男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影

Op-Ed Contributors

Cheaper green energy, better future

By Bjorn Lomborg (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-07-20 07:51
Large Medium Small

Public skepticism about global warming may be growing, but the scientific consensus is as solid as ever: Man-made climate change is real, and we ignore it at our peril. But if that issue is settled (and it should be), there is an equally big and important question that remains wide open: What should we do about it?

One prescription that is bandied about with increasing frequency certainly sounds sensible: The world should drastically cut the amount of greenhouse gases that it pumps into the atmosphere each day. Specifically, we are told, the goal should be a 50 percent reduction in global carbon dioxide emissions by the middle of the century.

Even its backers concede that achieving this target won't be easy - and they are right. In fact, they are so right that they are wrong. Allow me to explain.

Related readings:
Cheaper green energy, better future Green Day: Last Night On Earth
Cheaper green energy, better future Green temptation

Our dependency on carbon-emitting fuels is more than enormous. It is overwhelming. For all the talk about solar, wind, and other hyped green-energy sources, they make up only 0.6 percent of global energy consumption. Renewable energy overwhelmingly comes from often-unsustainable burning of wood and biomass by people in the developing countries. Fossil fuels account for more than four-fifths of the world's energy diet. So, in order to cut global carbon dioxide emissions by half by the middle of the century, we would obviously have to start getting a lot more of our energy from sources that don't emit carbon.

Can we do this? According to the International Energy Agency, here's what it would take to achieve the goal of cutting emissions by 50 percent between now and mid-century: 30 new nuclear plants; 17,000 windmills; 400 biomass power plants; 2 hydroelectric facilities the size of China's massive Three Gorges Dam; and 42 coal- and gas-power plants with yet-to-be-developed carbon-capture technology.

Now consider this: The list does not describe what we would have to build between now and 2050, but what we would have to build each and every year until then!

One more thing: Even if we managed to do all this (which we obviously cannot), the impact on global temperatures would be hardly noticeable by 2050. According to the best-known climate-economic model, this vast undertaking is likely to wind up reducing global temperatures by just one-tenth of 1 degree Celsius (one-fifth of 1 degree Fahrenheit), while holding back sea-level rises by only 1 cm (less than half an inch).

That's not a lot of bang for the buck. Indeed, the projected costs of this approach - some $5 trillion annually by mid-century - are so much greater than its likely benefits that it makes no sense to call it a solution at all.

Fortunately, there is a better, smarter way to deal with global warming. What if, instead of spending trillions of dollars trying to build an impossible number of power plants - or, more likely, condemning billions of people around the world to continued poverty by trying to make carbon-emitting fuels too expensive to use - we devoted ourselves to making green energy cheaper?

   Previous Page 1 2 Next Page  

主站蜘蛛池模板: 大姚县| 乌拉特前旗| 武威市| 凌云县| 成武县| 长丰县| 礼泉县| 芦溪县| 宁明县| 会泽县| 博野县| 永昌县| 新津县| 衡阳县| 通州市| 和田市| 安龙县| 林口县| 方城县| 岫岩| 栖霞市| 巍山| 康定县| 金昌市| 阿巴嘎旗| 明水县| 吉林市| 马公市| 大埔区| 安岳县| 铜山县| 福建省| 柏乡县| 子长县| 南京市| 余庆县| 财经| 那曲县| 和硕县| 平谷区| 油尖旺区| 高淳县| 乌审旗| 轮台县| 万全县| 乌兰察布市| 来安县| 苍南县| 大宁县| 松阳县| 呼伦贝尔市| 白银市| 湘潭市| 陇川县| 娄烦县| 云霄县| 竹溪县| 宁津县| 泸定县| 柳江县| 临漳县| 南华县| 崇州市| 章丘市| 泽普县| 稻城县| 蚌埠市| 昭通市| 涟水县| 原阳县| 慈利县| 全南县| 黄陵县| 普兰店市| 大埔区| 池州市| 河池市| 来宾市| 日照市| 盐山县| 益阳市| 丰城市|