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sustainable development

  • Eric Stevens•...

    Stop Debating Outcomes. Start Replacing Inputs.

    We talk about systems like they are ideas. They are not. Every economic system is built on a small set of physical inputs. Commodities. Materials. Things that get dug up, grown, refined, shipped, and standardized. Whoever controls those inputs controls everything downstream....
    sociology
    economics
    environmental science
    sustainable development
    Comments
    0
  • Eric Stevens•...
    If people cannot change the commodities society depends on, then protest alone will never produce lasting change. Protest is good at signaling pain. It is not designed to reroute capital. That’s not a moral judgment. It’s a structural one....
    sociology
    economics
    political science
    social movements
    sustainable development
    Comments
    7
  • Willow avatar

    Waking up happy! Aligning with my most profound purpose and taking direct action on a moonshot—a movie for the Wellbeing Economy—has me waking up at 5 a.m. with a smile. I am excited to start learning, writing, and reaching out to people who can offer input. 

    nat•...

    What is the Wellbeing Economy?

    economics
    public policy
    sustainable development
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    When it comes "the global warming debate," there are often third ways that are ignored. Often the framing is global warming and climate deniers or something like that.

    but it seems like there are obviously multiple perspectives here, and these two black and white boxes keep us from really seeing potential solutions.

    Bjorn Lomborg for example believes in man-made climate change, but also doesn’t like the alarmism. Although he cherry picks data like he accuses others of, he also I think rightfully points out lots of flaws in the arguments that help us identify solutions. Much of the hurricane damage increase over time is because we’re building bigger and more expensive houses in hurricane alleys; for this problem, we can stop building there; everybody stopping flying altogether until 2100 delays increases the increase by a few weeks, so stopping flying isn’t the solution. Often the solutions are smaller, more local, less sexy: want less polar bears to die? Increase regulation on poaching. (Polar bear populations are up over the past decade because of this, apparently). I would love to identify and popularize these solutions, so they are spoken in the same breath as global warming rather than it being all gloom and doom and end of the world.

    There are real tricky questions about what we’re trying to preserve and for whom, as well. If all we care about are humans and climate migration, then building infrastructure in places like Haiti and even evolving to coal power would be more helpful.

    jordanSA•...
    Thanks Yuri, I hadn't come across Carbon Dividends (shows my ignorance of this whole field!). I want to research more but to share some quick thoughts (since I like learning from you and making the convo happen and if i dont do quick i might never respond or take far too long),...
    economics
    environmental policy
    sustainable development
    energy policy
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    When it comes "the global warming debate," there are often third ways that are ignored. Often the framing is global warming and climate deniers or something like that.

    but it seems like there are obviously multiple perspectives here, and these two black and white boxes keep us from really seeing potential solutions.

    Bjorn Lomborg for example believes in man-made climate change, but also doesn’t like the alarmism. Although he cherry picks data like he accuses others of, he also I think rightfully points out lots of flaws in the arguments that help us identify solutions. Much of the hurricane damage increase over time is because we’re building bigger and more expensive houses in hurricane alleys; for this problem, we can stop building there; everybody stopping flying altogether until 2100 delays increases the increase by a few weeks, so stopping flying isn’t the solution. Often the solutions are smaller, more local, less sexy: want less polar bears to die? Increase regulation on poaching. (Polar bear populations are up over the past decade because of this, apparently). I would love to identify and popularize these solutions, so they are spoken in the same breath as global warming rather than it being all gloom and doom and end of the world.

    There are real tricky questions about what we’re trying to preserve and for whom, as well. If all we care about are humans and climate migration, then building infrastructure in places like Haiti and even evolving to coal power would be more helpful.

    tommySA•...
    When I read "Protect 80%+ of the Earth’s land for environmental stewardship" my gut reaction was "yeah, right ~rolls eyes~" but then I immediately started thinking about how that could be possible - homes, offices, shopping malls that are integrated with the environment in...
    urban planning
    architecture
    environmental conservation
    sustainable development
    Comments
    0
  • jordanSA•...

    When it comes "the global warming debate," there are often third ways that are ignored

    Often the framing is "global warming" and "climate deniers" or something like that. but it seems like there are obviously multiple perspectives here, and these two black and white boxes keep us from really seeing potential solutions....
    environmental policy
    sustainable development
    climate change debates
    Comments
    25
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