Man, I sure wish cybertrucks had been around to deflect when I spent 7 years driving a Fiat Panda.
houseofleft
I think that's a really good point to be fair. Would be interested to see what it was on a consumption basis - like other people are pointing out, the lifestyle of the ultra rich is definitely pretty carbon intensive.
I think there's a lot of focus on minimizing individual's impact, and don't get me wrong, that's a great thing to do, but it puts burden and guilt on people for things that are out of their control
If your government (wherever you are) held fossil fuel companies and the agro-industrial complex to account and encouraged investment in renewables, public transport and ground sourced heating, you would be living a low impact lifestyle just by going to work, buying your groceries and living normally.
If you have the money to invest in solar panels, EVs etc, that's fantastic, but don't feel guilt for not being priviledged!
The most impactful thing you can do is put pressure on your government to recognise the impact we're having on our ecology. Sign petitions, write to your representative, fund and/or join activist groups.
Importantly, try not to feel shamed, as an individual you didn't cause the situation (unless maybe you are a fossil fuel lobbyist, or oilcompany CEO) - go easy on yourself and just do what you can.
Thanks for such a detailed response! I'm planning on mainly using it for smallish trips, say heading into my local town. I've recently move to being just outside walking distance but it's very short distance to drive for.
I also live around a lot of woods and it'd be good to be able to ride on a dirt path now and then.
From what I can see a 'hybrid' sounds like it'd be a good fit?
Thanks! Relieved it sounds easy enough to figure out
This is the dumbest bet you can make and more or less the definition of lose/lose- if we fail to move off greenhouse gasses, what kind of mad max style future are you hoping to be rich in?
Does anyone have link to some more information on the science of why this is happening?
The article references a bunch of causes, like deforestation, ocean poisening affecting the ocean carbon pump, extreme heat etc. Are there any studies/data that try to break down where the impact comes from?
Gonna skirt right round the serious discussion about oil company based misinformation here and point out that his suit is an extreme act of terror on the seeing.
How much CO2 does AI use compared to other industries? I know it's a horrific use compared to all other software, but have no idea how it factors in global carbon emmissions?
Also, just to be clear, I'm genuinely curious and not defending burning huge amounts of carbon for profit if the AI sector is comparatively small. That kind of backwards "but it just a small amount of everything else" logic would be a great way to accelerate our already too fast death spiral.
Yeah, hopefully this is some genuinely good news, but it's hard not to see it as an unbelievably positive spin on the fact that this year we'll emit more CO2 than any year in record.
Oh boy, have fun! CTEs have pretty wide support, so you might be in luck (well at least in that respect, in all other cases you're still using saleforce amd my commiserations are with you)
I have a Fairphone 4 and would definitely give them the biggest recommendation I could.
Any part can be replaced with a screwdriver which is an order of magnitude better than I've seen with other brands. I dropped and broke my phone screen and although I had to buy a new screen, after that I had a phone working as if it was brand new.
I also got mortar into my usb charging socket and was able to replace the charging socket.
You might be able to tell that I'm not the best at looking after things, I'm working on this but in the meantime, fairphone have saved me at least two situations where I'd normally need to buy a new phone. Can't recommend them enough.