Tuesday, March 09, 2021

What Could Explain This?

How much of this drop is caused by clean-burning natural gas, brought to us by fracking?

Yesterday, The United Nations released its Emissions Gap Report 2020, an annual assessment of contributions to greenhouse gas and carbon emissions. The report has some notable information amid an array of complicated projections that may or may not come true. It claims, for instance, that “despite a brief dip in carbon dioxide emissions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the world is still heading for a temperature rise.” 

But for the United States, the real value in this report is as an advisory that it need not join the Paris Climate Accord. This report is evidence that, instead, the U.S. should just keep doing what it is doing to cut its own emissions. The U.S. is the most successful major country at mitigating its own pollution, and the U.N. shows this. 

According to the report, “the United States of America emits 13 per cent of global GHG emissions.” Comparatively, “China emits more than one-quarter of global GHG emissions.” The U.S. still contributes the most greenhouse gas emissions per capita in the world, but, over the last decade, the country’s GHG emissions have been in decline (0.4 per cent per year).“ Greenhouse gas emissions per capita in the U.S. are dropping precipitously while those of China, India and Russia continue to rise. With the world’s most successful economy (over $21 trillion in 2019), it is not a surprise that the U.S. pollutes more per person, but the U.S. is making great strides in changing this. 

More electric cars will require more electricity.  Wind and solar are not reliable enough.  Anyone who wants to reduce so-called greenhouse gases and claims not to want to damage our standard of living, but who is against nuclear power, is not serious and should be ignored.

1 comment:

Ellen K said...

The Greens on the Left are oblivious to the fact that electricity has to be generated and wind and solar are simply not efficient enough to provide energy for the coming wave of electric cars.Centralizing your power sources is a recipe for rolling blackouts and energy shortages.