The oil spill is another way of showing the real cost of a carbon based economy. As unfortunate as it is, I think that people are starting to realize that there are huge hidden costs in continuing down the road unabated with a carbon based energy systems. Do we really think the BP will be forced to cover all the economic impacts of the spill? How could you even measure that?
Problem is the alternatives are not cheap either for the average Joe trying to put food on the table and pay the rent. Really the only way to get progress on the problem is to unhide all those hidden costs. This is a big conversion in how we view the economic impact of our energy sources. If we did that it would become obvious that we waste lots and that conservation alone could have a big impact. Not conservation in the sense of a cold dark house, but increases in efficiency. Then the incremental costs of conversion to other sources would pay off even bigger.
If the Exon Valdez is any indication, BP can never put the genie back in the bottle and make it all OK. But that said, boycotting BP is the the wrong attitude IMHO. Make them pay through the nose as best we can for their stupidity, then drive the economy away from the problem altogether. As long as we continue to drill, mine, burn and transport this will just happen again and we are doomed to repeat history.
Problem is the alternatives are not cheap either for the average Joe trying to put food on the table and pay the rent. Really the only way to get progress on the problem is to unhide all those hidden costs. This is a big conversion in how we view the economic impact of our energy sources. If we did that it would become obvious that we waste lots and that conservation alone could have a big impact. Not conservation in the sense of a cold dark house, but increases in efficiency. Then the incremental costs of conversion to other sources would pay off even bigger.
If the Exon Valdez is any indication, BP can never put the genie back in the bottle and make it all OK. But that said, boycotting BP is the the wrong attitude IMHO. Make them pay through the nose as best we can for their stupidity, then drive the economy away from the problem altogether. As long as we continue to drill, mine, burn and transport this will just happen again and we are doomed to repeat history.
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