However, a report in the last week or two gave a projection as to how many billion
extra people there will be on the planet in a few years time.
That is the real problem. Unless that is addressed then what possible benefit can the changes we make have if they will be set aside simply by increased consumption?
So in respect of the last two responses part of the solution is certainly to be more responsible for how we manage our lives on this planet.
But that is not the problem. Indeed, it simply makes the problem more acute and the damage of a response to a false scenario even more so.
The questions about climate change are:
[ul][li]is man causing it?[/li]
[li]is climate change bad for us?[/li]
[li] is CO2 the cause?[/li]
[li]is more CO2 totally bad fr us or does it bring benefits? (remember the headlines about the cost/damage of El nino and the small paragraphs about how beneficial it really was?)[/li]
[li]Is the climate really warming up?[/li]
[li]Is responding to the assumption that the climate is warming up, that man is causing it and that man can do something about it a "safe" assumption to make and does it warrant a precautionary response?[/li]
[li] what if the IPCC et al are wrong? How much harm does the precautionary approach do to our ability to respond to the real problem, as an when it is identified?[/li]
[li] Can you scam the taxpayers twice? will they (taxpayers) pay out for another alarmist scare after having been duped on the first (the "Boy who cried wolf" principle as it is generally presented) or will they dig their heels in?[/li][/ul]
This isn't about whether we are environmentally concious or not but about whether the Anthropogenic Global Warming scare is genuine, mistaken or a hoax? or is it robust enough that we should act. Doing the wrong thing for the right reasons is no help when the real problem emerges and no one can be made to take it seriously and if the could, don't have enough remaining resources to do anything sensible about it.
JMW