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Climate Emergency

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  • kigelia said:
    Not its own. No one measure will be enough. 

    We need to slow/reverse population growth. 
    We also need to focus less on economic growth as a consequence of consumption. 
    We need use less fossil fuels. 
    We need to use less ‘stuff’
    we need to fly less
    we need to use more public transportation (ideally it should be free) and less private/personal transportation in the form of cars.
    We need to eat less meet
    we need to invest heavily in researching efficient, high capacity battery storage on large scales.

    All the tiny things we can do as individuals are useful as they build a bit more momentum and general mindset change. 
    I am just entirely unconvinced that reducing population growth - by whatever means - will make any difference at all in the short period of time we have to reverse climate change.  

    I think "overpopulation" is something that we can't "fix" in a way that materially benefits the climate.  Your suggestions for population reduction are very good, sensible, achievable and realistic.  It's just that it would take decades to make any difference to the population of the planet.  Decades we don't have. 

    An interesting example of the reduction in birthrate is China's one-child policy.  Introduced in 1979 when the population of the country was 975 million.  When it was finally scrapped in 2015, the population had grown to 1.37 billion.  Reducing the birth rate resulted in an increase in population of around 30%.  It also accelerated population ageing - the proportion of people aged 65 or older quadrupled. The working age population declined. 

    So, thirty-odd years of a policy designed to reduce birth rate has had unintended consequences, over the course of decades.  That's not the right way to fix the climate crisis. 
  • There is educate those who forever are having a pile of off spring and expecting everyone else to pick up the tab. 
    That’s a very parochial viewpoint that might have merit in the western world but that doesn’t have any meaning when you talk about the poorer parts of the world. In some places they have a lot of children because the infant mortality rate is high and also they need to have children to look after them when they’re old because there is no welfare state or other support. It’s not an easy subject to negotiate.
  • In other words you don't have the answer. 
    But neither do I.
    The answer to the problem has to be found with all the world's leaders coming together with an open mind to the problem. 
    I very much doubt anyone on a football forum will provide you with the answers so it's pointless asking. 
    Our leaders spent years bickering about a change, not a cessation, to our trading agreement with our nearest neighbours. I'm not confident they have the wherewithal to pull together with others to resolve an existential crisis, and I call it that because, when climate change causes a loss of habitat, species have been known to go extinct in the past.
  • kigelia said:
    Education, public health and women’s rights are I believe the key things show to reduce the birth rate. 
    Absolutely but that’s not an option in large parts of the world. Certainly it’s a laudable ambition but possible in the timeframes we’re looking at with climate change. ?
  • edited January 19
    Chizz said:
    I am just entirely unconvinced that reducing population growth - by whatever means - will make any difference at all in the short period of time we have to reverse climate change.  

    I think "overpopulation" is something that we can't "fix" in a way that materially benefits the climate.  Your suggestions for population reduction are very good, sensible, achievable and realistic.  It's just that it would take decades to make any difference to the population of the planet.  Decades we don't have. 

    An interesting example of the reduction in birthrate is China's one-child policy.  Introduced in 1979 when the population of the country was 975 million.  When it was finally scrapped in 2015, the population had grown to 1.37 billion.  Reducing the birth rate resulted in an increase in population of around 30%.  It also accelerated population ageing - the proportion of people aged 65 or older quadrupled. The working age population declined. 

    So, thirty-odd years of a policy designed to reduce birth rate has had unintended consequences, over the course of decades.  That's not the right way to fix the climate crisis. 

    A near-universal one-child limit was imposed in 1980 and written into the country's constitution in 1982. Numerous exceptions were established over time, and by 1984, only about 35.4% of the population was subject to the original restriction of the policy.

    There are some unintended consequences of reducing the birth rate - the obvious one being the end of humanity in the extreme. But more realistically, the current UK birth rate is 1.44 children for each woman - if that is maintained, and assuming no net immigration, the population of the UK would halve in less than 100 years, and that remaining half would be an ever ageing population. Society would cease to function as we know it today with not nearly enough labour to generate the wealth required for infrastructure, not least the health service.
  • RobRob
    edited January 19
    Yes, but the tech billionaire ‘Oligarchs’ (a Biden term) were firmly in the Biden camp before Trump won the election. OK, Musk ‘converted’ earlier but you get my drift. Weren’t they doing the same thing then from a left perspective? On which side they truly lean, who knows!
  • edited January 19
    Rob said:
    Yes, but the tech billionaire ‘Oligarchs’ (a Biden term) were firmly in the Biden camp before Trump won the election. OK, Musk ‘converted’ earlier but you get my drift. Weren’t they doing the same thing then from a left perspective? On which side they truly lean, who knows!

    They lean to the side that is in power, or likely to gain power. Siding with the party in opposition doesn't do a lot for their businesses. Your point seems to predicate some form of moral compass - sadly non-existent.
  • Agreed. My point was that it works both ways.
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  • Rob said:
    Agreed. My point was that it works both ways.

    Yes - and my point is that they don't do politics, they do £, $ and any other currency that can make them money.
  • Chizz said:
    I am just entirely unconvinced that reducing population growth - by whatever means - will make any difference at all in the short period of time we have to reverse climate change.  

    I think "overpopulation" is something that we can't "fix" in a way that materially benefits the climate.  Your suggestions for population reduction are very good, sensible, achievable and realistic.  It's just that it would take decades to make any difference to the population of the planet.  Decades we don't have. 

    An interesting example of the reduction in birthrate is China's one-child policy.  Introduced in 1979 when the population of the country was 975 million.  When it was finally scrapped in 2015, the population had grown to 1.37 billion.  Reducing the birth rate resulted in an increase in population of around 30%.  It also accelerated population ageing - the proportion of people aged 65 or older quadrupled. The working age population declined. 

    So, thirty-odd years of a policy designed to reduce birth rate has had unintended consequences, over the course of decades.  That's not the right way to fix the climate crisis. 
    Wow! Selective fact warning.
    400 million babies were not born because of that policy. 
    So one less USA on the planet.

  • bobmunro said:

    Yes - and my point is that they don't do politics, they do £, $ and any other currency that can make them money.
    I understand. I was refuting what Canters had said above. 
  • Rob said:
    Yes, but the tech billionaire ‘Oligarchs’ (a Biden term) were firmly in the Biden camp before Trump won the election. OK, Musk ‘converted’ earlier but you get my drift. Weren’t they doing the same thing then from a left perspective? On which side they truly lean, who knows!
    In the words of the great man "You took the words right out of my mouth"
  • bobmunro said:

    They lean to the side that is in power, or likely to gain power. Siding with the party in opposition doesn't do a lot for their businesses. Your point seems to predicate some form of moral compass - sadly non-existent.
    Didn't see too many of them on Trumps side from 2016-2020 !
  • MrWalker said:
    Wow! Selective fact warning.
    400 million babies were not born because of that policy. 
    So one less USA on the planet.

    The country's population grew by 395 million. So, one more USA on the planet. 
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  • Thank you for (hopefully) steering us back on track, Swordfish.
  • edited January 20
    It's very relevant on a thread about climate change, when it points to a long post which  is about many topics except climate change. 


    You normally love talking about how disinformation is misleading people.
    But I guess that's only Ok with you, so long as it relates to COVID and nothing else?

    And fine for you to all winge about how Billionaires are destroying the planet and have suddenly taken a sharp right turn, but you don't like it when I generously give my time to explain to you the reasons why that's so.
  • I think that’s really unnecessary and adds nothing to the debate, which I’ve been happily watching from the sidelines as I see both points of view. 
    But he's the resident comedian don't you know.
    Or rather, he thinks he is.
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