The converter and the membrane
In 1975 a small ceramic honeycomb appeared in the exhaust of American cars. The catalytic converter cut tailpipe pollution by about 90 percent per vehicle, and it did it without asking anyone to drive less. That is the pattern we keep pointing at. London’s Great Smog of 1952 killed thousands in a week; what ended the killer fog was not virtue but cleaner fuel and better combustion.
We build the thing that makes the dirty option obsolete. Scrubbers on smokestacks. Desalination plants that now supply most of Israel’s drinking water from the sea. Reuse systems that let Singapore drink its own rivers back. Cheap sensors that put a working air monitor in anyone’s pocket. Wealthier countries have cleaner air and water, reliably, because wealth buys the engineering — every system runs on a physical substrate, and ours keeps getting more efficient per unit of harm.
The policy-first camp says the rule forced the invention. Sometimes it did. We just notice the rule is useless if the technology to meet it does not exist — you cannot mandate a converter nobody has invented. Set the target and let engineers find the path.
Where we concede ground: Get rich first, clean up later
is also an alibi — it leaves the poor breathing poison while they wait their turn.
What would change our mind: If another two decades of cheap sensors and membranes don’t dent farm runoff and particulate deaths, the gadget wasn’t the story.
Read the full synthesis: What would it take to clean up the air and water?