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Regarding public transportation - it only works in countries that aren't as decentralized as the United States, the reason it will never work here is because we are a nation that embodies the idea of "sprawl", one of the very, very worst mentalities we could have insofar as we are concerned with trying to reduce our harm to the environment.
I'm not saying that makes it OK, but it's definitely why you will never see it happen in any meaningful sense unless by "Public Transportation" you mean "Public Teleportation."
As far as biofuels go I will say this much, the following paragraph sums up very nicely one of the massive logical fallacies of the biofuel push:
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These plant-based fuels were originally billed as better than fossil fuels because the carbon released when they were burned was balanced by the carbon absorbed when the plants grew. But even that equation proved overly simplistic because the process of turning plants into fuels causes its own emissions — for refining and transport, for example. |
Unfortunately, lots of people (academics included) failed both utterly and completely to realize the above - simply put, that the "Grow More Plants + Use Fuel From Them = Carbon Neutrality" argument is absurd from the outset.
This, however, doesn't mean that biofuels are useless and that we should stop pursuing them - it simply means we need to be far more thoughtful about how we implement them. For example, someone above said that solar energy wasn't doing anything for us now, which is just not true at all - solar and wind energy have made massive strides in the past 15 years.
One possible avenue would be to use either hydroponic or hot houses to grow switch grass, corn, or whichever plant you're using for fuel and attempt to eliminate the use of fuels that create greenhouse gases in its growth and refinement.
This, coupled with more stringent rules regarding land development (i.e. fuck the suburbs, save the rainforest, etc.) is only one option, but I guess my point is really only this: there isn't going to be an environmental "silver bullet", as the Times puts it, that will come and save us - it's going to take a lot of work, and this idea the general public has that some new fuel is going to pop up and save us is one of the biggest problems stemming environmental progress worldwide, not just in the U.S.
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last minute disco dot net
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