by aflurry » Sat 13 May 2006, 20:41:30
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('RonMN', '
')One thing we could do right now today, is carpool...if everybody did it we could cut our transportation cunsumption of oil in half OVERNIGHT! But what would that do to the auto industry? Or the tire industry? Then what do we do with the massive amounts of unemployed people?
well, this is sort of the reason i am floating this idea... personally, i have an aesthetic preference for solutions like carpooling (it's more social, less stressful, etc.), and other forms of reduction, an not just it terms of fuels usage, but reducing the the whole manic overproduction/overconsumption cycle.
however, it is the recognition of the very fact that you point out that makes me entertain these ideas despite my distaste for them. (here's another inevitable example of diminishing return: once your boss relizes that you can sleep for your whole two hour commute, guess who is expected to show up two hours earlier?)
But, here is a claim that we can acheive a dramatic efficiency increase without having to retool the economic architecture which we currently employ to make things happen. in fact, this will put people to work installing road sensors, producing fancy new cars with hi-tech gadjets all over 'em, rewiring suburban mcmansions with heavy duty wiring to handle the added load, developing the computer systems to manage all that load sharing and usage monitoring that will ahve to be involved, and all that industry devoted to the aim of REDUCING energy consumption rather than increasing it.
it sounds like magic! unfortunately, per my post above, i suspect it is.
but honestly, i hate bind this argument leads me to. no attempt to employ commerce to the task of energy reduction will work. it's like trying to use a sledge hammer to pull out a railroad spike, or a saw to stick two boards together. it is the wrong tool for the job. however, any attempt to reduce energy consumption by other means will damage commerce to the point that all of life's necessities we have handed over to it to provide, will disappear... poof!
and therein lies the rub.