) and a Tesla PowerWall battery (http://www.teslamotors.com/powerwall) which can charge up when electricity is cheap (if the sun is shining or the rates are low), then power your house with that free/low rate energy during peak times... and I'm pretty sure that the future is going to be friendly for consumers.

      That all sounds great...

      I just caution that we currently enjoy an amazingly dependable 24/7 power supply... we should be careful that in our rush to change, we don't lose it.

      It costs a lot of money to maintain that grid, if we all go local/battery/solar, then the power company either has to charge a lot more, or has to charged fixed rates, or we lose the power grid...

      Is that an improvement?

    144. Re:Oh boy, here we go... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just caution that we currently enjoy an amazingly dependable 24/7 power supply... we should be careful that in our rush to change, we don't lose it.

      We should also be careful in our fear of change, that we don't lose it because we don't keep up with the times.

      It costs a lot of money to maintain that grid, if we all go local/battery/solar, then the power company either has to charge a lot more, or has to charged fixed rates, or we lose the power grid...

      Is that an improvement?

      Ask the legislators in places that separated power generation from power delivery.

  2. Won't somebody think of the miners? by plover · · Score: 0

    Oh, wait. That's who over half the legislature is bought and paid for to represent.

    --
    John
    1. Re:Won't somebody think of the miners? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, if it weren't for political corruption, renewable energy would be so much cheaper than coal!

    2. Re:Won't somebody think of the miners? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 0, Troll

      Legislature? Obama doesn't need any stinking legislature. He's Emperor Lameduck! He rules by executive order!

    3. Re:Won't somebody think of the miners? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "Iron" lady, well she was no lady, decided to starve all of the miners and their families to death. To death! She even starved children. That is what happens when you let pro-AGW morons rule you. They hate you so they kill you. That is the way of their kind. Thatcher killed killed killed. She wanted global warming so she shut down all of the mines. Now, Obama has a plan to increase climate change, and you just know it involves killing people by the thousands like Thatcher. That is the way of their kind. They represent powers that are beyond us.

    4. Re:Won't somebody think of the miners? by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

      He rules by executive order!

      Donald Rumsfeld: You go to war with the army you have...

    5. Re:Won't somebody think of the miners? by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      Legislature? Obama doesn't need any stinking legislature. He's Emperor Lameduck! He rules by executive order!

      Interesting fact: In 2014 the Supreme Court ruled that the Clean Air Act gives the EPA not only the authority to regulate CO2 emissions, but the responsibility to do so.

      So you're right, Obama doesn't need the legislature to do this, because the legislature already gave him (or more precisely, gave the EPA) the power to do this back in 1970.

      If the legislature doesn't like what the EPA is doing, they can of course pass new legislation limiting what the EPA can do. Assuming the legislature is still capable of passing anything, of course.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    6. Re:Won't somebody think of the miners? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Despite all the Koch Brothers complaints about solar subsidies, there are more subsidies for coal than solar.

  3. Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we need by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yep central planning that will save us all.

  4. Obama should do a fact check... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ""We're the first generation to feel the impact of climate change and the last generation that can do something about it," Obama said on Monday."

    ---

    While that sounds nice when he is giving a speech, there are two problems with the above sentence.

    First, we aren't feeling the impact of climate change. For all the fear mongering, the oceans haven't risen, the weather is fine, and life has been carrying on.

    Second, we aren't the last generation who can do something about it. Depending on who you listen to, either we have already passed the point of no return, or we have a long time to worry about it.

    If AGW supporters are correct, then the changes being proposed won't change the outcome by enough to matter. We had to do all this 30+ years ago and get the world on board as well. A few cuts here and there will be swamped by the growth in the global economy and the number of new power plants being built every year. China alone is building a new coal plant every month.

    At this point, we're just moving the deck chairs around the Titanic, or perhaps put another way, we using a bucket brigade to try and get the water out of the ship. Nice idea, but pointless when the ship is still going to sink.

    So if the AGW people are right (and they might be, I wouldn't discount smart people so easily), then we need to start adapting to the change that is coming regardless of what we do.

    If the AGW people are wrong, then this is just a wealth transfer and overreaching power grab from big government.

    1. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've been waiting for deniers to move from
      1) Global warming doesnt exist
      2) Global warming may exist but its not manmade
      to
      3) Global warming does exit but there is nothing we can do about it.

      Too bad there werent some enlightened people who warned about this early enough to do something about it. oh wait...

      As for wealth transfer, you are deluded if you dont think the current state, of wealthy "deniers" stoking denial, clamoring for tax cuts are not doing their own wealth transfer, only in the opposite direction. They probably correctly deduce that the wealthier they are the easier it will be for them to withstand the effects of climate change, while the poor saps they convince to deny science will be the ones that will be hurt the most.

    2. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Informative

      For all the fear mongering, the oceans haven't risen,

      Yes, they have.

      the weather is fine,

      Is that a joke?

      and life has been carrying on.

      Well, except for the mass extinction.

      If AGW supporters are correct

      AKA "PhD scientists studying this for the last few decades".

      then the changes being proposed won't change the outcome by enough to matter.

      There is no one grand solution to AGW. There are a lot of smaller steps that added together might make a difference. Failing to do any of them certainly will not help.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    3. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by fustakrakich · · Score: 3, Funny

      So if the AGW people are right (and they might be, I wouldn't discount smart people so easily), then we need to start adapting to the change that is coming regardless of what we do.

      Eh, no biggie. In New York, Miami, and L.A., heh, and New Orleans, everybody can just move up one floor, get some gondolas, learn to sing in Italian... Jet Skis should become real popular

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    4. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by cats-paw · · Score: 1, Insightful

      First, we aren't feeling the impact of climate change. For all the fear mongering, the oceans haven't risen, the weather is fine, and life has been carrying on.

      first- we are feeling the impact of climate change. oh i'm sorry, have i interfered with your unsupported assertion by making my own unsupported assertion ?

      the oceans have risen:

      http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/f...

      Sea levels have been rising over the 20th century. This, and a host of other evidence say we _are_ experiencing the effects of climate change.

      yes, life is carrying on. and it will continue to carry on even at such time as that carrying on becomes very, very difficult. so what the hell is your point ?

      At this point, we're just moving the deck chairs around the Titanic, or perhaps put another way, we using a bucket brigade to try and get the water out of the ship. Nice idea, but pointless when the ship is still going to sink.

      The standard denier bullshit. We can't do anything , we should just get over it. Except that the standard denier bullshit used to be "there is no climate change". Now, it's "oh yeah, maybe there is, but we should just get used to it".

      By doing something NOW, we can make future impact less. BTW, what exactly do you have against dumping more shit into the air ? remember when they put lead in gasoline ? Should we have just left it in , because we had already dumped so much into the environment that it was "too late" to do anything about it ?

      If the AGW people are wrong, then this is just a wealth transfer and overreaching power grab from big government.

      your true slashdot, libertarian colors revealed.

      --
      Absolute statements are never true
    5. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by maccodemonkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "First, we aren't feeling the impact of climate change. For all the fear mongering, the oceans haven't risen, the weather is fine, and life has been carrying on."

      Errrr, what? The oceans have definitely been measurably rising.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Just because Manhattan isn't underwater doesn't mean we don't measure and observe it.

      "Second, we aren't the last generation who can do something about it. Depending on who you listen to, either we have already passed the point of no return, or we have a long time to worry about it."

      We've definitely already passed the point of return for no changes. The question from here on out is how much damage we want to do in addition to what's already been done. There isn't an upper limit to the damage due to global warming. That's like saying "Oh gosh, I'm in debt. Whelp, guess I'll just spend whatever I want because I'm already in debt!" It's nonsensical double talk from someone who's claiming that global warming is both not a thing, and it's too late to do anything about it anyway.

    6. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sea levels have been rising over the 20th century. This, and a host of other evidence say we _are_ experiencing the effects of climate change.

      You feel a rise of 0.12 inches a year? So in 10 years, oceans should be 1.2 inches higher?

      I don't know about you, but that doesn't strike me as something that 99.9% of anyone would notice, unless told about.

      You must have a different definition of "experiencing the effects" than everyone else does.

      Sea levels have been rising over the 20th century.

      Ok, so you're saying that global warming started 115 years ago? So that MUST make it all man-made, no chance that it could be anything else, right?

      yes, life is carrying on. and it will continue to carry on even at such time as that carrying on becomes very, very difficult. so what the hell is your point ?

      I'm sorry that your mind is so closed as to have missed the point. First, you make the assumption that life will become very, very difficult. You don't know that.

      Second, you don't know that any climate change can be avoided anyway, so all your efforts might amount to a fly trying to move an elephant.

      The standard denier bullshit. We can't do anything , we should just get over it. Except that the standard denier bullshit used to be "there is no climate change". Now, it's "oh yeah, maybe there is, but we should just get used to it".

      When you use words like denier, you show yourself to be closed as well. You assume AGW is proven fact and that anyone who disagrees with you is an idiot. Except, it isn't proven, many disagree, and you aren't nearly as smart as you think you are.

      By doing something NOW, we can make future impact less.

      You don't know that... actually, I think you're wrong. The "doing something" part has to be enough to make a change, and from what I've read, the changes proposed wouldn't do that.

      But you're ignoring that part. Bailing water out of the Titanic is in fact "doing something NOW", but it doesn't change the outcome of the ship sinking.

      But you aren't open and honest enough to accept that possibility, you assume that if you DO SOMETHING NOW, then all will be right. In the process you want to create a mess of another kind, without any assurance that your actions change anything.

    7. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 0

      The real problem with what the AGW alarmists propose is that:

      1. If the problem is severe, there isn't anything we can really do at this point.

      2. The solutions they propose will hamstring humanity and make us less able to ameliorate the problems that are coming.

      But the solution seems to be to listen to them, and do what they say. They are the experts. That's always been the approach that 'experts' take. There were many 'solutions' to various problems proposed during the 20th century. Believe me, they all claimed to be scientific. In the end, they all turned into totalitarian states.

    8. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 2

      first- we are feeling the impact of climate change

      No, we aren't "feeling" it, we are merely able to detect it. And if things keep going at this rate, we really don't have anything to worry about for centuries to come.

    9. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 0

      The question from here on out is how much damage we want to do in addition to what's already been done. There isn't an upper limit to the damage due to global warming.

      There is an upper limit to how much damage we do to our economy before our whole culture changes drastically. In ways that we might not like.

      So it's a lot more complicated issue than one asshole can solve with 'Executive Orders' that reward his cronies. Yes, Obama has cronies in business, in the economy, and in the Environmental movement.

      It might seem gratifying to see him 'stick it to' the stick figure effigies that the Environmental Movement has constructed. That might seem like justice to some.

      It's scary as shit seeing anybody wield that much power.

    10. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're the first generation to feel the impact of climate change

      This fatuous man should tell that to the Paleo-Indians who crossed the land bridge of the Bering Straight into glaciated North America.. "Fighting climate change" is beyond crazy.

    11. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      Just because Manhattan isn't underwater doesn't mean we don't measure and observe it.

      Manhattan will never be under water. Wall Street will always get yet another bailout.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    12. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      And I'll believe it as soon as the people proposing to tax me into oblivion to give to their campaign donors to "solve the problem" live in houses the size of mine, using the same electricity amounts I do, and stop flying private jets everywhere.

      Al Gore already admitted that he lied in pushing for ethanol from corn for votes in his presidential run. Hilary has already taken $300 million in bribes for favours from the State Department she ran. Obama has lied countless times to the American public.

      Sorry, your heroes are shit and I'm not sure why I should listen to them or anyone who claims I need to listen to them.

    13. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ignorance of people like you is pretty goddamn astounding.

    14. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We've definitely already passed the point of return for no changes. The question from here on out is how much damage we want to do in addition to what's already been done. There isn't an upper limit to the damage due to global warming. That's like saying "Oh gosh, I'm in debt. Whelp, guess I'll just spend whatever I want because I'm already in debt!" It's nonsensical double talk from someone who's claiming that global warming is both not a thing, and it's too late to do anything about it anyway."

      Unfortunately, modern humans are incapable of collective behavior changes that prevent the annihilation of the whole. History has shown this time and time again. Just look at all the Pacific island cultures that went extinct because they overpopulated and over consumed the resources on their island. There was always someone who thought it would be a good idea to cut down the last tree. In this globalized world where climate change is an existential threat to humans, there will still be people who will think it's a good idea to cut down that one last tree... The massive anti-global warming denial movement is the new "cut down the last tree" guy.

    15. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for reminding me that I'm not alone in the world.

    16. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Rockoon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You must have a different definition of "experiencing the effects" than everyone else does.

      They do have a different definition. They feel problems. They feel solutions.

      If they can't feel the problem (such as the problem that the solution they feel increases the poverty of people other than them) then its not a problem.

      These are a shitbags that dont understand that the number one killer in the world is poverty, that more than twice the population of the United States is way below the international poverty line in India alone. They are selfish self-centered coastal living fucks that have no sense of scale. They are extremely concerned that some people (such as themselves) might eventually be displaced by the extremely slow rise of the ocean, but are amazingly not outraged at all that the policies that they have pushed for cause people to die now.

      You've heard of 1st world problems? This worry about sea level rise is the extreme form of that. They already feel it, even though they havent been displaced and need to be told by someone else that its even happening. And its more important that what we do about it feels like a solution rather than is a solution.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    17. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you use words like denier, you show yourself to be closed as well.

      You assume AGW is proven fact and that anyone who disagrees with you is an idiot. Except, it isn't proven, many disagree, and you aren't nearly as smart as you think you are.

      Totally agree, 97% of scientists against 3% is very close call, it is hard to tell who is more likely correct. [Sarcasm]

    18. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ah, the typical "rational" response, because "feelings are the evul" as all good and proper logical people know.

      Of course, Obama was using the word feel in a different sense, but let's not let actually being able to recognize what somebody actually said get in the way of our diatribe.

      We've got to attack those damn irrational people talking about their feelings, because that's just the logical way to do things.

      And let's pretend to care about the poor in India, and elsewhere, never mind that those same people are dying right now for a host of reasons, including more than a little industrial development that didn't come with any particular oversight. But that's the sort of thing people who care about feelings would worry about, the important thing is that they have jobs working in factories, and never mind the costs, if there was a need for a solution, it wouldn't be due to feelings!

    19. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by pipingguy · · Score: 2

      People have allowed themselves to get emotional and politicized by the AGW issue. And they're frightened (they'll say they're "concerned" or "forward-thinking" or "cautious" because being frightened is not virtuous). It is very difficult to reason with a frightened person because fear clouds their ability to think rationally. The often vicious reactions of The True Believers to skeptics reveals the extent of the fear (or perhaps reveals the hidden bad faith political motives).

    20. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by weilawei · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sorry, your heroes are shit and I'm not sure why I should listen to them or anyone who claims I need to listen to them.

      You've conveniently listed all examples of politicians instead of PhD scientists (3 of them, in fact, and 0 scientists). The GP said "PhD scientists". How exactly are the two anything alike?

      The function of one is to lie through their teeth and the function of the other is to perform fundamental research. I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader which one is which.

    21. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real problem is you, based on the following:

      1. Your assumption that there's nothing we can do is not factually demonstrated, just blindly asserted.

      2. That the solutions proposed are necessarily crippling.

      And comparing it to other entities, well, that's an attempt at guilt by association. Why don't you just go around screaming "Hitler, Hitler, Hitler" and skip the pretense?

    22. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by davester666 · · Score: 1

      Are you claiming we have elected a bunch of uninformed, lying idiots to public office?

      Yeah, that's pretty accurate.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    23. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      I'm not a Democrat and I've never voted for or endorsed any of the people you mention. You are the partisan, not me.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    24. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Sea levels have been rising over the 20th century. This, and a host of other evidence say we _are_ experiencing the effects of climate change.

      And people are still arguing as to whether or not we're out of the last ice age still, but don't worry the science is settled. Just like cerebral palsy don't have any genetic factors. Wait a second! A group just finished up a study and found it does have a genetic component in at least 10% of cases. And there was a lot of people in the medical community who were against the study.

      Yeah, that's actually a brilliant example of science and scientists not wanting to go against the ingrained truth.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    25. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take your partisan bullshit and shove it up your ass.

    26. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The rise of the oceans is not just a first world problem. Some of the poorest places on earth stand to lose most of their landmass to rising tides. These are the people who can least afford it. http://www.businessinsider.com/islands-threatened-by-climate-change-2012-10?op=1

      Not to mention all the other desperately poor countries that are being buffeted by increasingly intense storms.

    27. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by non0score · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You mean, like the people in Bangkok who are feeling the problem of sea level rise every day (of course, they're also doing it to themselves due to over pumping of ground water)? Even if they stopped pumping water, that 2.5mm/year is still going to drown them very soon. Then again, I'm guessing they're all just "selfish self-centered coastal living fucks that have no sense of scale", and are all above the poverty line...oh wait....

    28. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      You've heard of 1st world problems? This worry about sea level rise is the extreme form of that. They already feel it, even though they havent been displaced and need to be told by someone else that its even happening. And its more important that what we do about it feels like a solution rather than is a solution.

      I think you've hit the nail on the head. :)

    29. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > some people (such as themselves) might eventually be displaced by the extremely slow rise of the ocean

      Bangladesh, one of the poorest 5 countries on Earth, has 120 million people living within 1 meter (1.1 yard) of the current sea level. Essentially the whole country is a giant river delta. When the water comes up and stays there, where exactly will you move 120 million people, Antartica?

      And there are many other african and south-east asian countries with million or tens of million of people already living at or almost at the sea level. Where do you move them, Siberia?

    30. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      > First, we aren't feeling the impact of climate change. For all the fear mongering, the oceans haven't risen,

      They have. http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/f...

      > the weather is fine,

      It's not. http://www.forbes.com/sites/je...

      > and life has been carrying on.

      'Struggling' would be a better word: http://news.stanford.edu/news/...

      And we are just seeing the beginning of these problems. The predictions of the IPCC are actually quite conservative. The reality is likely to be much worse. This isn't fear-mongering; I'm not talking about fire and brimstone and mass anarchy. Humans can adapt. But we will have to deal with mass migrations, destruction of large areas of crop land, and a potentially very harmful loss of biodiversity. These are facts which we can state with certainty; the only uncertainty is just how deep the wound will eventually go before we actually do something about it.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    31. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Rockoon · · Score: 1, Interesting

      When the water comes up and stays there, where exactly will you move 120 million people, Antartica?

      You are proving the god damned point I made in spades. You clearly have no sense in scale, at all. Lets put the situation on the table:

      Bangladesh has one of the highest child malnutrition rates in the world, with almost 40% of its children being malnourished. 40% of all births in the country are by girls age 18 or less. 127,000 children under the age of 5 die each and every year. 38 out of every 1000 children never even see their first god damned birthday. Only 43% of the population is fucking literate. 43% of the people live below the international poverty line. A massive 77% of the people have suffered severe dehydration requiring oral re-hydration salts.

      These people do not need solar panels, or god damned wind farms. What these people need is cheap energy, a stable government, economic freedom, and maybe some fucking help before that meaningful shit happens.

      Yet you are here feeling their plight.... about sea level rise. You proved the fucking point you selfish evil prick. You have no fucking sense at all of scale. Typical western liberal statist ignorant asshole. Selfishly doesnt give a fuck about things that really matter today.

      If you really cared about the people of Bangladesh you would get a fucking sense of scale, put some cash in an envelope, address it to one of the major charity organizations operating there, and ask others to do the same. But instead we see you justifying your feelings about sea level rise/global warming and quite despicably trying to use the people of Bangladesh as an excuse to push the solution that you feel.

      Go fuck yourself you selfish evil prick.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    32. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While that sounds nice when he is giving a speech, there are two problems with the above sentence.

      Since when has facts ever stopped any political speech?

    33. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -the ocean has risen 8 inches the past century
      -record heat waves and storms every year
      -species dying out at record rates
      -half of all wild animals died in the past 40 years

      anything else you want corrected today ?

    34. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they've already risen 8 inches.
      Remember hurricane sandy?

      well that extra 8 inches caused 30% more damage than Sandy would have if the seas hadn't risen.

      the sea doesn't have to rise tens of feet to be felt: .the problem is storm surge.

      the higher the base level of the sea, the easier it is for the storm surge to rush inland and cause damage.
      smaller storms that previously wouldn't have caused damage from the storm surge now can flood streets.
      and bigger storms like sandy caused several extra billion dollars in damage.

      and we've covered this price problem before you and I.
      this is your schtick: you act reasonable, but as time goes on you lose the veneer and reveal yourself for the ignorant denier you are.

    35. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How dare you speak of Al Gore, George Soros, and Warren Buffett like that.

    36. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well done good sir. wish I had a mod point :)

    37. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So we should ignore the Rothchilds psy-op because the Koch psy-op is better funded?

      It doesn't matter what you do in life, somewhere, some billionaire is profiting from your misery. Picking which billionaire you want to be screwed by is a pretty idiotic way to live your life.

    38. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by randallman · · Score: 1

      You're arguing a false premise, that choosing to eliminate our production of greenhouse gases is simultaneously a choice to ignore poverty in India. I don't consider myself a "selfish self-centered coastal living fuck", yet I am concerned about global warming. I'm also concerned about helping people in poverty and do contribute to that cause as well.

      And you're obviously a global warming denier. Otherwise you would realize that while the Earth will go on, the threat of global warming is to our entire race. It's impossible to predict exactly what will happen, but as Musk and others have said, greenhouse gas emissions are "the dumbest experiment in history". Once you've realized the full effect, you can't exactly start the experiment over and do things differently next time. It won't matter that the poor people in India were able to improve their standard of living with cheap coal if that coal makes the planet inhabitable for humans.

    39. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by KGIII · · Score: 1

      That is about the same ratio as Einstein faced before some astronomers were able to capture an eclipse on film. Consensus does not make science. I suspect you are one of those people who finds studies that they do not agree with and discounts their findings because they do not feel right to you. Leave the science to the scientists. You are not capable of understanding.

      Note: I am not saying AGW is not happening. In fact, what I have said offers no opinion on that. Sorry but, honestly, I am not skilled enough to opine on its veracity. I suspect, strongly, that you are not either. The difference is that one of us is honest.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    40. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Explain how come Venecians were trying to keep the Adriatic out of their city way back in the 14th century. No evil Man Made CO2 to blame. Face it, it's natural. It's happened before and it'll happen again, and again.... and eventually we'll end up with lead rain like Venus has. We'll be an iceball before that, however. Absolutely NO scientific proof that CO2 causes or has anything to do with GW other than a symptom. It always follows warming. Don't believe me - show me then. I dare you. Otherwise, admit man made global warming is a hoax to make a very small number of people very rich so we don't feel bad about it anymore.

    41. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget "Global warming exists and it's awesome", the "plants need CO2" nonscience crowd.

      Protip for commenters, using "AGW" marks you out as a denier. They'll have to be smarter than that (though, if they were smarter, they might understand what everyone else does; eesh, ego.)

    42. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by x_IamSpartacus_x · · Score: 1

      ...people in Bangkok... ...that 2.5mm/year is still going to drown them very soon.

      Sheesh, how short ARE people in China?

    43. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ""We're the first generation to feel the impact of climate change and the last generation that can do something about it," Obama said on Monday."

      ---

      While that sounds nice when he is giving a speech, there are two problems with the above sentence.

      First, we aren't feeling the impact of climate change. For all the fear mongering, the oceans haven't risen, the weather is fine, and life has been carrying on.

      Second, we aren't the last generation who can do something about it. Depending on who you listen to, either we have already passed the point of no return, or we have a long time to worry about it.

      If AGW supporters are correct, then the changes being proposed won't change the outcome by enough to matter. We had to do all this 30+ years ago and get the world on board as well. A few cuts here and there will be swamped by the growth in the global economy and the number of new power plants being built every year. China alone is building a new coal plant every month.

      At this point, we're just moving the deck chairs around the Titanic, or perhaps put another way, we using a bucket brigade to try and get the water out of the ship. Nice idea, but pointless when the ship is still going to sink.

      So if the AGW people are right (and they might be, I wouldn't discount smart people so easily), then we need to start adapting to the change that is coming regardless of what we do.

      If the AGW people are wrong, then this is just a wealth transfer and overreaching power grab from big government.

      Anthropogenic Climate Change (Global Warming as you quaintly put it) is definitely real. We're seeing changes in weather that should take thousands of years occuring in tens of years. Where have you ever gotten the idea it's natural or normal for the climate to change within the span of a human lifetime? This isn't even a scientific matter. If you can manage to keep your time scales straight along with your facts, you should be able to reason ACC is really happening, right now.

    44. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      There's literally nothing I could say to you that thousands of scientists haven't already tried to tell you. Are you also an antivaxxer, or are you only anti-science on this one subject?

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    45. Re:Obama should do a fact check... by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Now where did that come from? I'm not anti-vaxer, of course. I'm a scientist. A real one with over 30 years of experience in the scientific field.

      As I said, show me scientifically CO2 is causing it, not a political propaganda web site.

      Thousands of scientists say it's not man made.
      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sci...

      Villages showing up again that were under ice showing it was normally warmer:
      http://www.takepart.com/articl...

      Could go on and on and on. There's PLENTY of evidence that this is natural. I have seen absolutely nothing to show CO2 has anything to do with it any more than for example - the hot air from politicians.

      So I'll ask again and I mean this in a nice way - show me some scientific proof that CO2 is the cause. Not opinion, not a political propaganda site, something scientific. Please don't respond unless you have something scientific.

  5. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by AmazingRuss · · Score: 1

    ....because you've already taken the problem into your hands and reduced your carbon output.

  6. What a deal! by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 1, Troll

    It will cost us billions and is expected to have an effect that is within the statistical measuring error. What a deal. Of course this is from the guy who traded four high ranking enemy combatants for a deserter, so maybe he thinks it is a good deal. Please oh please can we elect an adult next time? Someone who has actually accomplished something other than getting elected?

    1. Re:What a deal! by thatisscary · · Score: 1

      Because the only person who will be elected is the person who is best at getting elected. (Throw in Arrow's Impossibility Theorem and not even that.) And since much of getting elected is convincing those who have power and influence to back you financially, etc. you get Obama. No worse than any before him, really. ( I am a bit tired of all the whining.) The only difference is that enormous power as accrued to the president, so incompetence is more widely felt and the consequences more severe.

    2. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Like another Ronnie Raygun who negotiated with terrorists to help him win an election by trading soldiers for guns and setting the stage for much of the issues we are dealing with in the middle east? Or how about Bush who got us into the first Desert Storm. And Jr who caused the near collapse of the economy and put us in the longest war the USA has ever been in over a lie? They all suck. Clinton gets sucked so that's different. NAFTA was his crowning shit.

      Maybe have your memory go back more than one president. And grow the fuck up before saying we need adults. We've not had one since Eisenhower.

    3. Re:What a deal! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      It will cost us billions and is expected to have an effect that is within the statistical measuring error.

      Look at it this way......cost us billions? No, we're going to borrow the money to pay for it, just like the high-speed rail in California.

      Isn't that a bad thing? In California, we're never going to pay off the debt, so might as well build cool stuff while people are still willing to loan us money. It might not help much with CO2 output, but hey, we'll have cool new solar power plants.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    4. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It will cost us billions and is expected to have an effect that is within the statistical measuring error. What a deal. Of course this is from the guy who traded four high ranking enemy combatants for a deserter, so maybe he thinks it is a good deal. Please oh please can we elect an adult next time? Someone who has actually accomplished something other than getting elected?

      Agreed we need an ADULT this time around, a republican one.. That is NOT Trump folks.. PLEASE don't support that guy. He reminds me of Ol' Ross Perrot, the hand grenade with a crew cut. Only Trump has a really bad taupe on that explosive. Sure he's fun to listen to, but putting an avowed self serving business guy who only recently became conservative into the oval office is like putting Mr. Howell in charge of a carrier task group during a war.

    5. Re:What a deal! by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      In California, we're never going to pay off the debt...

      Say whaaa?..

      And furthermore, a 'debt' is not something you pay off. It is a valuable commodity to trade on the open market and reap great profits in brokers commisions.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    6. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, Carter was the one who set the stage for the clusterfuck that is the Middle East by not supporting the Shah of Iran.

    7. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The democrats deciding everyone should be able to buy a house is what caused the collapse.

    8. Re:What a deal! by Saanvik · · Score: 2

      Surely you mean Presidents Truman and Eisenhower, right? I mean, after all, it was the CIA during their administrations that overthrew the democratically elected government in Iran that is more responsible for the situation in the Middle East then anything else. See CIA-assisted coup overthrows government of Iran.

      Or perhaps you mean the European leaders who, after WWI, created countries that never existed in the Middle East?

      I think putting blame on President Carter is a bit misplaced. While President Carter called on the Shah to stop torturing people and to release political prisoners, the US continued to strongly supported the Shah. Social changes in Iran were too large and too rapid, though, to quell without even more horrendous human rights violations than the Shah was already committing. In reality, there was not way to keep the status quo in Iran. We supported the Shah far too long, against our own stated human rights beliefs and against our own best foreign policy judgements. President Nixon, though, believed that Iran, ruled by the Shah, was vital to American interests in the area, so, that's what we got.

    9. Re:What a deal! by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Labeling it democratic and it actually being democratic are two entirely different things. The previous regime in Egypt was a pretty good demonstration of that. So is the current regime in Iraq that's driving the rest of the country into the arms of ISIS.

      Not having centuries of experience in this area probably doesn't help. Their understanding of democracy is much like the average tea bagger's.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    10. Re:What a deal! by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 2

      People are not responding to Trump because he is Trump. They are responding to the two card monte that the Rs and Ds are playing on us. For instance, Immigration. Immigration, both legal and illegal, is destroying our country. In Texas alone, illegals have been charged with over 177,000 serious crimes since 2008, including almost 3,000 homicides. Trump is the only one willing to point out the insanity of bringing millions of low-skilled and illiterate people here from third world shitholes and then giving them welfare benefits. A few mentally ill people shoot innocents, and the Ds start lecturing us on giving up our civil rights. Illegals kill tens of thousands, and nary a peep about the border. Insanity. And this is only one example. Abuse of political amnesty, "Free trade" etc. are similar issues. I just hope he does not run as a third party candidate. If he is the R nominee, I will most definitely vote for him.

    11. Re:What a deal! by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      "It will cost us billions and is expected to have an effect that is within the statistical measuring error."

      That's only one of the problems with the whole boondoggle. And I think your estimate should have read 'tens of billions', if not more.

    12. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great to have Arthur Anderson as your con artists^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H accountants; the pension system is still broken and deliberately gutted to make a "surplus" that my kids have to pay for.

    13. Re:What a deal! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Do you notice, from your link, that as soon as there's a budget 'surplus,' politicians begin arguing about how exactly to spend it? California is in debt so deeply because, as soon as they get any money, the politicians spend it, and more.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    14. Re:What a deal! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Immigration, both legal and illegal, is destroying our country.

      If that were true, the country would be destroyed by now, because we're all immigrants.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    15. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Immigration, both legal and illegal, is destroying our country.

      If that were true, the country would be destroyed by now, because we're all immigrants.

      Well, in some sense that's 120% true. Those immigrants have destroyed Mayan civilization, although that happened not directly in current US territory. However in current US territory there were lots of indigenous people, which were driven off their land. ;)

      Current immigration consequences does not look to be that extreme, however immigrants surely have their effect on "native" people.

    16. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Labeling it democratic and it actually being democratic are two entirely different things.

      So Iran wasn't democratic because you say so?

      Post some evidence that this is so, rather than just insisting you're right. Put up or shut up.

    17. Re:What a deal! by Xest · · Score: 1

      Yeah but look on the bright side, that cost of billions will be more than made up for the fact that you no longer have to invade oil rich states where you create enemy combatants by fucking over their country and where your troops can desert in the first place.

      So it seems to suit your own argument just fine- billions to become energy independent is a bargain compared to trillion dollar wars to maintain oil dependence.

    18. Re:What a deal! by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Well, That do that because nobody is trying to stop them. They are assuming that when you reelect them, you are saying, *We don't care. Take the money!* I really can't argue against that assessment. Anyway, as long as the water problems continue, anyone who says you have a budget surplus is a big fat liar and is stealing the money.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    19. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. This POS is TRUL abusing presidential directives, something which the Congress and the SCOTUS need to start addressing.

      He completely ignores that IIRC there was a recent legal case in which the ruling amounted to that costs had to be considered with any EPA rules, and this is the fuckwits response? WTH does this scumbag get off? I've NEVER witnessed such callous disregard for the rule of law, I don't think that even FDR went quite this crazy, but maybe he did with packing the SCOTUS... but this guy is no FDR, just some cocky...

    20. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An incomplete list of things Obama has accomplished, courtesy of your local Google:

      http://pleasecutthecrap.com/ob...

    21. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shutup racist.

      Immigrants, both illegal and legal, commit crimes at less than 1/3 of the rate of citizens.

      Illegal immigrants cannot get welfare , or any other public assistance.

    22. Re:What a deal! by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 1

      Any sentient being with two brain cells to rub together can see the difference between pre-1965 and post-1965 immigration. Before the welfare state, people came to America for opportunity. Now we take in illiterates and criminals and give them craploads of free stuff, courtesy of the Chinese and our grandchildren.

    23. Re:What a deal! by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 1

      Well that is certainly one creative way of interpreting events. Not one that I share by the way. I mean, what country invades another for oil, then doesn't take it?

    24. Re:What a deal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, come on. Stop insisting that positions be based on pesky *facts*. You'll never get to hear Republican talking points if you insist that they don't get to make shit up whole cloth!

    25. Re:What a deal! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Anyway, as long as the water problems continue, anyone who says you have a budget surplus is a big fat liar and is stealing the money.

      The water problems come from the same source as the budgetary problems. Both farmers and city dwellers have been doing a good job reducing their water usage (by letting their lawns die or by using more efficient irrigation techniques). But every time there's a surplus of water, someone says, "Hey, let's use that water for my project over here!" That's poor management, though. You need to save up for the dry years.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    26. Re:What a deal! by KGIII · · Score: 1

      You know, we do not really get any oil from the Middle East, right?

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    27. Re:What a deal! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      That story indicates that there is no intention of using the current surplus to pay down the debt, so the debt will never be paid off.

    28. Re:What a deal! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      In Texas alone, illegals have been charged with over 177,000 serious crimes since 2008, including almost 3,000 homicides.

      What percent of people in Texas are illegals? How many total serious crimes have been committed since 2008?

      Despite the size of the numbers, for all we know, that rate could he half the rate of the US citizens.

    29. Re:What a deal! by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      You can't sell and trade notes that have been paid off, they have no value, outside some Hollywood auction house. No, you have to make it bigger! And you keep selling it until the first guy balks, then the state pays off that note with a new one, and tells us we must make 'sacrifices' because there is no money. 'Debt' is pure profit, babe. I thought everybody understood that after 2008

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    30. Re:What a deal! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I thought everyone understood that after 1980. Trickle Down Voodoo Economics, baby.

    31. Re:What a deal! by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      1929?... Oy! just like everything else, turtles!

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    32. Re:What a deal! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1
    33. Re:What a deal! by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 1

      The analysis I have seen mentioned that illegals are about 6X times as likely to commit murder compared to the rest of us.

    34. Re:What a deal! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Must be analysis done by conservative anti-immigrant groups.

      The greatest indicator of first-time crime is SES. So any analysis that doesn't correct for SES is trying to prove that poor people are evil. And yes, most immigrants are poor.

      So yes, you've seen statistics that prove the well known phenomenon that poor people are more likely to commit a crime. They also congregate in high-crime areas, because those are generally cheaper places to live. But just throwing a number on a group doesn't mean anything beyond the speaker hating the group being talked about.

    35. Re:What a deal! by Xest · · Score: 1

      One that still wants to keep global oil prices affordable and locked to it's currency given it's dependence on it.

  7. Aaron Sorkin should get a kickback... by chaboud · · Score: 1

    This sounds a lot like the line from The American President regarding "White House Resolution 455" (an energy bill reducing fossil fuel emissions), which is, "It is, by far, the most aggressive stride ever taken in the fight to reverse the effects of global warming..."

    "...single most important step that America has ever made in the fight against global climate change..." begins to sound hilariously similar 20 years later.

    Note that I know nothing about the material elements of this speech or bill. I just think that the speechwriting language is eerily similar.

    1. Re:Aaron Sorkin should get a kickback... by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      "White House Resolution 455"

      I found "White House Resolution 451" more interesting . . . this proposed burning all the books in the Library of Congress to generate electricity.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  8. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ....because you've already taken the problem into your hands and reduced your carbon output.

    I have actually... and more people do every day...

    I spent a few hundred dollars to replace all my incandescent bulbs in my home with LED bulbs. And I was ranting a few years ago against government over reach when they wanted to ban incandescent bulbs. I still am, it isn't their job to pick winners.

    LED bulbs did get down to a price point where they make sense, now it comes down to education to make people aware of how much money they save. My payback period on those bulbs is just over a year, maybe 15 months. That is a no-brainer if there ever was one. People talk about solar systems having 7 to 10 year paybacks, yet ignore the one that has less than 2 years of payback.

    I also recently purchased a car for the first time in almost 20 years. My primary vehicle is a 2015 Yukon XL Denali, a wonderful vehicle that burns crap loads of gas, but is very useful for moving my family, their friends, and stuff. However, if it is just me, or just me and my wife, it is overkill... So now I also own a 2014 Ford Taurus that gets 29 MPH on the highway. It is still comfortable and filled with nice stuff, but it burns almost half the fuel of my big truck and I make a point to drive it instead of the truck when I don't need the truck.

    Now I'm thankfully in the position that I can afford to buy another vehicle, not everyone is. I figure that the gas savings pays for the insurance on it, so it isn't "free" or even "cheap", but it does reduce my carbon and pollution footprint.

    And I'm a Republican! So not all of us want to just "drill, baby drill" until it is all gone. But the solutions should be reasonable and take into account everyone, not just top down central planning.

  9. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....because you've already taken the problem into your hands and reduced your carbon output.

    Somewhat, but only because it made economic sense....

    The AC has a valid point. For the most part this "central planning" of large parts of the nation's economy is not a good idea, especially based on the faltering case we know as climate change. There is no way WE (the USA) could really do anything about carbon emissions, unless you just want people to needlessly die and the USA be remanded back to third world status... China won't stop, Russia won't either, so you want to shoot ourselves in the head with this CO2 reduction thing? No thanks, not for every treaty the UN could ever write, because our enemies won't care, and we will be at a significant disadvantage when we do this.

    Obummer's promise to "fundamentally change to America" in this way amounts to surrendering ourselves to be dominated by really bad people. No thank you, I'd rather have climate change in all the wildest predictions over my kids' kids having to learn Russian and Mandarin to deal with their government.

  10. I love this part... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "the oceans haven't risen"

    Uh huh. Tell that to the tri state area after Hurricane Sandy - a near-foot sea-level rise over 100 years that made the difference between flooding and not.

    "the weather is fine"

    Weather and climate are two different things. You can look it up.

    "and life has been carrying on"

    Yeah, as long as you don't count the bellwether species whose ranges are changing. You do know what bellwether means, right?

  11. A good step by MPBoulton · · Score: 1

    It's about time better incentives were introduced - other countries have gone a long way towards their renewable energy targets by incentivising construction of solar panels on people's homes and it sounds like that would help here.

  12. Strength of Greenhouse Effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I learned for the first time the other day that what I had read about the greenhouse effect causing 33 C of warming over and over in nearly every source available is actually based on a non-physical calculation. Not a simplified calculation (which can be fixed with additional information), but a totally incorrect calculation (which does mean (T) rather than mean(T^0.25):

    I will say that I do not particularly like this model as a suitable introduction to the greenhouse effect. It is useful in many regards, but it fails to capture the physics of the greenhouse effect on account of making a good algebra lesson, and opens itself up to criticism on a number of grounds; that said, if you are going to criticize it, you need to do it right, but also be able to distinguish the difference between understood physics and simple educational tools.

    https://www.skepticalscience.com/argument.php?p=2&t=88&&a=509

    So I really am wondering what the strength of this effect is now.

    1. Re: Strength of Greenhouse Effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's sctical science, a irrational denialist site, nothing there is of any worth at all.

  13. Ugh, we need less climate change... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    not a proposal for climate change. Why is he not against it? He has gone full on Republican-retard. So stupid. So stupid.

    1. Re: Ugh, we need less climate change... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're just noticing this now? He's always been a CONservative. Always. He has always spouted hate for the working poor. He hates us. He is no different for the Shrub Jr.,

  14. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by GrahamCox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you seriously believe that switching to LED bulbs and driving a car that gets only 29mpg (which is terrible gas mileage in reality, only relative to your other gas guzzler does it seem reasonable) will achieve anything? Even if every single person in the world did this, it would make no effective difference.

    The real waste is at the front end, where power is generated, and the only fix for that is "top down" legislation to force the providers to do something about the emissions and inefficiency. And that pretty much has to be dictated because industry has shown time and time and time again that it won't regulate itself if left to its own devices.

    Some things simply cannot be solved by laissez faire capitalism. In fact it creates many problems, which is obvious to anyone willing to open their eyes for two seconds. That does not mean that the solution is the opposite, a totally planned central economy, but a sensible mix of the two. The knee-jerk reactionary repugnance to anything with even the mildest whiff of small-s 'socialism' is seriously damaging. It damages the health and happiness of every person, and now it is seriously damaging the planet. Nothing is black or white, perhaps a little subtlety should be given its chance. People have been sold the right-wing view for so long now they've forgotten what the middle ground even is. Centre-right policies are seen as far left, which is ridiculous.

  15. What about large ships by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does his proposal say anything about large ocean going vessels? They are essentially huge power plants roaming the oceans, spewing tons of carbon and other greenhouse gases.

    1. Re:What about large ships by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pffft. What about Nascar, NHRA, Aircraft, termites, etc? It isn't going to make a dent as long as people reign the earth. The only way to clean up would be to revert to pre-renascence populations and technology.

  16. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by 0123456 · · Score: 1

    ....because you've already taken the problem into your hands and reduced your carbon output.

    Yes, we have. We've reduced 'carbon output' in the West by shipping manufacturing to China, where it's less efficient and far more polluting.

  17. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by MightyMartian · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I think capitalism could solve it, it's just that by the time AGW began kicking the living shit out of the economy and causing widespread ecological damage, much of it would be irreversible.

    But guys like the Koch's want it that way. They'll walk away with vast amounts of money and insulate themselves from the woes being suffered by everyone else. We are literally allowing our economic and political systems be completely co-opted to serve a tiny fraction of the population. And worse, many of us actually think that the Heartland Institute and the Wall Street Journal are some sort of purveyors of truth.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  18. And emits 700,000 lbs of CO2 to announce it ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the 3,300 mile flight from Washington, DC to Elmendorf AFB in the Arctic, Air Force 1 will burn 16,000 gallons of fuel emitting 350,000 lbs of CO2 each way.

    1. Re:And emits 700,000 lbs of CO2 to announce it ... by Saanvik · · Score: 2

      I doubt your math, but it doesn't really matter. For every megawatt of power generated by a coal plant, on average, 2,249 lbs carbon dioxide are generated. In 2013, there were 1,581,115 megawatt hours of electricity generated by coal. That's 3,555,927,635 pounds.

      Even so, you're saying, he's a hypocrite, right? Wrong.

      The President isn't saying "Shut down everything that emits carbon dioxide". He's saying that it's time to decrease our carbon dioxide emissions. No hypocrisy, and even with your numbers, a drop in the bucket for emissions.

    2. Re:And emits 700,000 lbs of CO2 to announce it ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Air Force 1 is a modified Boeing 747
      A Boeing 747 burns 5 gallons of fuel per mile http://www.ask.com/vehicles/much-fuel-747-burn-per-hour-6398acafa7f10e8c
      3365 miles from Washington DC to Anchoeage, AK http://www.distance-cities.com/distance-washington-dc-to-anchorage-ak
      21.1 Lbs CO2 / per gallon http://www.eia.gov/environment/emissions/co2_vol_mass.cfm

      3365 x 5 = 16,825 gallons of fuel for one way trip
      16,825 x 21.1 = 356,690 Lbs of CO2 per one way trip
      356,690 x 2 = 713,380 Lbs of CO2 for the round trip

      Nothing wrong with the math. Just a simple statement of facts.

    3. Re:And emits 700,000 lbs of CO2 to announce it ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gotta love Slashdot. Someone makes a statement of fact. Saanvik doesn't bother to check the facts and instead sets up and knocks down his own strawman argument and that is scores a 3.

    4. Re:And emits 700,000 lbs of CO2 to announce it ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      talk to an honest biologist so you can learn we need more co2 than we have so plants will grow faster and produce more oxygen. or keep pushing your religion. either way..

    5. Re:And emits 700,000 lbs of CO2 to announce it ... by cyberchondriac · · Score: 2

      I doubt your math, but it doesn't really matter. For every megawatt of power generated by a coal plant, on average, 2,249 lbs carbon dioxide are generated. In 2013, there were 1,581,115 megawatt hours of electricity generated by coal. That's 3,555,927,635 pounds.

      Even so, you're saying, he's a hypocrite, right? Wrong.

      The President isn't saying "Shut down everything that emits carbon dioxide". He's saying that it's time to decrease our carbon dioxide emissions. No hypocrisy, and even with your numbers, a drop in the bucket for emissions.

      But how again is that not hypocrisy? "We need to emit less carbon", then flies everywhere in a fuel guzzling modified 747, even for quick vacations.
      And when "deniers" say small steps wouldn't be enough to combat AGW anyway, they get lambasted for being too fatalistic, because every little bit helps.. but now this is a just a "drop in the bucket". Maybe those who wish to lead should do so by example, especially those who call for dramatic reductions. I know he can't go everywhere without AF1, but he and Hillary don't do a damn thing to check their carbon footprint.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    6. Re:And emits 700,000 lbs of CO2 to announce it ... by Saanvik · · Score: 1

      Sigh.

      Read what I wrote, emphasis added

      I doubt your math, but it doesn't really matter.

      I still doubt the math. It's clearly back of the envelope. The fuel burned by a 747 is not constant, as the link provided makes clear. See Atmosfair Airline Index for 117 page PDF that describes how challenging it is to describe how much CO2 is released by an airplane. Also, the distance is wrong, since the jet certainly didn't follow a straight line

      However, one more time, the math doesn't matter. It gets lost in the decimal points when compared to CO2 emissions from coal.

      I didn't create a straw man. The clear implication was that the President was being a hypocrite. Putting the CO2 released by his trip in context of his plan makes it clear that's a silly argument. Adding in that the President wasn't saying all CO2 emissions must stop makes it even clearer.

  19. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    US it largest or 2nd largest CO2 producer in the world. If your not going to change, then no one else is. The US sets the standards as the biggest, angriest gorilla in the room.

      Of course Russia won't stop. They are secretly excited about global warming, making large parts of their country warmer would be great for them. Also they have huge coal reserves, gas reserves, etc. Pro-solar is anti russian.

      China is a bit different. As a tech heavy scientifically literate oligarchy, they have actually determined that climate change would generally be bad. They will have to increase emissions, in the short term, but are desperately making moves to improve things. Local pollution in China is so bad its actually becoming a civil unrest issue. So they want to become the number 1 in solar manufacturing, undercut everyone and then make it a monopoly. China actually leads the world in renewable investment.

    Germany showed everyone you can do it. The country that has probably the worst climate for renewables has the highest number of solar cells and the highest number of wind farms. Its good for Germany because they are no longer relying on Russian gas or coal (or anyone else for that matter). Saves the global environment, makes your local environment less polluted, makes you less dependent on evil resource driven economies, while they cost a lot to install they are actually lasting longer than expected meaning after the 10 year payback you can look forward to 50 years very cheap energy.

      If we all invest heavily into renewables now, yes, 10 years the investment is marginal. But after that you actually get a boost. If you are increasing your renewables by a few percent a year eventually it makes a huge difference.

  20. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by bunratty · · Score: 1

    Individual action is not going to reduce carbon dioxide emissions much. We need to replace fossil fuels with alternative sources of energy, which is something individuals can't do on their own. We need to build new power plants. This is something we will need to do anyway, since fossil fuels will not last forever. The only option is how quickly we wean ourselves off fossil fuels, not whether or not we do it. And doing so more quickly has the added benefits of reducing pollution and ocean acidification.

    --
    What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  21. Some states are complaining of course by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    But if, and only if they can contain their effluence inside their own borders, I say, Let them choke themselves! But since smog doesn't respect state borders neither should the feds. Squabbling little fiefdoms (the states) cannot handle national issues and should butt out, and clean up, or the feds will do it for them!

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    1. Re:Some states are complaining of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pollutants don't obey national borders either. The USA needs to conquer Earth right now, before it is too late! Unless the whole Earth falls under federal jurisdiction, all is lost! Please, Mr. President, save us from ourselves!

    2. Re:Some states are complaining of course by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Almost a quarter of California smog is imported from China. I wouldn't mind seeing some lawsuits in the world court over it. But then when Canada sues the US over acid rain, it's all, "world court? pffft!"

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    3. Re:Some states are complaining of course by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 1

      CO2 is not smog. CO2 is not a pollutant. CO2 is a trace gas without which there would be no plant life on this planet. CO2 is just as critical to animal, and therefore human, life as oxygen. These are scientific facts, which the left somehow ignores in their rush to destroy the civil society. "Destroy the civil society?" you ask? Yes, that is the goal and the entire reason for fixation on CO2. Control CO2 and you control every aspect of modern life. So are you a useful idiot or do you fantasize about being one of the elite philosopher-kings lording over the rest of us?

    4. Re:Some states are complaining of course by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      No, I'm talking about smog. Where did I say anything about CO2? And what kind of crap was that you posted anyway? Nobody's trying to destroy civil society except maybe the aristocrats that are mismanaging it. Please, shitcan the shtick.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  22. Two in one day? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow! Two propaganda posts in one day? First Hillary's wonderful plan for our future and then Obama's Climate Change plan! Wow, how lucky we are! Give glory to our grand present and future leaders! Hail Obama and his successor Hillary the great!

    (did I lay the sarcasm on thick enough?)

    1. Re:Two in one day? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's funny that implementing Hillarys plan will increase emissions in the production of solar panels more than Osamas climate change plan would reduce them.

  23. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

    I have: vegetarian, bike most places, solar energy.

    And I still think Obama is batshit crazy.

    At this point, I'd rather vote for a Christian conservative pushing free markets than another progressive Democrat.

  24. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So now I also own a 2014 Ford Taurus that gets 29 MPH on the highway.

    Wow, that's almost a 200% improvement over their previous top speeds!

  25. Never gonna happen... by jonwil · · Score: 1

    As long as so many companies, towns and states earn so much money digging dirty polluting black rocks out of the ground and burning them to generate electricity, there is no chance that that the USA can move to a cleaner greener future.

  26. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Saanvik · · Score: 2

    There is no way WE (the USA) could really do anything about carbon emissions, unless you just want people to needlessly die and the USA be remanded back to third world status.

    It's comments like this that really get my goat. There are options between doing nothing and becoming a third world country. The President's plan wouldn't make us a third world country and it will decrease our carbon emissions.

    Oh, BTW, closing coal powered plans will actually reduce deaths in the US; and, you know what, it's already happening! See Death and Disease from Power Plants. The numbers of deaths attributable to pollution from power plants has gone down significantly in the last 15 years.

  27. "dur hur protect our jobs!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is what I expect a bunch of coal power plants worker to start shouting soon enough.
    Coal or Oil power plants has no place in the world of today, would be able time you people realize this.

  28. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by sims+2 · · Score: 2

    I was going to ask you where you were getting led's so cheaply.
    But I checked the math first.

    I can get one 65w equivalent led bulb for $7.84 or I can get four 65w bulbs for $7.88.

    Assuming energy cost of $0.10/kwh and 4hr/day usage the 55w difference in power usage adds up to a savings of $8.01/year.

    I'm replacing mine as they burn out even with their low cost it seems a waste to throw out a perfectly good lightbulb and the newer led bulbs are a near perfect match to the incandescent bulbs I have 6 recessed fixtures in my living room and one of them is a led but you can't tell which one it is!

    I Have got to say I really didn't think the turn around time would be that short. Thanks for pointing that out.

    --
    Minimum threshold fixed. Thanks!
  29. Meaningless by schwit1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The US power industry puts out 5% of the worlds carbon and this plan will cut it by 1.5% over how many years? China on average is bringing on a new power plant every 10 days. Please explain how this insignificant but costly plan is going to affect climate change?

    1. Re:Meaningless by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The US power industry puts out 5% of the worlds carbon and this plan will cut it by 1.5% over how many years? China on average is bringing on a new power plant every 10 days. Please explain how this insignificant but costly plan is going to affect climate change?

      The same way that going to the gym once or twice helps a person lose weight -- not by a whole lot, but you have to start the ball rolling somehow.

      Also, it's a lot easier to convince other nations to reduce their emissions when you've started reducing your emissions first. Otherwise they just accuse you of "do as I say, not as I do" hypocrisy.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    2. Re:Meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it will further destroy the US. btw carbon isn't bad toxic chemicals are

    3. Re:Meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How about some facts?

      1. China have more renewable energy capacity installed than US (153 vs 105 GW (excluding hydro in which China generates about 27% of world hydro power generation));
      2. China invest more into renewables($83.3 vs $38.3 billions a year).

      Renewables Global Status Report 2015

      US were never a leader in this field and losing ground every year. So it is about damn time they did something about this even if it is something small like this!

      As saying goes: starting a task is 50% of its completion.. (or something like that :))

    4. Re:Meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US power industry puts out 5% of the worlds carbon and this plan will cut it by 1.5% over how many years? China on average is bringing on a new power plant every 10 days. Please explain how this insignificant but costly plan is going to affect climate change?

      The same way that going to the gym once or twice helps a person lose weight -- not by a whole lot, but you have to start the ball rolling somehow.

      Also, it's a lot easier to convince other nations to reduce their emissions when you've started reducing your emissions first. Otherwise they just accuse you of "do as I say, not as I do" hypocrisy.

      It is more like went to gym once a week and have 6 slices of pizza and 1L coca everyday as your reward.

    5. Re:Meaningless by Vitriol+Angst · · Score: 1

      If we don't TRY, we will have no credibility when asking other countries to improve their technology.

      Also, by trying to improve our technology, we will learn some things we didn't know how to do.

      China is very interested in improving efficiency and reducing pollution; they really can't go on with the smog they have. We could be exporting solutions and services to them.

      Not doing anything will cost us more; in credibility, in scientific advancement, economically, and of course jobs. It's going to be the #1 source of new jobs or mercenary will be the number one source of new jobs as we cause damage to crops and flood coastal areas.

      --
      >>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
    6. Re:Meaningless by Inferno+Vulpix · · Score: 1

      Better analogy is having a social circle of overweight people and collectively agree to go to the gym together, and then only you show up.

      Sure, you're fit, but the group's still a group of fat people.

    7. Re:Meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This narrative is getting old FFS. There is no excuse not to improve the US emissions, the people have spoken and it will happen. Whiners STFU.

      "The U.S. and China announced an historic agreement to combat climate change, a major step forward from the world’s two largest greenhouse gas emitters. Not only does the agreement hold the two nations to taking additional steps to bring down the carbon emissions that drive climate change, but China just pledged to deploy a tremendous amount of clean energy.
      “The non-fossil target may be the most important part of the package,” said Melanie Hart, Director of China Policy at the Center for American Progress. “Renewable and nuclear energy accounted for 9.8 percent of China’s energy mix in 2013. They have just promised to double that percentage by 2030. That target will light a fire under China’s already-aggressive renewable deployments and put even stronger limits on coal and other fossil fuels.”"

      China is the country to watch. Its burgeoning economy and voracious appetite for coal-fired power make it the world’s biggest source of greenhouse gases, generating over one quarter of man-made carbon emissions. But it’s also leading the drive for clean energy by embracing low-carbon generating technology at an unprecedented scale. That makes China a unique laboratory for studying the costs and logistics of competing power sources— and for comparing the merits of nuclear power and renewables.

      "China’s prodigious nuclear program currently has 17 commercial reactors operating and 28 more under construction—almost half the global total of reactors being built. The government expects to have 40 gigawatts (GW) of nuclear power on line by 2015 and at least 58 GW by 2020.

      But those figures pale next to the gargantuan wind and solar programme. At the end of 2012 China had the world’s largest wind turbine capacity, 75.6 gigawatts, and it’s aiming for 100 GW by 2015 and 200 or more by 2020. Solar photovoltaic capacity is also skyrocketing: the previous 2015 target of 21 GW has been raised to 35 GW, and the 2020 target of 50 GW will likely rise as well. According to these figures, wind and solar will eclipse nuclear power in China."

    8. Re:Meaningless by bidule · · Score: 2

      Direct google search yields:
      USA energy consumption per capita = 6,793.96 kg of oil equivalent (2012)
      China energy consumption per capita = 2,029.36 kg of oil equivalent (2011)

      Note that Europe is in the 3-4k range while Canada is above 7k.

      --
      ID: the nose did not occur naturally, how would we wear glasses otherwise? (apologies to Voltaire)
    9. Re:Meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still better than if you leave out the gym.

      "We shouldn't do [this] good thing because of [that] bad thing." is seldom a good argument in the long run. Doing a good thing is almost always the right thing to do, regardless of everything else.

    10. Re:Meaningless by LQ · · Score: 2

      Direct google search yields: USA energy consumption per capita = 6,793.96 kg of oil equivalent (2012) China energy consumption per capita = 2,029.36 kg of oil equivalent (2011)

      Note that Europe is in the 3-4k range while Canada is above 7k.

      Except that a lot of that energy consumed by China is in the manufacture of the world's cheap goods. By importing from China, the rest of the world is exporting its carbon emissions.

    11. Re:Meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot. There is no such thing as 'catastrophic man-made global warming', hence they renamed it 'climate change'...

      www.wattsupwiththat.com
      www.climatedepot.com

    12. Re:Meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US is hardly "first" in planning to reduce emissions. More like last. Even China has carbon reduction plans.

    13. Re:Meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      powerplants to run factories to produce goods to ship the US.

    14. Re:Meaningless by TaleSpinner · · Score: 1

      > but you have to start the ball rolling somehow.

      There comes a point when rolling multi-trillion-dollar balls when we must admit that money cannot be printed out of thin air without consequences. The US money supply has increased 400% under Obama, inflation is being held barely in check by keeping it between the government and the Fed - and by redefining the definition of "inflation" as not covering food or energy so they can lie about it more easily. But that won't last forever - anyone who buys groceries or pays electric bills already knows this. And Obama knows it, too, he is simply counting on his faith that that bomb won't go off until another President takes office and can then be blamed for it.

      >Otherwise they just accuse you of "do as I say, not as I do" hypocrisy.

      Oh, so it isn't hypocritical at all to sign "someday, maybe, intends to" agreements requiring expendatures that will cripple the US economy because it gives China, Russia, et al, a short-term advantage in the world markets? That's not hypocritical, hmmm? Obama needs to stop licking foreigner's boots and pay attention to the REAL world, or we WILL ALL pay the consequences. Even as it is, no small part of those consequences have already become unavoidable thanks to his idiocy, and I don't refer to "climate change."

  30. California's Clean Air Act... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Requiring cars and light trucks get a smog check is an absolute joke. The test is a joke, driving habits do not equal what comes out the tailpipe during the test. All it does is ripoff motorists that have to shell out $60 every 2 years. Besides that, cars that do fail many times go elsewhere and hand over an extra $20 to get passed. You think this Osamasmog program is going to work? Doubt it.

  31. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by thegarbz · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I still am, it isn't their job to pick winners.

    No but their job is to serve the greater good and legislating on energy efficiency in that regard is no different from mandating health and safety standards, or telling the local coal plant that they can't simply produce cheaper energy by dumping sludge into the river rather than disposing of it correctly.

    Every single decision ever made by a government results in picking winners, whether specifically by technology as in this case, or by trade agreements, setting minimum standards, or in some cases even granting specific monopoly by flat out funding a project using tax payers money.

  32. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by ganjadude · · Score: 0

    my brand new v6 impala gets 21 if im lucky. 30 is great mileage in the states. we dont drive small death traps like the rest of the world

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  33. We need a Green Curtain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We used to have an Iron Curtain and we know need to divide the world with a Green one.

    Step #1: Develop the high tech needed to move away from fossil fuels

    Step #2: Incentivize step #1 via adoption of a carbon tax that increases over time.

    Step #3: This is the main step. Use the carbon tax as a trade barrier. Unless you buy our expensive technology to produce clean energy, you cannot trade with us and we won't trade with anyone who trades with you.

    If you get the US, Europe and Japan on one side of the Green Curtain, that would be a tremendous incentive for other countries to follow. In addition, it would create a tremendous market for the tech developed in Step #1.

  34. Politically manuvering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two years in the making, President Obama formally unveiled his plan to cut power plant emissions today, calling it the "single most important step that America has ever made in the fight against global climate change.

    And just how is this supposed to work? The Supreme Court has already ruled that the EPA cannot regulate power company emissions because it might cost big business profits better spent on bribery. http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/supreme-court-limits-epas-authority-regulate-carbon-dioxide-emissions/

  35. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by khallow · · Score: 1

    Do you seriously believe that switching to LED bulbs and driving a car that gets only 29mpg (which is terrible gas mileage in reality, only relative to your other gas guzzler does it seem reasonable) will achieve anything? Even if every single person in the world did this, it would make no effective difference.

    It would do more than completely eliminating coal burning plants. Transportation generates a similar amount of CO2 to coal burning power plants. And in addition, massive reduction in electricity demand would reduce the number of coal power plants.

    Some things simply cannot be solved by laissez faire capitalism. In fact it creates many problems, which is obvious to anyone willing to open their eyes for two seconds. That does not mean that the solution is the opposite, a totally planned central economy, but a sensible mix of the two. The knee-jerk reactionary repugnance to anything with even the mildest whiff of small-s 'socialism' is seriously damaging. It damages the health and happiness of every person, and now it is seriously damaging the planet. Nothing is black or white, perhaps a little subtlety should be given its chance. People have been sold the right-wing view for so long now they've forgotten what the middle ground even is. Centre-right policies are seen as far left, which is ridiculous.

    It's not a mild whiff of "socialism". It's a massive restructuring of our society and economy on shaky grounds. What happens when the next imaginary ecothreat comes through? If we continue to use the same decision-making process as we're doing here, then it's going to be a long stream of poor decisions and a descent either into regional dissolution or even a new dark age, if the whole world should buy in for the duration.

  36. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So now I also own a 2014 Ford Taurus that gets 29 MPH on the highway. It is still comfortable and filled with nice stuff, but it burns almost half the fuel of my big truck and I make a point to drive it instead of the truck when I don't need the truck.

    29 MPH is kinda meh. In 2003 I purchased a brand new Golf TDI (diesel) that got over 40 mpg (6L/100km) on the highway, and that was over a decade ago. The Passat TDI, which are roughly the same same as the Taurus, also gout about 40 mpg IIRC. The current TDIs get about 60.

    I'm well aware of diminishing returns of mileage, but IMHO it's kind of sad that in over a decade we've barely progressed.

  37. grandstanding political BS nonsense by slashmydots · · Score: 1

    Methane is 1000x as disruptive as CO2 and we have more cows than power plants plus there are working prototypes of methane electrical generators in cow barns.

  38. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I still am, it isn't their job to pick winners.

    Which is why they didn't. Any number of companies and technologies were available, and aside from a few minor grants and programs, any could have "won" if they were in a position to do so. But it is the government's job to prevent harm to the rest of people, and it turns out after a hundred years, we decided incandescent bulbs were excessively contributing doing so, as they wasted a lot of power and given how much power comes from polluting sources, there was no reason not to go on both ends of the scale.

    I suppose they could have just taxed incandescent bulbs at an allocated rate for their pollution, but they chose a different path. It was simpler.

    What's better about yours?

    LED bulbs did get down to a price point where they make sense, now it comes down to education to make people aware of how much money they save. My payback period on those bulbs is just over a year, maybe 15 months. That is a no-brainer if there ever was one. People talk about solar systems having 7 to 10 year paybacks, yet ignore the one that has less than 2 years of payback.

    Maybe the people you know do, not so much with our power company here, or the home supply stores, or the general merchants. Even the discount dollar stores.

    It's even in the section on the bills where they give tips on how to reduce your electric bill.

    Hell, I'm sure Cree or somebody is still advertising about it on one of those TV networks that cater to people who want to fix up homes.

    Ignored? Not hardly.

    But the solutions should be reasonable and take into account everyone, not just top down central planning.

    I don't think you understand how useless this platitude is.

    What was unreasonable about the multi-year light-bulb phaseout? What problems did it cause?

    Other than the hysteria among some parties at losing their precious burning filaments, I can't recall any of significance.

    The world didn't end, and the regulations themselves had numerous exceptions, more than enough to satisfy everyone.

    What would you have done differently?

  39. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by XopherMV · · Score: 1

    I think capitalism could solve it, it's just that by the time AGW began kicking the living shit out of the economy and causing widespread ecological damage, much of it would be irreversible.

    But guys like the Koch's want it that way. They'll walk away with vast amounts of money and insulate themselves from the woes being suffered by everyone else.

    Hell, the Kochs don't need to spend any money to insulate themselves. At their age, they'll be dead before the worst negative effects are felt.

  40. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by GrahamCox · · Score: 1

    No, you drive large death traps.

    Consuming a gallon of fuel to transport one human being 30 miles is a ludicrous waste of resources. A personal vehicle that could achieve the equivalent of 200 miles per gallon is perfectly feasible right now with no new technological breakthroughs. The only thing that would have to shift is the perception that you need to be enclosed in 2 tons of steel.

  41. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by XopherMV · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Some things simply cannot be solved by laissez faire capitalism. In fact it creates many problems, which is obvious to anyone willing to open their eyes for two seconds. That does not mean that the solution is the opposite, a totally planned central economy, but a sensible mix of the two. The knee-jerk reactionary repugnance to anything with even the mildest whiff of small-s 'socialism' is seriously damaging. It damages the health and happiness of every person, and now it is seriously damaging the planet. Nothing is black or white, perhaps a little subtlety should be given its chance. People have been sold the right-wing view for so long now they've forgotten what the middle ground even is. Centre-right policies are seen as far left, which is ridiculous.

    It's not a mild whiff of "socialism". It's a massive restructuring of our society and economy on shaky grounds. What happens when the next imaginary ecothreat comes through? If we continue to use the same decision-making process as we're doing here, then it's going to be a long stream of poor decisions and a descent either into regional dissolution or even a new dark age, if the whole world should buy in for the duration.

    Imaginary threats don't harm us. Real threats do. We're facing the real threat of global warming. Instead of taking an honest look at the science and possible solutions, you look the potential bill and say any solution is impossible. Nevermind if the bill would include the price to get the world off fossil fuels and eliminate our gas payments forever. Nevermind if the bill would remove the motivation behind wars for oil and the trillions we've spent for those. Nevermind if the bill would clean up our air and eliminate smog and cut our medical payments for lung conditions. So, we live with your shortsightedness in a worse world where we constantly pay for gas with our money and lives.

  42. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by GrahamCox · · Score: 1

    Thanks for making my point - for some it's black and white; if we can't have black we must have white. If we can't have unfettered capitalism we must have a "massive restructuring" and go 100% with full-blown communism. No-one, least of all me, is advocating that. A SENSIBLE mix where capitalism does what it does well, and central planning does what it does well can and does work. Look at countries like Denmark - the vast majority have a comfortable and pleasant way of life without massive unemployment, violence and social upheaval. Sure, each person has to pay a little more tax but the kicker is that tax doesn't just benefit a few already rich plutarchs, it benefits everyone in the form of schools, hospitals, transport and so on. Capitalism really doesn't do those things well - countries that have tried to follow that ideological model are in some serious strife, like the UK. Profit cannot solve every problem.

    Anyway, we're hardly talking about a massive restructuring. So far it's been a slow piecemeal drift. If the change to sustainable were speeded up 10 times you'd hardly notice the difference. And if you're right (unlikely), and the threat is imaginary, then you've made a better world for nothing I suppose.

  43. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    regardless of your thoughts on how everyone should live, this is the world we actually live in.

    id love to get 200 MPG (what car does that??) now, but i wont trade off size and comfort for MPGs

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  44. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    if you eat almonds, you are doing more damage to the west coast than my driving does. have you seen the water needs for a single almond??

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  45. If you like your electricity... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...You can keep your...

    Yeeeaaahhh...

  46. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Jeremi · · Score: 2

    It would do more than completely eliminating coal burning plants. Transportation generates a similar amount of CO2 to coal burning power plants.

    CO2 emissions in transportation are being reduced as well, via higher fuel economy standards, development of electric cars, etc.

    This isn't a scenario where any one improvement will "solve" the problem. The problem has to be attacked on many fronts simultaneously, and all of the partial reductions will start to add up over time.

    It's a massive restructuring of our society and economy on shaky grounds.

    Hardly. The proposal merely sets targets and leaves it up to the individual states how to reach them. The states don't even have to submit a proposal until 2016, and don't have to start making any actual changes until 2020. The administration is bending over backwards to make this as easy as possible, and still conservatives are crying like they're being waterboarded.

    What happens when the next imaginary ecothreat comes through?

    There's your problem -- you think global warming is imaginary, and therefore the amount of resources that can justifiably be allocated to fighting it is zero. There's no point in discussing mitigation strategies with when you haven't even accepted that there actually is a problem that needs to be solved. Most likely at some point in the next 5, 10, 15 years the evidence will become obvious enough to overcome your ideological blinders; but in the meantime the rest of us need to start working on a fix now, rather than waiting for you to be convinced.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  47. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    China is also generally a more southerly country than the US. Warmer weather to start with.

  48. Could not agree more by WindBourne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Basically, it is the extremists that are killing America, and even the west.
    Many ppl note the fact that the far right HATES science and pick and choose what they want to. And they are correct.
    However few ppl have noticed the fact that the far left HATES science and pick and choose what they want to.
    Take the case of AGW. A rational person says that the science is overwhelming in favor of AGW. Therefore the smart thing is to drop our CO2 and relatively soon.

    BUT, if you run the numbers, you will see that we NEED nukes. In particular, we need gen IV nukes since they can not meltdown. In addition, these can make use of the nuke waste/ aboveground thorium, rather than mining for U.
    Yet, the far left fights it. And the far right, really has not done SQUAT for the nuke industry.

    Then you have the fact that the far left screams about America's emissions. Yet, current calculated numbers from 2013 show that China accounts for more than 30% of CO2, while the entire west accounts for less than 28%. In addition, China's emission far outweigh even America's emissions. Both in current, as well as total since 150 years ago, or even 1000 years ago.
    And that does not include what OCO2 is showing. OCO2's numbers are showing that CHina's emission is well over 40%, and probably closer to 45%. That is HUGE. Absolutely fucking HUGE.
    BUT, what does the far left do? They scream that America needs to buy wind/solar from China and continue to drop our emissions. At the same time, they claim that China's growing their Wind/solar faster than America, while ignoring the fact that China's % of electricity from Coal grows EVERY YEAR, and is now in the high 80s.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:Could not agree more by BlueStrat · · Score: 2, Informative

      Many ppl note the fact that the far right HATES science and pick and choose what they want to. And they are correct.

      Orly?

      "After years of being lambasted by the left as uneducated rubes, a recent study by a Yale law professor proves members of the Tea Party are actually more likely to understand scientific issues than is the rest of the population."

      http://www.westernjournalism.c...

      "Yale Law professor Dan M. Kahan was conducting an analysis of the scientific comprehension of various political groups when he ran into a shocking discovery: tea party supporters are slightly more scientifically literate than the non-tea party population.

      When composing histograms of the scientific inference abilities of liberals and conservatives, he discovered that those who described themselves as tea party supporters came out pretty well, based on National Science Foundation standards of evaluation:"

      http://www.ijreview.com/2013/1...

      ~Sigh~ SMH

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    2. Re:Could not agree more by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 2

      BUT, if you run the numbers, you will see that we NEED nukes. In particular, we need gen IV nukes since they can not meltdown. In addition, these can make use of the nuke waste/ aboveground thorium, rather than mining for U. Yet, the far left fights it.

      This is the issue in a nutshell. Logically, Gen4 Nuke is the least worst option, but the most people can't get past the emotional response. Chernobyl! Fukushima! Imagine if we gave up flight after the first couple of plane crashes? You fix bad engineering by better engineering, not giving up.

    3. Re:Could not agree more by non0score · · Score: 1

      I also do find it interesting that the Tea Party has slightly better scientific understanding than the average non-Tea Party-er. But given more data from this link, it seems to me that non-Tea Party Republicans are the true scientific illiterate population (not only do they have to lower their own average, they have to also be low enough to drag down the positive contribution of the Tea Party members).

    4. Re:Could not agree more by non0score · · Score: 1

      I don't know, but I thought most left-leaning people in the US aren't against gen4 or above anymore? Furthermore, I think the argument against nukes are more nuanced -- most people aren't against nukes...they're against crappy nuke constructions, like Fukushima. But because they don't have any way of controlling the construction process, they go for the outright banning action.

    5. Re:Could not agree more by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2

      BUT, if you run the numbers, you will see that we NEED nukes.

      Yep, and we need to build them in the US... We could create a wonderful nuclear revival industry and export them around the world, if only we could get over the irrational, "oh my god the nuclears!" fears of people.

      Wind and solar can be part of the solution, that is wonderful. A combined nuclear, wind, solar, hydro power grid that maybe keeps 5-10% natural gas as backups strikes me as a reasonable plan.

      But the far left doesn't want to hear it and the far right is so busy defending coal that they can't hear it either...

    6. Re:Could not agree more by euroq · · Score: 2

      You've conflated too many groups, i.e. cherry picked data, in order to fit the evidence to your world view.

      The non-teaparty population is composed of everyone... liberals, conservatives, and whatevers. Those websites are right-leaning and show that you are looking for evidence in places that fit your world view. It says that tea-partiers are more scientifically aware than conservatives as well.

      Don't get me wrong - I'm glad that tea-partiers are slightly more scientifically aware, because I'm glad when anyone is more scientifically aware.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    7. Re:Could not agree more by euroq · · Score: 1

      I don't think they're equal (left and right's responsibility and effective outcomes against the relative CO2 emissions), but I won't bother arguing that because there's plenty of the internets to do that elsewhere.

      What I will say is that I don't think it's correct to compare China and the entire West's percentage of CO2 emissions. It is smarter to focus on reducing emissions in your own country and be a leader in doing so, regardless of that. The technology will slowly but steadily build up to make it more efficient. The costs will go down in the long term, even if they are expensive in the short term.

      --
      Just because the U.S. is a republic does not mean it is not a democracy. Democracy/republic are not mutually exclusive.
    8. Re:Could not agree more by Cyberax · · Score: 0

      Ah, Yale know-nothings. A typical Tea Partier understands science. And then rejects it.

    9. Re:Could not agree more by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      And this study smells like raw sewage. Check other links from this site, like bullshitty ( http://www.westernjournalism.c... ). However, the target audience of this site appears to drink this sewage with enthusiasm.

      Meanwhile, Seattle's unemployment rate currently stands at 3% and is poised to drop to 2% by the end of the year. My favorite restaurant (it's in the next building from my apartment) has extended its hours to 2am.

    10. Re:Could not agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nukes are so expensive that building renewables WITH backup is already cheaper ...

    11. Re:Could not agree more by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Is there a name for people who claim to be rational and reasonable, but whose arguments are full of logical fallacies and obvious flaws, and claims everyone else is an extremist?

      Let's look at your actual points:

      BUT, if you run the numbers, you will see that we NEED nukes. In particular, we need gen IV nukes since they can not meltdown. In addition, these can make use of the nuke waste/ aboveground thorium, rather than mining for U.

      First you will note that even those on the far left of the environmental debate, like Greenpeace, acknowledge that realistically non-renewable energy sources will be required in the medium term. You claim that generation IV reactors cannot meltdown is dubious, and at best a matter of debate. And your suggestion to use thorium ignored the huge cost involved and the financial risk of investing in an unproven (at commercial scale) technology that has been beset by problems in experimental reactors.

      Yet, current calculated numbers from 2013 show that China accounts for more than 30% of CO2, while the entire west accounts for less than 28%.

      Yes, but look at what is happening right now, as well as the raw numbers. China has committed limiting its peak CO2 emissions and then reducing them. The US is now pushing ahead with reductions. Given the politics of the situation that's quite significant, and by keeping up the pressure and demonstrating that reductions are possible in a sustainable and beneficial way we can keep China on that course.

      An in any case, what you are saying is that the US manages to be much cleaner than China, but still the world's largest economy. So environmental regulations don't appear to be screwing you, and you have better cars, better white goods, a better environment to live in because of them.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    12. Re:Could not agree more by Pseudonymous+Powers · · Score: 1

      To be fair, when the first couple of planes in history crashed, it usually only killed a couple of people--the pilot and maybe the person he landed on. Granted, we haven't had a lot of casualties in the history of nuclear power to date (unless you count evacuees with increased cancer risk as casualties, in which case, hoo boy), but its potential for producing casualties is way beyond even a 9/11 type plane crash.

      While I do believe that it's possible to design a nuclear reactor that won't murder an entire city and poison an entire state for a thousand years when it breaks down, I'm way too cynical to ever believe anyone who makes that claim about the particular nuclear reactor they're trying to sell. Because that's the exact same claim they made about the Chernobyl, Fukushima, and Three Mile Island reactors.

    13. Re:Could not agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and then people like you ignore that the reason for china's huge emissions is the mfr'ing of goods for the US and Europe.
      we didn't just offshore the jobs.
      we offshored the pollution too.

    14. Re:Could not agree more by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      "BUT, if you run the numbers, you will see that we NEED nukes. In particular, we need gen IV nukes since they can not meltdown."

      Did Obama mention the N-word at all in his manifesto? If not, it wasn't a real climate platform.

    15. Re:Could not agree more by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      And this study smells like raw sewage. Check other links from this site, like bullshitty ( http://www.westernjournalism.c... ). However, the target audience of this site appears to drink this sewage with enthusiasm.

      Meanwhile, Seattle's unemployment rate currently stands at 3% and is poised to drop to 2% by the end of the year. My favorite restaurant (it's in the next building from my apartment) has extended its hours to 2am.

      http://ycharts.com/indicators/...
      The unemployment rate is going back up and has been for the past 3 months. It dropped at the same time it was dropping for the rest of the country,
      Raising minimum wage would have a greater negative impact in places closer to the southern border where there are a greater pool of people to pay under the table at rates below even today's minimum wage.

      I have always been curious if educated people really see raising minimum wage as anything more than suckering poor people into feeling like that have more cash. When minimum wage increases, it just creates even more income inequality as the cost of living suddenly rises very quickly and all the people that were making 16 - 20 an hour are suddenly making less (well the same but that same money now has a lot less buying power as prices have just shot up on them.)

    16. Re:Could not agree more by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      I've often wondered if the raising of the minimum wage is partially deliberate to hollow out the middle class. Raises aren't keeping up all that well and the bottom keeps being raised. When I was in high school and college I worked at a gas station and made pretty reasonable money. When I finished there I was making $12.50 an hour base pay and minimum wage was something like $5.25 (or was it $4.75?). Any way I still see my former manager (his store is on my way to work so I stop there) and asked out of curiosity what corporate was paying assistant managers (what my position was) and while it has increased in the last 18 years it now is only $16 an hour yet minimum wage is now $9.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    17. Re:Could not agree more by GWBasic · · Score: 1

      BUT, if you run the numbers, you will see that we NEED nukes

      I used to be for nuclear power. The problem is that, when nuclear reactors get old, they require hyper-vigilance to ensure that they aren't leaking radioactive materials. We just don't have the political climate to regulate a leaky nuclear power plant.

      If the US was pro-regulation, I think we could have enough checks and balances to run nuclear power safely. But, given how we don't like regulations, I'd rather just invest in energy sources that don't require such close watch.

    18. Re:Could not agree more by whistlingtony · · Score: 1

      Hi. I believe I'm the far left.

      I also live next to Hanford, one of the most expensive nuclear clean up sites in the world. So, that does affect my outlook on things.

      I'm here to tell you that you need to listen to ME, not what other people are telling you that I'm telling you.

      Nuclear waste is an issue. There are solutions. Better technology exists. I'm OK with nuclear if it's done well.

      Also, No, I don't want us to buy solar and wind from China. I want us to subsidize a vital part of our infrastructure, build them right here in America, to grow OUR economy.....

      Please don't put words in my mouth.

      Also, yes, China's emissions are huge. I'd like to fix that, but I don't run China. So, perhaps I should worry about what I do supposedly run? Other people's bad behavior is not a free license for your own....

    19. Re:Could not agree more by randallman · · Score: 1

      We can't do much about China directly. What we CAN do is LEAD. We should do our best to fix problems at home and demonstrate a system China WILL WANT to replicate. They're pretty good at copying, you know. I agree that nukes should be on the table as modern designs look promising. Also to consider though is that solar and wind, with the advent of grid storage and falling prices, is considerably more cost effective than it was even a year ago.

    20. Re:Could not agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As opposed to coal plants, which leak radioactive materials by design, both venting it into the atmosphere, and into the associated ash/sludge pools.

      We don't seem to have the 'political climate' right now to do much of *anything* useful, mostly thanks to a certain party demographic in Washington which is openly more concerned with trying to screw over the sitting President than in actually governing.

    21. Re:Could not agree more by budgenator · · Score: 1

      The type of reactors at Fukushima have been decommissioned in most countries with businessmen who haven't deluded themselves into thinking that they are some kind of re-incarnated Samurai.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    22. Re:Could not agree more by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      The unemployment rate is going back up and has been for the past 3 months. It dropped at the same time it was dropping for the rest of the country,

      It's seasonal, and will go down during the next months. JFYI.

      I have always been curious if educated people really see raising minimum wage as anything more than suckering poor people into feeling like that have more cash. When minimum wage increases, it just creates even more income inequality

      BZZT! Factually wrong. Greater minimum wage creates more income equality, and this can be demonstrated easily: http://economics.mit.edu/files...

    23. Re:Could not agree more by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      The numbers are adjusted seasonally so that's already wrong info.

      Greater minimum wage creates more income equality by pulling the middle class down

    24. Re:Could not agree more by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      There are two reasonable definitions of the value of somebody's work. One is the amount you need to pay to get somebody to do it, and one is the amount it contributes to the employer's bottom line. There is a class of jobs that pretty much anybody can do, and unless we're at full employment those jobs are going to pay minimum. These jobs are often worth considerably more to the employer than the employer is paying. The immediate effect of raising minimum wage is that a few jobs will go away and the rest will pay better. The longer-range effects are much less predictable. For example, if an employer is paying more for an employee the employer might find it worth investing in making that employee more productive. This could spur the economy.

      Do you have any evidence that the cost of living rises quickly? Most prices are tied to labor costs, to some extent, but in most fields the bulk of the labor costs are from employees making more than minimum wage anyway.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    25. Re:Could not agree more by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      We can estimate a 9/11 plane crash as killing about fifteen hundred people. There is one nuclear power disaster that has caused deaths on that order, which is Chernobyl. Chernobyl is, very simply, not happening again. (Who ever claimed that Chernobyl was absolutely safe? Do you have some sort of cite?)

      Your other examples don't support your claims. Fukushima may or may not have killed someone, and few people not immediately involved in the cleanup have any significant harm. The exclusion zone is much less than a state, and it's real hard to poison something for a thousand years when you're working with a dangerous isotope with a half-life of about forty years. Three Mile Island was even more innocuous.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    26. Re:Could not agree more by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Ok, I'll bite again. So far nobody has reeled me in:
      Show me that CO2 is causing GW. Not your opinion, or someone else - a scientific proof.

      Science isn't science if it isn't repeatable. So far I haven't even seen an experiment to show that CO2 is the cause and not a symptom. In fact, historical graphs show CO2 lags warming. If anything it's a symptom, not a cause as shown by historical data.

      Therefore, cutting CO2 does nothing, well except pay certain people like Algore a boatload of money so you feel better. You should admit it. Understand if I'm wrong, I'm wrong - show me.

    27. Re:Could not agree more by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      While I do believe that it's possible to design a nuclear reactor that won't murder an entire city and poison an entire state for a thousand years when it breaks down, I'm way too cynical to ever believe anyone who makes that claim about the particular nuclear reactor they're trying to sell. Because that's the exact same claim they made about the Chernobyl, Fukushima, and Three Mile Island reactors.

      So instead of coming up with methods to make thing safer (even Chernobyl, the worst accident ever still killed less than deaths from coal over the years), your suggestion is to throw your hands up in the air and say it can't be done?
      A simple solution to your fear is to have the people evaluating the design separate from the people selling the design. This isn't rocket science.

    28. Re: Could not agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry America you aren't leading jack shit any more.
      We all hate you.
      Signed, the rest of the world....

    29. Re:Could not agree more by Pseudonymous+Powers · · Score: 1

      Chernobyl is, very simply, not happening again.

      Hm, are you sure it's that simple?

      Who ever claimed that Chernobyl was absolutely safe? Do you have some sort of cite?

      Nope. I imagine it's kind of hard to get records from Soviet-era engineering debacles, but to be honest I didn't even try. Do you really believe that, during the entire planning, construction, and operation of the plant, nobody ever raised any safety concerns and was dismissed as a luddite worrywart?

      Fukushima may or may not have killed someone, and few people not immediately involved in the cleanup have any significant harm.

      Yes, I specifically acknowledged that there hadn't been a lot of direct casualties in the history of nuclear power. Then I essentially said, "yet". No, I don't have a three-thousand page report to back that up. I apologize for my lack of rigor. What I'm doing here, basically, is making extrapolations based on my life experiences with people and engineering to make predictions about future engineering projects run by people. It's all very anecdotal, granted, but my observations so far suggest that, in engineering projects, often things go as planned. Which is great! But sometimes they don't, which is less optimal.

      The exclusion zone is much less than a state, and it's real hard to poison something for a thousand years when you're working with a dangerous isotope with a half-life of about forty years.

      Sorry for exaggerating, I can see how that would be annoying. So maybe what I meant to say is "poison an entire county for 40 years"? You're right---that is, by any measure, a lot better. Still kind of sucks, though, if you really think about it.

    30. Re:Could not agree more by Pseudonymous+Powers · · Score: 1

      So instead of coming up with methods to make thing safer (even Chernobyl, the worst accident ever still killed less than deaths from coal over the years), your suggestion is to throw your hands up in the air and say it can't be done?

      I'm all for researching ways to make things safer. I just don't want me or my family to be part of the testing sample, which has been a problem in the past. With nuclear fission power as we know it, even one screw-up is too many. And the fission power boosters have already been wrong about safety a few times now. In my view, they've used up their mulligans. I'd rather suck up the expense for much less efficient forms of non-polluting electricity generation, at least until we can develop (relatively) clean fusion power. Even then, I think it's worth asking ourselves how much electricity is going to be enough electricity.

      A simple solution to your fear is to have the people evaluating the design separate from the people selling the design. This isn't rocket science.

      I guess that's a good start. I probably wouldn't have a lot of faith in the impartiality and competence of the evaluating body, though. What I'm really expecting to happen is that one of the reviewing engineers sees something potentially hazardous on the blueprints, and reports it to management. Management, which is pretty much universally a bunch of besuited sleazeball politician-on-the-take types, has that engineer quietly fired, and replaces him with someone with a healthier respect for the bottom line, and who doesn't see any problem with valve 39c, thank you very much, sir.

    31. Re:Could not agree more by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      So changing goalposts, are we? Now minimum wage increases income equality but at the expense of the middle class (again, factually wrong). Next it will grow the middle class, but probably at the expense of good vibes or something.

    32. Re:Could not agree more by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      Not changing the goalpost. I was just surprised that you considered moving the poor artificially into the middle class pay rage and thus bring the middle class down to the poor pay range income equality.

      How is it factually wrong that this is at the expense of the middle class? I have been in the situation where I was making more than the current minimum wage. Minimum wage was increased but I didn't not get the same increase they did - but I saw all the prices for things that I liked or needed go up to make up the pay difference.

      My wife was making $7.00 an hour when minimum wage was $5.15. It went to $7.75 (or whatever it is now). The raise in pay she got was to the new minimum wage.

      I imagine you work in a job that has skills that cannot be taught in a week or two and are in a better position to push for a raise to adjust for the increase in cost of living. Most of us do not have that and none of the people making minimum wage have that.

    33. Re:Could not agree more by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Those jobs are just as often marginal in the first place. Once the employee costs more than he is producing he will be unemployed and likely replaced by a machine. Which will stimulate the economy of whoever makes the machine and fuck the low skill former employee.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    34. Re:Could not agree more by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Spend some time in the electric power industry. Their management is mostly made up of promoted competent engineers.

      That is changing to some extent, but those are mostly power marketers. The management of the '100% wind' companies are certainly sleazeballs, but they don't generate power, just sell it.

      Not all business is life insurance. Not all management is the same.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    35. Re:Could not agree more by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Will you give similar credit to the USA for our exports of Ag, chemical and manufactured products? Didn't think so.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    36. Re:Could not agree more by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Blocking this president is certainly useful. Much more so then letting him legislate by executive order.

      Gridlock is really the optimal outcome of the current political climate.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    37. Re:Could not agree more by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Management, which is pretty much universally a bunch of besuited sleazeball politician-on-the-take types,

      I can only guess your limited experience has given you this poorly thought out view. I suggest you read this: http://www.cracked.com/article...

    38. Re:Could not agree more by haruchai · · Score: 1

      China's GHG emissions didn't surpass the USAs until sometime between 2003 and 2007 and the total emissions for the past century is only about roughly equal with the USA's.
      They're starting to cut back on coal use and have also started to build cleaner plants, putting emissions controls on existing ones and are NOT grandfathering any.

      A good portion of China's emissions were because NA & Europe had outsourced a big chunk of their pollution and that's something that the "far left" didn't want.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    39. Re:Could not agree more by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Not changing the goalpost. I was just surprised that you considered moving the poor artificially into the middle class pay rage and thus bring the middle class down to the poor pay range income equality.

      Dude, the US succeeded in destroying the middle class. The $15 wage is NOWHERE close to middle class.

      How is it factually wrong that this is at the expense of the middle class?

      Because you're defining 'middle class' as 'those who can sneer at those poor beggars on the street'. In the actual world out there, middle class are business owners and professionals. And they _benefit_ from higher minimal wage.

      You see, a worker with some disposable income can actually (gasp!) visit a restaurant with their family. I know, it's insulting for many conservatives to eat in the same establishment with poor proles, but small business owners actually get more customers.

      It doesn't scale infinitely - if you raise the minimum wage way up then eventually the labor price will dominate everything else, erasing any further gains and leading to inflation. Economic research points out that the equilibrium point is somewhere near $30 per hour.

      I imagine you work in a job that has skills that cannot be taught in a week or two and are in a better position to push for a raise to adjust for the increase in cost of living. Most of us do not have that and none of the people making minimum wage have that.

      Yes, I'm a highly paid professional (in the top US income tax bracket) and I wish that everyone could earn a decent livable wage.

    40. Re:Could not agree more by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      You see, a worker with some disposable income can actually (gasp!) visit a restaurant with their family. I know, it's insulting for many conservatives to eat in the same establishment with poor proles

      This blatantly shows your bias and what you think of those who think differently than you.

      I am lower middle class supporting 2 kids on my income (my wife died a few years ago.)

      Yes, I'm a highly paid professional (in the top US income tax bracket)

      This tells me all I need to know. In other words, this won't negatively impact or your liberal friends so no reason not to do it.

    41. Re:Could not agree more by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      I am lower middle class supporting 2 kids on my income (my wife died a few years ago.)

      It looks like you're NOT middle class, but rather a worker. In other words, a member of proletariat and instead of making sure that your income goes up, you prefer to stop others from moving up. Should I quote Lenin about this?

      This tells me all I need to know. In other words, this won't negatively impact or your liberal friends so no reason not to do it.

      Not really true - we do pay the taxes and they disproportionally affect higher incomes. And I'm totally fine with it.

  49. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Harlequin80 · · Score: 1

    My Mercedes E250 CDI gets 36.5 mpg in everyday city driving and it is the epitome of safe and comfortable.

  50. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who was the *last* progressive Democrat you voted for? Dennis Kucinich? That's the last one I remember running in a presidential race...

  51. good grief. So many lies from the far right by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    Look, O got loads of money from the nuke industry. Why? Because he is a fan of nukes.
    The problem was that the dems were opposed to it, and the GOP is opposed to ANYTHING that O tries to do.

    Right now, is the PERFECT time for the GOP to get off their fucking ass and put forward a bill to really fund nukes. O would back it.
    BUT, you nut jobs will not do it.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:good grief. So many lies from the far right by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Look, O got loads of money from the nuke industry. Why? Because he is a fan of nukes. The problem was that the dems were opposed to it, and the GOP is opposed to ANYTHING that O tries to do.

      That is simply not true. If it were, O would have at least mentioned nukes in his latest proposal. You like to make excuses. When has resistance from the GOP stopped him from pushing his ideas publicly?

  52. You fool believe China will follow you to cut CO2? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US power industry puts out 5% of the worlds carbon and this plan will cut it by 1.5% over how many years? China on average is bringing on a new power plant every 10 days. Please explain how this insignificant but costly plan is going to affect climate change?

    The same way that going to the gym once or twice helps a person lose weight -- not by a whole lot, but you have to start the ball rolling somehow.

    Also, it's a lot easier to convince other nations to reduce their emissions when you've started reducing your emissions first. Otherwise they just accuse you of "do as I say, not as I do" hypocrisy.

    We China are not gonna cut our CO2 emission what so ever. Haha, you sucker.

  53. Coal is dying by PPH · · Score: 1

    Thanks in large part to the low cost of natural gas. So Obama needs to get out in front of his and make it look like it was actually his doing.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  54. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually I would rather see the life on this plant completely exterminated than enslaved.

    Thereby making the rest of us slaves to you will.

    I will never stand even for most trivial amount of socialism, which to me is slavery. Not even a trivial amount of slavery, 1% slavery is completely unacceptable as far as I am concerned.

    Yep, you want to make us your slaves, and dictate to everyone else what you want, nothing else is acceptable.

    Fortunately, you're relatively powerless.

  55. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    I was going to ask you where you were getting led's so cheaply.
    But I checked the math first.

    I can get one 65w equivalent led bulb for $7.84 or I can get four 65w bulbs for $7.88.

    Amazon had a deal of the day a month or so back offering 60w LED bulbs for $5 each delivered.

    So I bought 30 of them. I've since bought more at about $6 each.

    I don't pay 10 cents a kWh, I pay less than 7 cents, but even at that price, they make sense.

    I also have some lights that are on 12 hours a day, do that math there and it becomes a complete no brainer.

    I could have just done the high use lights, but frankly, the economics are so in favor of it that I did them all, even the closet lights where it makes less sense.

    the newer led bulbs are a near perfect match to the incandescent bulbs

    They are... I had some CFLs and frankly they suck. The LEDs are much, much nicer... I've even replaced the CFLs and that is a far less interesting economic situation, but I consider the superior light and lack of hum from the LEDs to be worth it.

  56. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a hugely salient point! In the conversations I've had with engineers in the manufacturing sector, they point out that by the time you factor in the cost of shipping, labour savings are almost neutral. The real cost savings comes from being able to dump whatever they want, whenever they want in the rivers and up the smokestack.

  57. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Today's Chinese six year olds are the key. I kind of feel sorry for them, they will have a lot on their shoulders. They'll be the project leads in 2060-2080, charged with "fixing/correcting a planet"...but only if they learn to respect that which is not human. That's a massive cultural shift to make in an already-born generation. But as a society they've shown it can be done.

    Let's hope they can make that shift, or we're all screwed mightily, and those kids will be cursed for centuries, rather than celebrated.

      - Anonstradamus

  58. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, my. You're an arrogant little twit, aren't you? Luckily, you matter not.

  59. Tax Energy instead of Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's an idea, switch from income tax to energy production tax.

    People who use more energy will pay more. More local jobs because production of products farther from the consumer will cost more due to higher cost of transportation.

    Things will get more energy efficient quick.

    To make it fair for the lower income people, there will be a pre-bate refund for the taxes at poverty level. Example is if $20k is consider the poverty, and $20k of spending pays about $3000 in taxes, each person legally living in the US would get a refund for $3000/12 each month to pay for their Energy Tax.

    Also very few IRS agents needed without the income Tax to enforce.

    http://energyproductiontax.weebly.com/

    1. Re:Tax Energy instead of Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A pox on whoever decided it was appropriate to manipulate the citizenry through the tax code.

  60. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by captainpanic · · Score: 0

    Yep central planning that will save us all.

    But you're an AC, and you're not here to discuss. You're just trolling around. I sometimes wonder how many of you anti-sustainability trolls are paid by some lobby groups.

    But there is a small chance you're not just trolling, but that you actually believe that a minimalistic government is the only way forward. And I could understand that view, if you are a brainwashed American, so I forgive your ignorance. But YES, sometimes central planning is necessary to make everybody behave, and to ensure that the interests of everyone are protected.

    The energy market should have never been privatised in the first place. It is a fundamental necessity of everyone, just like healthcare, a good infrastructure and security. And it's not as if the world is lacking good examples of countries with centrally planned programs that do work.

  61. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if you eat almonds, you are doing more damage to the west coast than my driving does

    What's your fucking point?

  62. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by OneSmartFellow · · Score: 1

    29 MPH with a Ford Taurus, I know American cars are shit, but that's really bad.
    I can get at least 120 MPH with my Volkswagen Golf. I've gone up to about 145 MPH in a BMW X5 on a clear motorway in Croatia.

  63. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

    Do you seriously believe that switching to LED bulbs and driving a car that gets only 29mpg (which is terrible gas mileage in reality, only relative to your other gas guzzler does it seem reasonable) will achieve anything?

    It achieves more than just grousing and blaming.

    The real waste is at the front end, where power is generated, and the only fix for that is "top down" legislation to force the providers to do something about the emissions and inefficiency.

    Among other things wrong with that, legislation cannot effect magic. And presidential edicts are not legislation.

    So, you guys ready for nuclear yet? No? Then chill out. Nobody is giving up modern life and energy, you included. So save the "moral" outrage.

  64. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by SomeoneFromBelgium · · Score: 1

    Not only that, but the bill for dealing with the consequences of global warming (higher dikes, loss of crops, defence against new diseases, irrigation facilities and dams, damage from more frequent and more violent hurricanes...) will be higher than the costs of switching to non CO2 energy sources...

  65. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    And I was ranting a few years ago against government over reach when they wanted to ban incandescent bulbs. I still am, it isn't their job to pick winners.

    Where do you draw the line and how did you decide on that exact spot?

    It is illegal to dump toxic industrial waste in your back yard. I think most people would agree that that is reasonable regulation that allows us all to live together. Right at the other end of the scale you have incandescent light bulbs, which waste a lot of energy compared to CCFL and LED, and even halogen, and thus generate more pollution from electricity generation. Okay, it depends where you live, where your energy comes from etc. But generally speaking using them pollutes more than other forms of lighting.

    So where is the line? How much pollution, how far away from populated areas, what kind of health damage is acceptable? You are arguing over the position of this line that separates things the government should regulate from those it should not, and I'm interested to know what criteria and reasoning you use.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  66. Hey Obama by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Volcanoes don't give a fuck what's in your propsal. One eruption negates any reductions of the entire US for at least a year.

  67. Stuff like this hurts the poor the most by acoustix · · Score: 1

    This will cause energy prices to rise, which hurts the people with the least amount of money the most.

    --
    "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
  68. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

    And to add to that my '02 BMW 325i consistently gets 33-34 MPG commuting to and from work and on open highway gets about 37 MPG, these are American not British gallons as well as being a gasoline powered vehicle with 145,000 mile on it. Again a very comfortable and safe vehicle as well.

    --
    Time to offend someone
  69. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I'm a Republican!

    Ah, so you're voting for Hillary too, eh? You may as well admit it. She's the sanest republican out there.

    Worst trolling ever, you deserve -8. She's an overly-liberal, lying moonbat who sees herself as royalty. She's in the race completely for herself, and doesn't give a crap about the country, only whatever legacy she can leave behind, and she'll sell out anyone she can on her path to fame and glory.

  70. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Xest · · Score: 1

    "we dont drive small death traps like the rest of the world"

    Um, the US has an 11.6 per 100,000 people death rate on the road, vs. France's 4.9, Germany's 4.3, or the UK's 3.5.

    So people driving those "death traps" in the rest of the world are half as likely to die as you Americans are in your gigantic gas guzzlers. We typically get 50mpg and they tend to even let us drive faster too.

    So yeah, nicer cars, faster journeys, less likely to die, and more money left over at the end of it.

    Remind me why you think blowing cash on a fugly car that only gets 21mpg is a good thing again?

  71. Under MY proposal by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    Utility rates would NECESSARILY SKYROCKET. Yep, the economy sucks, the USA in the past few decades has transformed from a global manufacturing country, to more of a service sector company. All of the high paying jobs, have been pushed overseas, so yeah, why not, lets make the utility rates SKYROCKET, and force our country to have rolling black outs like the rest of the world. JUST TO MAKE IT FAIR. Bunch of crybaby socialist/communist/marxist that run this country into the ground.

  72. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by khallow · · Score: 1

    Unless, of course, it's not. The thing people don't get here is that we don't choose CO2 energy sources just because. They are considerably cheaper and more effective than the alternatives. And one of the more important consequences of this choice is that we are bringing a vast number of people out of poverty.

    I think it's telling that arguments about "climate change" ignore the elephant in the room - namely, that poor people can't afford to care. Just growing the economy at the current expense of the climate seems more likely to result in a net gain for the climate than the poorly thought out and hasty solutions to global warming proposed today.

  73. The Chome Gang rides again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe the rest of the world has moved beyond this scare; perhaps it's time for Obama to catch up.

  74. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by khallow · · Score: 1

    Speaking of Denmark, they embraced renewable energy on a large scale and doubled the price of their electricity as a result. We don't need to consider imaginary futures when we can see the harmful effects of ineffective mitigation measures right now.

  75. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by khallow · · Score: 1

    Hardly. The proposal merely sets targets and leaves it up to the individual states how to reach them. The states don't even have to submit a proposal until 2016, and don't have to start making any actual changes until 2020. The administration is bending over backwards to make this as easy as possible, and still conservatives are crying like they're being waterboarded.

    And what happens when states start blowing this directive off? If they don't start making actual, very costly changes, what will the EPA do?

  76. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    It is illegal to dump toxic industrial waste in your back yard.

    Should you be able to pay any amount of money to be able to do that legally? To compensate society for the damage?

    Let me put this another way:

    Right at the other end of the scale you have incandescent light bulbs, which waste a lot of energy compared to CCFL and LED, and even halogen, and thus generate more pollution from electricity generation.

    Ok, fair enough... What if each bulb came with a $5 tax that went into a clean energy fund that helped pay for wind and solar?

    There are in fact applications where incandescent are useful. Not many, but some. And some people just prefer them.

    I think very, very little should ever be banned. Drugs for example, make them legal and tax the crap out of them. Banning alcohol didn't work, the war on drugs hasn't worked either.

    Right now, you can get incandescent cheap from Mexico, they are for sale on Amazon for pete's sake. The "ban" has just created a black market. Or in this case, a gray market, since their new production is banned, but not their sale. But even if you banned their sale, you could still get them.

    So where is the line? How much pollution, how far away from populated areas, what kind of health damage is acceptable?

    I actually think you should be allowed to pollute, to some extent, as much as you want, so long as you can pay for it. If you can compensate society for the damage, and perhaps then some, have at it.

    Of course the idea is not to promote pollution, it is to make it more expensive than being green, to put a "bill from society" for the damage. For example, I think the gas tax in the US is way too low and doesn't reflex either the cost to maintain the roads or the cost to society for everyone burning tons of it. How many conservative Republicans do you know who say that we should triple the gas tax?

    Banning things is generally (but not always) a bad idea, IMHO.

  77. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by khallow · · Score: 1

    There's no point in discussing mitigation strategies with when you haven't even accepted that there actually is a problem that needs to be solved.

    My view as well.

    Most likely at some point in the next 5, 10, 15 years the evidence will become obvious enough to overcome your ideological blinders;

    That's fine with me. Evidence is where this should have started in the first place.

    but in the meantime the rest of us need to start working on a fix now, rather than waiting for you to be convinced.

    No, you don't. Keep in mind that you have yet to show that there is a credible danger and yet to come up with a credible solution to that. Just because you have feelings to the contrary isn't interesting to me. There are some profoundly stupid aspects to current climate change mitigation that really needs to be addressed. I'll list a few right now:

    1) The proposed solutions aggravate bigger problems like poverty, overpopulation, corruption, destruction of arable land and habitat.
    2) The current strategies reward defectors.
    3) Urgency is demanded even though there is no evidence to back a need for urgency. We could as you propose, wait that 15 years, but we're in too much of a hurry to do common sense and build a consensus first.
    4) There is so much bad decisions, one-sided arguments, and propaganda surrounding climate change arguments right now. That smells of scam to me. I think we should wait a bit just so the con artists move on to something else.

  78. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    Should you be able to pay any amount of money to be able to do that legally? To compensate society for the damage?

    Can you adequately compensate someone for death or serious and unfixable health problems?

    Ok, fair enough... What if each bulb came with a $5 tax that went into a clean energy fund that helped pay for wind and solar?

    Wouldn't it just make more sense not to pollute in the first place? Why clean up a mess when you can easily avoid making it in the first place, especially when the mess is likely to do permanent damage to people's health?

    There are in fact applications where incandescent are useful. Not many, but some. And some people just prefer them.

    When there is justification, i.e. no other reason, that's fine. "I just prefer polluting" is not acceptable, sorry. We have to share this environment.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  79. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    So now I also own a 2014 Ford Taurus that gets 29 MPH on the highway. It is still comfortable and filled with nice stuff, but it burns almost half the fuel of my big truck and I make a point to drive it instead of the truck when I don't need the truck.

    You did the ROI on the LED. What's the ROI on the Taurus?

  80. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, it takes a lot of water to grow almonds (roughly 1 gallon per almond). Do you really think that each almond actually *contains* a gallon of water?
    The vast majority of that water re-enters the local ecosystem (with a small amount evaporated, and transported else where by the wind).

  81. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by randallman · · Score: 1

    "Most likely at some point in the next 5, 10, 15 years the evidence will become obvious enough to overcome your ideological blinders"

    No it won't because this is the same type of denial suffered by drug abusers and alcoholics. The proof couldn't be much stronger than it is.

    Most people who deny that our pumping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere is causing the Earth to warm, deny because they simply don't want to believe it and no amount of evidence will change their mind. Add to that the deliberate attempt to cast doubt on the issue by people and organizations (motivated by money and political ideology) and you can understand where we are at. This has happened before most notably with tobacco. Tobacco was known (by tobacco companies) to cause cancer in the 50's. Despite strong evidence and scientific consensus, it wasn't until the 90's that the general public realized smoking caused cancer. And many didn't believe it (and some still don't) because they simply don't want to.

    The book "Merchant's of Doubt" contains incredibly thorough investigations into this phenomenon.

  82. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    You did the ROI on the LED. What's the ROI on the Taurus?

    There isn't one, not from a money point of view...

    It'll save me, give or take, about $120 a month in fuel... I'm paying $357 a month to own it, I figure if I keep it a few years and sell it, my net ownership cost will be in the $200 a month range.

    Which sounds cheap, but that doesn't include insurance, tires, oil changes, etc. Depends on how long I keep it of course.

    There is a small benefit in not putting so many miles on my truck, it holds a bit of value a bit longer, but that is just searching for reasons.

  83. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it just make more sense not to pollute in the first place?

    Of course, that is the point. Make it more expensive to pollute, but allow it if someone wants to pay enough for it.

    For example, I love my big truck, if anyone tries to tell me "I shouldn't drive such a thing", screw em, I can drive what I want.

    However, I don't agree that light trucks and SUVs should be exempt from the fuel rules of cars, given what light trucks and SUVs are really used for.

    So slap the gas guzzler tax on them and use that tax to provide rebates for fuel efficient cars. If the current $7,500 tax credit for EVs was paid for by a tax on big gas burning SUVs, I'd have FAR less of a problem with it, except that it shouldn't be JUST FOR EVs, it should be for any vehicle that gets, say, over 50 MPG.

    You could also do a sliding scale, maybe set the middle to 30MPG average. Every MPG over that gets a small credit, growing with size as it burns less fuel. Every MPG less than that has a tax. Buy whatever you want, drive whatever you want, pay for it.

    Can you adequately compensate someone for death or serious and unfixable health problems?

    As sad as this is, yes you can... The court system clearly has placed a value on lives which is why large companies, too many times, have made decisions based on "what will it cost us if this product kills 10 people? what about 25 people?"

    For what it is worth, I don't agree with such thinking, I'm just pointing out that our current system does allow for this.

    When there is justification, i.e. no other reason, that's fine. "I just prefer polluting" is not acceptable, sorry. We have to share this environment.

    We allow people to smoke cigarettes, and those have no good qualities whatsoever. What we have done is tax the crap out of them, but banning stuff usually has bad side effects.

  84. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Dayze!Confused · · Score: 1

    We first switched to all CFLs, then as LEDs have come down, and with local incentives from utility companies, we have been transitioning to LEDs. The first to be replaced were high use, and practical use ones, such as the lamp we use often in the bedroom, and the ones in the bathrooms where it can be a little annoying to have the light start dim and gradually get bright. For the most part during the summer we hardly even need lights inside due to our south facing windows.

    --
    "All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." [Thomas Jefferson]
  85. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

    Do you seriously believe that switching to LED bulbs and driving a car that gets only 29mpg (which is terrible gas mileage in reality, only relative to your other gas guzzler does it seem reasonable) will achieve anything?

    No, the change to LED bulbs saves me money, the car gives me something else to drive and almost kinda sorta saves me money. There are other reasons to have an extra vehicle and the few hundred dollars a month it ends up costing me is not a big deal.

    BTW, you say 29 MPG is bad... you clearly have a different view of vehicles than I do, and that's ok. Find me a 4,000lb full size car with a real back seat and a decently powered V6 engine and all the bells and whistles that does much better... Oh, and have it cost $21K while you're at it... (bought it used, 1 year old, 22k miles)

    The real waste is at the front end, where power is generated, and the only fix for that is "top down" legislation to force the providers to do something about the emissions and inefficiency. And that pretty much has to be dictated because industry has shown time and time and time again that it won't regulate itself if left to its own devices.

    You can't change it by enough to matter. I suspect Obama knows this, or at least I hope the people advising him have told him that...

    If the goal is to stop the rise in CO2 levels in the air, then we're toast, because that isn't going to happen.

  86. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by david_thornley · · Score: 2

    You do realize that poor people are going to suffer more than the affluent from climate change effects, don't you? Barring some sort of intervention, they're screwed either way.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  87. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh please! Really, just shitcan the shtick!

  88. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by khallow · · Score: 1

    You do realize that poor people are going to suffer more than the affluent from climate change effects, don't you?

    Then it's good that the policies I propose make a vast number of affluent people not poor people.

  89. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Jeremi · · Score: 1

    And what happens when states start blowing this directive off? If they don't start making actual, very costly changes, what will the EPA do?

    If a state fails to come up with a plan, the Federal government will come up with a plan for them, and enforce it.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  90. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by Jeremi · · Score: 1

    Most people who deny that our pumping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere is causing the Earth to warm, deny because they simply don't want to believe it and no amount of evidence will change their mind.

    You might be right, but I suspect that something sufficiently dramatic and close-to-home (e.g. the permanent evacuation of Miami, or Disneyland underwater, or the loss of California as an agricultural area) would probably convince a lot of the deniers.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  91. Re:You fool believe China will follow you to cut C by Jeremi · · Score: 1

    We China are not gonna cut our CO2 emission what so ever. Haha, you sucker.

    Actually, they already have.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  92. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by khallow · · Score: 1

    The proposal merely sets targets and leaves it up to the individual states how to reach them.

    [...]

    If a state fails to come up with a plan, the Federal government will come up with a plan for them, and enforce it.

    I see where this is heading. It's all voluntary until someone decides not to do it.

  93. CO2 not cheaper. You ignore externalities. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CO2 not cheaper. You ignore externalities.

    That is the basic fail of all conservative economists. Economics without accounting for externalities is like physics without the laws of thermodynamics.

    You can pretend that CO2 energy is a perpetual motion machine all you want. But in the end the laws of physics will reveal the true costs that you are ignoring.

    1. Re:CO2 not cheaper. You ignore externalities. by khallow · · Score: 1

      CO2 not cheaper. You ignore externalities.

      Assuming of course, that the externalities are bigger than what I see. If they aren't, then I'm not ignoring them.

      You can pretend that CO2 energy is a perpetual motion machine all you want. But in the end the laws of physics will reveal the true costs that you are ignoring.

      Nonsense. CO2 energy doesn't have to last forever. As I noted earlier, if we just run it out a century, which I grant may be infeasible, then we have almost the entire world at or superior to the best economies at the of the last century. That gives us a huge amount of flexibility for handling the problems of the world, including the relatively mild one of climate change.

  94. Re:Oh Great! More Central Planning! Just what we n by khallow · · Score: 1

    No it won't because this is the same type of denial suffered by drug abusers and alcoholics. The proof couldn't be much stronger than it is.

    Which is a pretty dumb thing to say. Here's two obvious reasons why: 1) there hasn't been even a 1C rise in global mean temperature since the beginning of the industrial era, and 2) there's a factor of three uncertainty in the estimates of CO2 temperature forcing.

    Most people who deny that our pumping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere is causing the Earth to warm

    I agree. What I disagree on is both the amount of resulting warming and the degree of need to do something about it.