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by m12k 1675 days ago
> Efficiency and cost savings that just happen to reduce emissions? That's where the focus should be.

Isn't that where the focus has already been for decades? Which has pretty definitely proven itself insufficient for curbing emissions at anywhere near the scales that we need?

1 comments

Yes I would agree with that, but that doesn't mean we should stop trying. As an example, the NZ government is currently funding grants to reduce carbon emissions in livestock by 10%, which is an easily achievable target with current technology but the knowledge of how to do it isn't widespread.

A lot of this progress is unfortunately going to fall to governments and grants like this, which is probably where any carbon mitigation company needs to concentrate rather than venture capital. Once the claims about cost reduction can be proved, agriculture will follow soon enough.

Other industries will have similar grant schemes.

IMO that's exactly the argument why wee need a carbon tax. The status quo is that the only people who are really doing anything at all are some governments and the wokest part of the population. That's not nearly enough - we need all the companies and the whole population too. We don't just need to incentivize doing something else, but simultaneously disincentivize doing a lot of what we currently do, so everyone actually starts looking for alternatives. We can't just make emissions illegal without shutting down society, but we can (and should) make them painful.