by lorenzo » Fri 12 May 2006, 15:35:22
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'T')oo bad for all the plant and animal species that will be extinguished by your massive coconut-plantation schemes, huh Lorenzo? But yeah, maybe if we convert every bit of soil to biomass glop farms we can continue to keep our highways crammed with SUVs for a few more decades until climate change finishes us off.
No, many thousands of those islands are *naturally* populated by coconut trees. No need for plantations. All you have to do is to pick up a fraction of those coconuts from nearby islands (trained monkeys do the job, easily and happily). You know, those uninhabited islands where the reality TV survival shows are shot? That kind. They're full of coconuts!
I can imagine that with oil at US$ 20 it wasn't worth sailing all the way to that island over there, just to pick up some coconuts. But with oil at US$ 75, and with the possibility of turning them into profit-making biodiesel, that island definitely becomes worth visiting.
With a satellite, a gps and some simple software, you can calculate exactly which islands are worth visiting.
Random pic turning up when you put the search term "uninhabited island" into Pbase:
Caption: "the only things I pick up from trekking all these uninhabited islands"
Maybe our friend Louie can tell us more about the unexploited potential...