People who deny that humans are wreaking havoc on the planetโs life-support systems astoundย me.
When confronted with the obvious damage weโre doing to the biosphere โ from climate change to water and air pollution to swirling plastic patches in the oceans โ some dismiss the reality or employ logical fallacies to discredit theย messengers.
Itโs one thing to argue over solutions, but to reject the need for them is suicidal. And to claim people canโt talk about fossil fuels and climate change because they use fossil fuelโderived products, such as plastic keyboards, is nonsensical.
Thereโs no denying that oil, coal and gas are tremendously useful. They hold super-concentrated energy from the sun and are used to make a variety of products, from medicines to lubricants to plastics. The problems arenโt the resources but our profligate use of them. Using them more wisely is a start. In many cases, we also have alternatives.
Burning oil, coal and gas to propel inefficient automobiles and generate electricity illustrates the problem. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, about 14 to 30 per cent of a gasoline-powered carโs fuel is used to propel the vehicle. That energy is mostly moving a tonne of car, which often holds one 80-kilogram person. Thatโs a lot of fuel and energy to transport one or two people.
Looked at this way, even electric or hybrid personal vehicles arenโt terribly efficient, but they at least pollute less than gas-powered vehicles โ and the EPA notes 74 to 94 per cent of an electric carโs energy goes to moving the vehicle and its passengers. Energy-efficient or electric vehicles are moving in the right direction, but public transit and active transport such as cycling and walking are better alternatives.
Fossil fuel power plants are also inefficient. Only about a third of the power generated reaches consumers. More is lost through wasteful household or business use. A lot of energy is also required to extract, process and transport fuels to power plants. Because of the many methods of generating and supplying electricity with renewable sources such as solar, wind and geothermal, itโs tough to put exact numbers on efficiency, but far less power is wasted. Because the energy sources are inexhaustible and donโt produce emissions, waste isnโt as big a concern as with fossil fuels โ although itโs still important.
Most plastics are also made from oil โ which presents another set of problems. As with fuels, people started making plastics from oil because it was inexpensive, plentiful and easy for corporations to exploit and sell. Our consume-and-profit economic system meant automakers once designed cars not to be efficient but to burn more fuel than necessary. Likewise, manufacturers create far more plastic products than necessary. Many items donโt serve much purpose beyond making money. Sometimes the packaging is worth more than the contents!
Itโs so bad that researchers from Australiaโs University of Tasmania and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds recently found 18 tonnes of plastic garbage โ 239 items per square metre โ scattered across a small South Pacific island 5,000 kilometres from the nearest human occupation. Scientists have also found massive, swirling patches of plastic in the North and South Pacific oceans, each holding around 400,000 plastic particles per square kilometre. University of Tasmania researcher Jennifer Lavers said plastic in the oceans could be as great a threat as climate change. โYou put carbon dioxide into the atmosphere or plastic in the oceans and both will stick around,โ she told New Scientist.
As with fossil fuels, the first step to addressing the problem is to substantially reduce plastics usage. There are also alternatives. To begin, we should recycle everything already produced. Plastics can also be made from renewable resources, such as hemp, or any fast-growing plant that contains cellulose. In fact, plastics were once commonly made from animal products such as horn and tusks, but when those became expensive, people started using plants, switching to oil products when that became more profitable.
We can and must cut down on fossil fuels and plastics. We also have alternatives, and ways to prevent plastics from ending up in the oceans. Those who look away and pretend we donโt have a problem are only slowing solutions and accelerating our self-destruction.
David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaster, author and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Senior Editor Ian Hanington. David Suzukiโs latest book is Just Cool It!: The Climate Crisis and What We Can Do (Greystone Books), co-written with Ian Hanington.
Learn more atย www.davidsuzuki.org.
Image credit: Kevin Krejci via Flickr CC Byย 2.0
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