File:OCO-2 to measure CO2.jpg

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GreenPolicy360 Siterunner: On Facebook over the past few weeks a conversation, a thread as it's called, has come together between Florida and California. Here are a few of the exchanges as the question of "externalities" are being discussed and acknowledged as difficult for most to understand.

Here Ron Merkord, a graduate of applied physics at Caltech, ventures that externalities are like garbage and decisions are being made to dump 'garbage' in our neighbor's yards.

The metaphor equating garbage=externalities is not far from reality.

Take a look at GreenPolicy's externalities page(s) and consider how we/humankind, individually/business/government are 'dumping' our trash into other's yards, water/air/food (microplastics anyone?), and into 'The Commons', our natural resources like Earth's atmosphere where the pollutants (garbage/trash) are already causing damage with severe consequences accumulating over time.

Future generations will have to deal with what our generation's legacy is leaving behind. Our garbage. The consequences of our decisions.




Ron Merkord

October 20 at 11:11 AM ·

I had this great idea to save money the other day. Rather than paying our monthly $96 for trash pickup, I could just take our trash each week and go dump it on our neighbor's property. Instant savings!

Crazy, right? Of course, no one would really do that. Yet that is exactly what we do when burning cheap fossil fuels, and then just dump the trash CO2 emissions into everyone's atmosphere, not worrying about the cost of cleanup or the cost to future generations for a warming planet.

These are called externalities in accounting -- these hidden costs that are borne by a third party, in this case our planet. This is why our switching to 100% renewable energy (such as our recent switch here in Ventura County) is so important, even if it costs a little more. Because really, it doesn't cost more if you figure in the cost of taking out the trash.


Ron Merkord

October 5 at 9:18 AM ·

Reality check -- every single day, 365 days a year, our burning of fossil fuels now releases 112 million tons of carbon dioxide gas into our atmosphere. 112 million tons, every... single... day!

Of all the countries that signed the Paris Climate Accord, not a single country has held to the emissions cuts promised to even hold global temperature rise to +2C. Realistically, we are now on track for a +4C temp rise.

Try and picture what 112 million tons of something, every single day, actually looks like. For example, that is like 60 million cars (1 out of every 5 in the US) being vaporized into gas and put into our atmosphere, every... single... day. In just five days there would be no cars left in the US.

The scale of what we are doing is so astounding, our minds can't even picture the scale of what is really going on.


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Comments


Steven Schmidt: Elon Musk speaks of these emissions as a vast chemical 'experiment'. I talk of a 'thin blue layer', our troposphere, into which we are pumping our 'externalities'. www.thinbluelayer.com


Steve Rothboeck: We may be on track for 4C warming, but civilization may collapse (if God forbid we stay on this course) before that level is reached. Climate change could be the underlying causal factor for floods, fires, famine, and war, etc.

The perplexing thing is that today we have the technology to substantially mitigate climate change, through a transition to renewable energy sources.

We also need to address population, pollution, habitat destruction, and extinctions.

But it's a lack of will not technology that so far prevents humanity from changing direction (forgive me for stating the obvious and preaching to the choir).


Ron Merkord: Steve, I find the lack of will just astounding. Everyone is concerned about this or that being a little cheaper than renewables or low carbon alternatives, so that they can afford an extra toy. Yet they ignore how we are selling out the future of our kids.


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GreenPolicy360's Earth POV




You can manage only what you can measure Dr David Crisp, OCO-2, June 2014 m.jpg

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