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by AnthonyMouse
1014 days ago
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The vast majority of CO2 emissions are from burning fossil fuels to generate heat/energy on the ground. We already know cost effective alternative ways to do that. That's ~90% of the way there with no increase in costs. We don't really have to "figure out" biofuels. They exist and are only moderately more expensive than fossil fuels. Institute a carbon tax and planes would run on biofuels and have 20-50% higher fuel costs, possibly less if cheap renewables lower energy costs in general and thereby the production cost for biofuels. On top of that, if petroleum fuels were only being used for aviation they might have lower economies of scale and higher prices, making biofuels more competitive. One of last big things we still need to figure out is what to do about cement. But even there half of the CO2 attributed to it is energy use rather than the chemical process, which could be switched away from fossil fuels. Then we could use less concrete and more wood or steel. Or someone might come up with a cost effective alternative to cement in concrete. The incentive to do all of these would exist with a carbon tax. The market is going to do whatever is most cost effective, even if it's only more cost effective by a modest percentage. But then all you need is a modest percentage in carbon tax and you're done. |
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I wouldn't say that all of that 90% is equally easy. There are challenges that increase as more power is made from solar/wind, and there are different challenges to making enough nuclear.