Saving the planet?

Presumably the extra two people are creating their own usage elsewhere?
 
They may...

...but even if they do, how much will they decrease? Taking two inhabitants out of a building doesn't reduce usage by half. Heating and cooking energy will remain much the same for two as four, unless eating and space use changes dramatically. Food costs will come down a bit but it's surprising how the absence of the kids encourages more, rather than less, spending on your stomach. Washing and cleaning will remain much the same unless you spend a substantial amount on a smaller washing machine. You may have less waste to dispose of and less to recycle - then again, you may not.

None of these things are anything like as simple as some people claim. :naughty:

No. Not half. I didn't say half. But it's showing that less people equals less energy usage/waste/etc which goes make to my initial general point about over population.

They are both adults. They cook their own meals, we don't have family meals. Cooking should be roughly halved. As should be kettle boiling. Toilet flushing. Consumables such as toilet paper, and handwash, even toothpaste, and clothes washing consumables/energy/water, winter tumble drying! Half the baths ran & showers taken. Plus the smaller things like lights switched on, TV, game console, phone charging, hair drying & straighteners, electrical stuff on stand-by......
 
No. Not half. I didn't say half. But it's showing that less people equals less energy usage/waste/etc which goes make to my initial general point about over population.
So how do we deal with this alleged over-population?

Do we sterilise anyone whose income is below a certain level? Perhaps we simply execute all criminals (including droppers of litter and those who don't pay for their TV licence)? Then again, we could just call for volunteers to commit suicide... :naughty:
 
So how do we deal with this alleged over-population?

Do we sterilise anyone whose income is below a certain level? Perhaps we simply execute all criminals (including droppers of litter and those who don't pay for their TV licence)? Then again, we could just call for volunteers to commit suicide... :naughty:
Quite possibly sterilisation, or partial sterilisation, will happen from plastic and other pollution.
 
So how do we deal with this alleged over-population?

Do we sterilise anyone whose income is below a certain level? Perhaps we simply execute all criminals (including droppers of litter and those who don't pay for their TV licence)? Then again, we could just call for volunteers to commit suicide... :naughty:

Solving the issue is probably a much bigger issue in itself :) And probably more controversial.
 
We decided, many years ago, that we wouldn't breed.

Logan's Run, anyone?
 
No. Not half. I didn't say half. But it's showing that less people equals less energy usage/waste/etc which goes make to my initial general point about over population.

They are both adults. They cook their own meals, we don't have family meals. Cooking should be roughly halved. As should be kettle boiling. Toilet flushing. Consumables such as toilet paper, and handwash, even toothpaste, and clothes washing consumables/energy/water, winter tumble drying! Half the baths ran & showers taken. Plus the smaller things like lights switched on, TV, game console, phone charging, hair drying & straighteners, electrical stuff on stand-by......
But it isn’t fewer people, it is the same number of people but now in two places, so consuming more.
 
But it isn’t fewer people, it is the same number of people but now in two places, so consuming more.

IN OUR HOUSE, THERE WILL BE FEWER PEOPLE SO LESS ENERGY CONSUMED & WASTE PRODUCED.

ON OUR PLANET, WITH LESS PEOPLE THERE WILL BE LESS ENERGY CONSUMED & LESS WASTE PRODUCED.

Hence my original post stating that over population is a cause/issue which you & Mr Bump seem to be sweeping your way around.
 
IN OUR HOUSE, THERE WILL BE FEWER PEOPLE SO LESS ENERGY CONSUMED & WASTE PRODUCED.

ON OUR PLANET, WITH LESS PEOPLE THERE WILL BE LESS ENERGY CONSUMED & LESS WASTE PRODUCED.

Hence my original post stating that over population is a cause/issue which you & Mr Bump seem to be sweeping your way around.

Yes, fewer people on the planet would use less energy, but fewer people in your house isn't as that energy consumption is now going on elsewhere.

It is similar to shipping plastic to the Philippines for "recycling" or buying tat from China so we don't have CO2 from manufacturing here. Or complaining that it is the masses of population in the Far East causing the problems, when it is high consumption (mostly in the West), and world market forces that is the problem.
 
Yes, fewer people on the planet would use less energy, but fewer people in your house isn't as that energy consumption is now going on elsewhere.

It is similar to shipping plastic to the Philippines for "recycling" or buying tat from China so we don't have CO2 from manufacturing here. Or complaining that it is the masses of population in the Far East causing the problems, when it is high consumption (mostly in the West), and world market forces that is the problem.

I'm off to paint a f*****g target on my garden wall to bang my head against........
 
I'm off to paint a f*****g target on my garden wall to bang my head against........
Don't forget to put the camera on a tripod and use a sound trigger to expose... :naughty:
 
So how do we deal with this alleged over-population?

Do we sterilise anyone whose income is below a certain level? Perhaps we simply execute all criminals (including droppers of litter and those who don't pay for their TV licence)? Then again, we could just call for volunteers to commit suicide... :naughty:
Educating women & getting them into work is one way. I remember that free school meals reduces child labour in India (maybe it was Bangladesh) more effectively than laws and probably also cuts population growth,

I believe that the rate of growth is slowing in most places.
 
We decided, many years ago, that we wouldn't breed.

Logan's Run, anyone?
Yes, I remember Logan's Run but the age people were allowed to live to was 30. Perhaps that is a little harsh but, whatever figure was chosen, I'm a gonner.

Dave
 
Yes, I remember Logan's Run but the age people were allowed to live to was 30.
That was a change made by the film's writers, one of many, which those of us who had read the book couldn't understand at the time and which I still don't. Originally, the mandated age was 21.

The book was typical of mid-1960s American science fiction, mostly about how wrong "the system" was and how individuals could change (or at least, survive) it. In the end, I came to the conclusion that it provided no insights and was simply nihilistic.
 
That was a change made by the film's writers, one of many, which those of us who had read the book couldn't understand at the time and which I still don't. Originally, the mandated age was 21.
I'm guessing it was so the actors chosen to play the roles would be more realistic. Although both Michael York and Richard Jordan were both over 30 (Jordan almost 40), playing characters under 21 would've been too much of a push.
 
I'm off to paint a f*****g target on my garden wall to bang my head against........
Maybe a different analogy would have worked better?

Educating women & getting them into work is one way. I remember that free school meals reduces child labour in India (maybe it was Bangladesh) more effectively than laws and probably also cuts population growth,

I believe that the rate of growth is slowing in most places.
Yes, I believe so. This article gives some evidence, and suggests reasons why. And adds thoughts on the consequences.
 
Not being intentionally perverse in choosing to appear not to understand would have been a lot better.
Sorry you feel that way.

In this thread Nod has the best response.
 
Most unusual!
 
Here is a happy report about driving a 4x4 tank to the tip to recycle bottles.
Lots of somewhat alarmist claims there without supporting evidence - which is the real problem in debates like this.

It seems to me that, if you're going to claim "x is such and such", you need to give full details of how you reached that conclusion, otherwise you're sliding into "God told me the other day..." territory. :naughty:
 
It was when they tested car tyre particles – a poorly understood yet ubiquitous pollutant – that they knew they were on the right track. Using a parmesan grater atop a drill, they carefully shaved tiny fragments of tyre and soaked them in water.

“When we tested the tyres it killed all the fish,” said McIntyre. From there, they were able to identify the culprit: a toxic chemical known as 6PPD-quinone, the product of the preservative 6PPD, which is added to tyres to stop them breaking down. The pioneering study, published in 2020, has been heralded as critical to our understanding of what some describe as a “stealth pollutant”.
Now, it is possible that this pollutant only kills this kind of fish.

"You've got to ask yourself one question: 'Do I feel lucky?' Well, do you, punk?"
 
Lots of somewhat alarmist claims there without supporting evidence - which is the real problem in debates like this.

Not fair to say there’s no supporting evidence since some is quoted in the article. I agree it’s not conclusive or exhaustive but it certainly points to a likely source of that and all kinds of problems.

I’ve often wondered where all that tyre dust goes.

Actually, originally I wondered where all the shoe sold polyurethane dust went since it’s potentially very carcinogenic (actually urethane is the carcinogen but the poly-u can be broken down) and I was wearing polyurethane soled shoes at the time!
 
I agree it’s not conclusive or exhaustive ...
... which, to my way of thinking, is the problem.

So many of the fads and fantasies that we're stuck with come from saying, in effect, "that's my belief and you're a fool if you disagree". This is what leads to vast amounts of wasted effort and resources. Sometimes, it turns out the fantasy reflects reality in effect, so little damage is done. Much of the time it doesn't and the squandered resources aren't available to deal with the real problems.

An example: coastal erosion caused by a changing climate won't be reduced by wasting huge resources "reducing carbon" but it might be controlled by dropping rocks in the sea at the appropriate points, identified by careful tidal and geologic surveys ...

Wave breaking against Sidmouth cliffs _1040046.JPG
 
... which, to my way of thinking, is the problem.

So many of the fads and fantasies that we're stuck with come from saying, in effect, "that's my belief and you're a fool if you disagree". This is what leads to vast amounts of wasted effort and resources. Sometimes, it turns out the fantasy reflects reality in effect, so little damage is done. Much of the time it doesn't and the squandered resources aren't available to deal with the real problems.

An example: coastal erosion caused by a changing climate won't be reduced by wasting huge resources "reducing carbon" but it might be controlled by dropping rocks in the sea at the appropriate points, identified by careful tidal and geologic surveys ...

View attachment 361762
Except dropping rocks in the seas has been shown to cause problems elsewhere on coastlines.

You say this:

"So many of the fads and fantasies that we're stuck with come from saying, in effect, "that's my belief and you're a fool if you disagree".

I'm guessing, that is your belief and I am a fool if I disagree?
 
... which, to my way of thinking, is the problem.

So many of the fads and fantasies that we're stuck with come from saying, in effect, "that's my belief and you're a fool if you disagree". This is what leads to vast amounts of wasted effort and resources. Sometimes, it turns out the fantasy reflects reality in effect, so little damage is done. Much of the time it doesn't and the squandered resources aren't available to deal with the real problems.

An example: coastal erosion caused by a changing climate won't be reduced by wasting huge resources "reducing carbon" but it might be controlled by dropping rocks in the sea at the appropriate points, identified by careful tidal and geologic surveys ...

View attachment 361762
I’m with @Pound Coin on this one. While dropping rocks in the sea can sometimes be useful by and large any kind of hard sea defence tends to just shift the erosion further along the coast.

Not only at sea. You can see where landowners have fortified riverbanks on their side resulting in erosion on the other bank ;(. Water is very persistent :(.
 
I’m with @Pound Coin on this one. While dropping rocks in the sea can sometimes be useful by and large any kind of hard sea defence tends to just shift the erosion further along the coast.
Agreed. The umpty trillion tons of the planet, the umpty trillion ergs emitted by the sun, the enormous effects of air and water sloshed around by the influence of the moon, will be far beyond our ability to influence for a very long time, if ever.

So we just have to do what we can, where we can and leave it to some other poor booger to do their bit, further down the road
 
I'm guessing, that is your belief and I am a fool if I disagree?
But I don't disagree with you, however much you may be insulted by my agreement.

As I said above, we have to do what we can do and the problems that causes have to be left to the person we pass those problems on to.
 
How do you know that the car is not more fuel efficient than Daves 2.5l 20 year Mondeo....

Also where is said bottle bank, the ones i know are either in a supermarket car park or around a village hall so she is probably at the supermarket anyway, or passing one.

Am sure most of us do far worse!
Pretty sure there was never a 2.5ltr mondeo 1.6, 1.8,2.0ltr not in the last 20 years anyway .. and now owning a 2.2 Honda CRV tdi it’s probably more economic and less polluting to leave it ticking over for a couple of minutes than starting it up from dead .. . If I had the money I would change it for a hybrid Toyota .. but I don’t have that sort of money on a pension . Full electric is a non starter in rural wales Due to not enough facilities or charging availability .
The whole car thing needs looking at in more depth in rural areas
 
Agreed. The umpty trillion tons of the planet, the umpty trillion ergs emitted by the sun, the enormous effects of air and water sloshed around by the influence of the moon, will be far beyond our ability to influence for a very long time, if ever.
So, is that your belief generally? Or are you just referring to coastal erosion?
 
So, is that your belief generally?
No.

But when it comes to dealing with planetary forces, of course it is.

Even the biggest organisation cannot change the course or time of a tide. All we can do is our best to deflect it from that which we wish to protect. Then we must leave it to the next man to do the same.

Of course, if we are sensible, we'll each tell the other what we're doing and offer to help them in turn.
 
Coastal erosion is affected by changes in tides, flows, water level, and strength & number of storms. Increases in these increase erosion.

All these are affected by climate change, so we could lessen the increase in erosion by reducing our impact on climate change. I doubt we will though, as it is more important to elect a weird leader or two and other important things.
 
All we can do is our best to deflect it from that which we wish to protect.
Hum...... continue to use fossil fuel as a consumable, continue to consume energy like it is limitless and continue our inefficient lifestyle is very very far from "doing our best".

If it isn't for "saving the planet", we at very least must all do our part to reduce the ever growing climate injustice. Just the last heatwave is clear on a micro scale, people who owns AC or can get a breeze, or people who don't own AC and can't open window at both ends of house for a breeze. This kind of extreme weather is getting worse all around the world.
 
Coastal erosion is affected by changes in tides, flows, water level, and strength & number of storms. Increases in these increase erosion.
This is a statement of the obvious.

My point is that nothing we can do will alter those facts. Instead of all this daft rhetoric about turning back the change in the climate, we need to spend our time and resources on identifying where the changes will cause real problems and altering either the immediate environment if we can or moving people away from the affected areas if we cannot.

This kind of extreme weather is getting worse all around the world.
It is. That's why we need to concentrate on helping those who are directly affected instead of all this "extinction rebellion" nonsense.

There's an American saying: "You can't fight city hall" which applies here. Where you can't effect change, you can only move away from it. We should be attempting to both make the changes that would help those who can't do it for themselves and helping people to move away, where it is not practical to make those changes.

However, to do this requires committing real resources on a huge scale, something that the world's kleptocracies refuse to consider.
 
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