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Mike Roberts's avatar

I was hopeful, when you wrote "the shift to renewables is not free of environmental impact" that you recognise that no energy source capable of powering industrial technological civilisation is clean. And yet you then used that term "clean energy" (in some form) later in your piece, especially around hydrogen and fusion.

Though climate change is a big issue, it it just one of the many environmental issues we have, along with the limited resources issue. The only approach that makes sense, at a minimum, is to scale down our energy use. And yet economic growth and development is the priority for all countries. It's not true to suggest that a lower level of economic development doesn't have the issue of development and growth requires more energy. Of course, poorer nations use less energy but as they grow, they will require more energy.

The transition will be difficult. So far, it hasn't stopped growth in conventional and traditional energy sources, and emissions continue to grow. The transition seems to be as far off as it ever was. But if the transition is ever made (and surely there must be a big doubt over whether it is even possible), it will not stop environmental degradation and habitat loss, because it will continue to require non-renewable resource use, and at an increasing rate (though even a steady state level of use would be unsustainable). And it would enable an unsustainable civilisation to continue. But not for ever.

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Eamon O'Malley's avatar

This is incredibly comprehensive—thank you for all of this great information! I definitely learned a lot. Fusion could be extremely interesting given the recent revival of nuclear excitement and development—just subbed as well!

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