by davep » Tue 29 Jan 2008, 19:33:53
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', 'O')ne of the problems with this kind of thread is that it seems to frame the topic so that all sides are stuck arguing along one dimension--in this case, production. We all become little Cheneys, obsessed with energy production, but implicitly or explicitly dismissing the, in fact, central importance of conservation.
If we wanted to reflect their relative importance, we should have 10 or more threads on conservation (reuse, using less, doing without...) for every thread on production, whether from conventional or from alternative sources.
We already use, directly or indirectly, some 40% of the earth's current biological capacity, and many times that when you factor in fossil fuels, which represents use of the earth's earlier biological capacity.
It's time, actually long past time, to think about how to massively scale back from this absurdly enormous use of energy, to "power down," to decide what power is (and we are) really for.
That's a fair point, but this thread is specifically about the merits or otherwise of Pimentel's research. It's a bit rarefied, but I think most of us assume that any future would require power-down and don't see the various alternatives as being a direct replacement for what we have now. It's not really a "production" question as in scale, but a viability question in a post-peak world. I'm not sure many here would defend current "bio-ethanol" practices.
What we think, we become.