Related article: The growing supply of energy should not lead us to underestimate the
longer-term challenge of providing energy for a growing world economy.
At this point, even with greater efficiency, it looks as though the
world could be using 50 percent more oil 25 years from now. That is a
very big challenge. But at least for the next several years, Buy Cheap Abana the
growing production capacity will take the air out of the fear of
imminent shortage. And that in turn will provide us the breathing
space to address the investment needs and the full panoply of
technologies and approaches -- from development to conservation --
that will be required to fuel a growing world economy, ensure energy
security and meet the needs of what is becoming the global middle
class.
The writer is chairman of Cambridge Energy Research Associates. His
book "The Prize: the Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power" received the
Pulitzer Prize.
From checker at panix.com Mon Aug 1 19:23:00 2005
From: checker at panix.com (Premise Checker)
Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2005 15:23:00 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: [Paleopsych] =?iso-8859-1?q?Foreign_Policy=3A_Carl_Pope=2C_Bj=F8?=
=?iso-8859-1?q?rn_Lomborg=3A_The_State_of_Nature?=
Message-ID:
Carl Pope, Bj?rn Lomborg: The State of Nature
Foreign Policy, 5.7-8
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id="3084&print=1"
Is the world getting Purchase Abana Online greener? Or are we selling it short for a fistful of
greenbacks? Apparently, even committed environmentalists can disagree. When
Carl Pope looks out his door, he sees the polar ice caps melting, ecosystems on
life support, and clean water disappearing. But Bj?rn Lomborg believes
humanity?s backyard has never looked better. Who?s got it right? For young and
old, rich and poor, the answer might just mean the world.
Our Roof Is Caving in By Carl Pope
The global environmental dilemma teems with both risks and opportunities. The
world is at considerable peril, yet solutions to the problems we face are at
our fingertips. We have been loading the Earth?s atmosphere with Order Abana Online mercury from
burning coal, chemical plants, and mining for centuries. As a result, the fish
caught in our oceans are now a health risk for young women. Yet we have, and
can afford, the necessary technology to stop pumping mercury into the
environment. The trick is finding the will and prudence to pursue such
solutions. Currently, the world?and the United States in particular?lacks the
leadership to link the two.
Let me show you what I mean. Thirteen?hundred scientists from 95 countries just
issued a report called the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, which notes that 15
of the 24 ecosystems vital for life on Earth are in a degraded or overdrawn
state. That?s like a doctor telling you that 60 percent of your organs are
failing. Yet we cannot summon the courage to tackle simple solutions. Keeping
tires on American automobiles properly Buy Abana inflated, for instance, would save as
much oil as will be found by drilling (and destroying) the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge.
If you don?t believe a report from 1,300 scientists, consider that the CIA
believes that more than 3 billion people will be living in water?stressed
regions?from North Africa to China?by 2015. The water tables of major
grain?producing areas in northern China are dropping at a rate of 5 feet per
year, and per capita water availability in India is expected to drop by 50 to
75 percent over the next decade. The number of chronically malnourished people
in sub?Saharan Africa will increase by 20 percent over the next 15 years.
That is scary stuff. It?s also unnecessary. Do these alarming trends mean that
the sky is falling? No. If the sky were falling, we couldn?t do much except Buy Abana Online
hide. But these trends do mean that the roof over our house will cave in?unless
it gets some much?needed repairs. Consider the United States? energy policy.
Americans consume 25 percent of the world?s oil. Why? Because consumers lack
choices. Even though engineering has made car engines 25 percent more
efficient, increased bulk has made fuel economy worse. In some U.S. cities, the
waiting list for a hybrid car is longer than the waiting list for a kidney
transplant. Instead of pursuing new solutions such as hybrid cars, the United