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Sharon F.'s avatar

Roger, I think that some people don’t actually want GDP to go up. But I think that thinking about the model is a great way to ruffle through the discussion and find out where people disagree. For example, you could want to reduce carbon subject to the constraint that a certain standard of living can be maintained in some countries and increased in others. As you talk about “stealth advocacy” there is also “stealth Reduction in quality of life” as perceived by..ordinary human beings. Hence, challenges around siting new energy facilities of whatever decarbonized persuasion (uranium mining, solar and wind, transmission). Or the perceived need for everyone to live in cities and take buses for “the climate.”

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James Mondello's avatar

Interesting analysis and more up my alley. People involved in the green movement think the world is selfish and greedy. They have their a/c and auto but they don’t want anyone else to enjoy the same luxury. Instead of spending trillions on policies that don’t work how about a Manhattan Project for climate? Science realistically is the only way to accelerate decarbonization. The current technology improves GDP but falls short on reducing the footprint. A really great analysis of the problem Roger.

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