Alyrium Denryle wrote:Maybe something gets lost in translation here, or perhaps there is something in there you consider implicit that I missed, but...what? Last I checked, the whole point of clean power is to reduce reliance on fossil fuels. Now, I will grant that dropping nuclear power means more fossil fuels in the short term, but saying that clean power advocates dont argue against fossil fuels is an inherent contradiction.
Clean power advocates focus on opposing nuclear (which is the cleanest of all conventional power sources) and in many countries they have achieved significant milestones in preventing nuclear power from becoming as widespread in at least electricity generation, as it is in France. In some nations they have either curtailed or downright destroyed the nuclear power programs. It means more fossil fuels
period (not 'in the short term'), because even the most ambitious clean power goals for larger countries include
25-30% of the renewable-generated power. Correct me if I am wrong.
Alyrium Denryle wrote:That depends on what time scale you are operating on. Five years? Probably. On the other hand, the poor countries are also going to suffer the most from climate change. By a considerable margin. By which I mean "hundreds of millions of sea-level-rise refugees and a collapse of the global food system that will hit them MUCH harder when food prices sky-rocket"
But you aren't getting even close to stopping climate change by dropping nuclear and spreading the nonsense ideas about clean power reducing fossil fuel consumption. If anything, you are accelerating it and also masking it behind a facade of 'cleanliness', under which bad things happen:
http://www.spiegel.de/international/ger ... 288-3.html
Alyrium Denryle wrote:It is unfortunate. But if you can think of a way to change it (Again, one that is attainable. Telling the developed world not to outsource their pollution is not attainable. Enforcing regulation on international corporations might be. Maybe.) by all means. Bitching about the evils of colonialism solves precisely nothing.
Well first of all when other countries place restrictions on Western companies that want to pollute, it creates a huge problem for the West since they are not prepared to dump their own shit in their own backyard. This then leads to accelerated lobbying on part of the West to dump industrial refuse elsewhere. That lobbying succeeds in part because the Third World elites are mostly too corrupt to stop this shit and cannot resist the enormous kickbacks they get for turning their countries into gigantic junkyards...
Alyrium Denryle wrote:You act as if most rare earth metal deposits are in the developed world. They are not. Most are in the developing world, so the mining cannot exactly be shifted in a manner congruent with social justice. The refining MIGHT, but keep in mind, switching the developing world over to renewable energy sources is a medium term goal as well, so it is not as if they will not benefit from increased supply of the raw materials.
The developing world cannot fully 'switch to renewables', at best we are talking about goals even
more modest than the goals for the First World which I outlined above. RE mining perhaps cannot be stopped, but social justice at least demands that the extracting country get more for it or some other form of increased compensation. You have Thanas arguing against that in this very thread.
Alyrium Denryle wrote:Even if hundreds of thousands die from the side effects of mining and refining everything from rare earth minerals to uranium, it is better than the hundreds of millions, even billions climate change and food supply collapse will kill and displace. Almost Anything is preferable to that. Carpet nuking india would cause less (direct blast related) mortality.
You would have a point if the energy switch policy touted by the greens (which includes phase-out of nuclear power since political greens are mostly idiots) would decrease emissions. As practice shows, it does not. So what's the point? GW is pretty much unstoppable either way (unless we carpet-nuke the First World).
Alyrium Denryle wrote:Now, it would certainly be better if the developing world insisted on better safety standards and even basic environmental legislation. Hell, many western companies like Apple these days are insisting on some basic worker protection measures. But ultimately the governments of the developing world are sovereign powers, and because they control say, the supply of rare earth metals by way of being the place where the deposits exist, they have a certain amount of leverage. They can insist on better conditions. They dont. That is on them, not us. Different story in the textile industry of course, but that is not what we are discussing, now is it?
But in this very thread I brought up some examples of regulation. Contrary to Thanas' insinuations that the RE export quotas in China are not pointing to an environmental issue, the same measures were coupled with a crackdown on RE smuggling (which is funding the dirtiest illegal mining operations) and, unsurprisingly, RE mining regulations that prohibited severe pollution. The regulations from 2010 are being upgraded now. Since the implementation of these regulations leads to liquidation of a great number of illegal or outdated mines, the RE production quotas have to be maintained and exports have to be controlled - otherwise more illegal operations will spring up to fill the demand. But what does the West do? Accuse China of not playing fair. Which may be true, but it is nonetheless for their own good. Mining in Australia, the US and Greenland is already being considered. So if more countries force the West to dig their resources elsewhere, they could limit pollution in their own nations. The US, on the other hand, is the only developed nation not to have ratified the Basel and Stockholm conventions - and I don't expect them to do it any time soon. Canada, that poster boy of 'US, but more like Europe', wants to continue exporting
asbestos, a known deadly danger. What are you talking about exactly? 'They can insist on better conditions', sure, and they do, more and more as they realize just what exactly the costs are. This draws only ire and lobbying from the West, not understanding and support:
http://www.twnside.org.sg/title/basel-cn.htm
So please, guys. I know that the Third World elites are corrupt and easily drawn into agreements that allow developed nations to pollute not only during production, but also dump their shit - literally! - on the shores and lands of other countries. What you ignore is that many First World nations actively desire this, and have deliberately sought to sabotage critical pieces of international legislation meant to protect the Third World from becoming a dump for the First World, like the Basel convention and subsequent legislation arising from the utter failure of Basel to stop the dumping of toxic shit.
Here's some typical First Worlder logic:
The motivation for exporting hazardous waste to developing countries is primarily economic. Lawrence Summers, the former vice president and chief economist of the World Bank, is reported to have encouraged these exports.[17] Summers' wrote in an internal memorandum: 'I think the economic logic behind dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest wage country is impeccable and we should face up to that'.[18] The rationale for this statement was that any 'health-impairing pollution should be done in the country with the lowest cost, which will be the country with the lowest wages'.[19] Although Summers and the World Bank have since retracted these statements[20], the economic incentives for exports of hazardous waste to developing countries are indisputable.
Some important reminders from the
BAN:
The United States is the world's largest generator of hazardous wastes, accounting for almost three quarters of the world's annual production.
Like I said, you guys do look like the proverbial speck-searchers in the eyes of another. I'm sorry to say but so as long as OECD is the largest sole hazardous waste producer in the world, all and any measures to combat their influence over trade, extraction, processing and waste disposal are welcome. But a lot of it has to come from
inside OECD. However, the green advocates have adopted a NIMBY attitude towards a global problem and de-facto facilitated acceleration of global warming due to their antinuclear stance, and turning Third World into a giant dump due to their complete indifference towards other nations being polluted so as long as their own cities and villages stay safe.