Climate in the 21st Century

Will Humankind see the 22nd Century?

  • Not a fucking chance

    Votes: 45 28.0%
  • Maybe. if we get our act together

    Votes: 41 25.5%
  • Yes, we will survive

    Votes: 75 46.6%

  • Total voters
    161
Then his trade war cost the coal producing part of the country any chance they had of exports.
I was in the industry. The Chinese took over the manufacturing for a good portion of our product. They are hard to compete with. Their government subsides them to the point that they can sell finished goods shipped from china for cheaper than the raw materials cost.
But wait, we have a product that we do better than anybody. One of the few things we sell to China. Or did. We've made our product too expensive to buy but we still have to buy your stuff because we stopped making it.Way to go stable genius, we fought hard to get a market there.
 
I was in the industry. The Chinese took over the manufacturing for a good portion of our product. They are hard to compete with. Their government subsides them to the point that they can sell finished goods shipped from china for cheaper than the raw materials cost.
But wait, we have a product that we do better than anybody. One of the few things we sell to China. Or did. We've made our product too expensive to buy but we still have to buy your stuff because we stopped making it.Way to go stable genius, we fought hard to get a market there.
We will always need coal to make steel, even after we stop using it for fuel. We need to be smart about what we use. I can't wait until we use oil only for chemicals.
 
We will always need coal to make steel, even after we stop using it for fuel. We need to be smart about what we use. I can't wait until we use oil only for chemicals.
This day is coming, sooner than many think.

Solar is cheap. Really cheap. It's super amenable to distributed power schemes that don't tax the capacity of long distance power transmission and distribution systems, instead tending to lower demand on them.

Pakistan bought 22 Gigawatts of panels in just 2024 alone, a staggering quantity that will help the country's development and keep it from ever needing to generate that electricity from fossil fuels.

The United States needs to get serious about our own transition to renewables or we will be left behind. The petrodollar is dead.
 
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