You can download a free PDF of the full contents my book, Wild Free and Happy.
https://postdoom.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Wild-Free-Happy.pdf
You can download a free PDF of the full contents my book, Wild Free and Happy.
https://postdoom.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Wild-Free-Happy.pdf
[Note: This post is sample 65, of Wild Free & Happy, the last in the series. It provides instructions for obtaining a free digital copy of the entire finished manuscript.]
Finally
Finished!
Greetings! I’m
delighted to finally announce the official release of a writing project I’ve
been working on for 25+ years. Wild Free & Happy
explores our long and bumpy relationship with the family of life. It spans from our ancient tree dwelling
ancestors to the rowdy mob of eight billion outside our windows today.
The mainstream mindset typically presents the big history
epic from a humanist perspective. We are
the greatest! We’re living in a
wonderland of astonishing progress. We
proudly celebrate the glorious rise of civilizations, empires, industries,
progress, technology, human brilliance, etc.
Stuff keeps getting better and better, and the best is yet to come!
That’s what I was taught in classrooms 60 years ago. It’s what my parents were taught 90 years
ago. It’s probably what today’s students
are still expected to memorize and regurgitate.
The embarrassing portions of the human saga are mostly shoved into our
monster closet and forgotten.
Today, the humanist faith is being roughed up by a heresy
called realism. Yesterday, there were
8.2 billion of us, the population meter keeps spinning, and the warning klaxons
are flashing and screaming. Ruthless
power-hungry strong men are popping up around the world like mushrooms after an
autumn rain, spilling rivers of blood.
We live in interesting times.
The planet is rocking and rolling with unusually devastating
storms, heat waves, wildfires, floods.
The climate is warming, glaciers are melting, oceans are
acidifying. Extinctions, deforestation,
soil destruction… Don’t worry! Solutions are on the way (and will be
massively profitable for investors).
Experts have everything under control.
For me, Wild
Free & Happy has evolved into something like a sacred quest, my
calling. I graduated from high school a
few weeks after the first Earth Day in 1970.
It was an era when there were minimal controls on industrial pollution,
and the consequences were horrid. By the
1990s, my attention was focused on environmental issues.
I spent lots of time reading, writing, and conversing
online. Among the dreamers of those days
were many fans of Daniel Quinn’s books — all we needed to do was drop out, form
tribes, hug trees, and the balance would be restored. Um, a beautiful idea, but....
Back in 2004, I used Wild Free & Happy as the title of a
91-page experiment. It appealed to the
optimistic magical thinking of that era.
Now, in 2024, that title suggests what we have lost and forgotten.
The Earth Crisis is a predicament, not a problem. Problems have solutions, predicaments have
outcomes. Overshoot is a predicament,
and it’s outcome is some sort of yucky process that returns humankind’s
eco-impacts to a level within the carrying capacity of the planet. This will not be fun and easy.
In 2011, I launched a blog
to share my rants and book reviews with a larger audience. By 2018, I was posting rough draft sample
chapters of Wild Free
& Happy, and the project was picking up steam. The blog has now had more than 899,000 views,
and should pass a million in January 2025.
In 2021, I proudly announced that my book project was close
to the finish line, ready to launch in just a few more weeks. Wrong!
My hungry brain kept discovering more and more amazing information —
important missing pieces that strongly boosted the potency of the reading
experience.
Now it’s 2024, my brains are tattered, and it’s time to
release my literary monsterpiece. The
last thing I want to do is spend two or three years finding a publisher. I don’t need money. I’m an extremely frugal bicycle riding
car-free wordsmith, and Social Security and Medicare take excellent care of me.
Our loony culture strongly expects us to shop till we drop,
and devote our lives to hoarding status trinkets. It utterly fails to educate society on
environmental history, and respect and reverence for the family of life. Ignorance is an expensive pathogen.
Consequently, most folks have little or no interest in
voluntarily making radical changes in order to reduce the impacts of their
lifestyles. Big Mama Nature doesn’t care
what our preferences are. She will do
what needs to be done, ready or not.
My secret plan is to release this book to the world, in
digital form, at no cost, to encourage folks to share it with others, and hope
that it might slow down our war on the future a bit. Printed books cost money, and many folks
don’t have $30 or more to spare for a non-necessity. Many folks in many places don’t have credit
cards and/or convenient access to parcel delivery services.
My free digital book can be downloaded with the click of a
mouse, and easily shared with friends and family. It’s intended to be fairly easy to read for
older teens. An additional benefit is that
it’s full of many hyperlinks to additional information, for readers eager to
learn as much as possible. On the
downside, hyperlinks have limited working lifespans. This manuscript has been evolving for
years. So, expect to find dead
links. It’s often possible to find these
links via the Internet Wayback Machine (web.archive.org)
I’ll release the book as a Microsoft Word document. As needed, it can be converted to other file
formats — PDF, EPUB, Kindle, Kobo, etc.
If folks with websites want to make my book available for
folks to download, great! I would prefer
not to be the world’s only distribution hub.
My library limits online access to one-hour segments. I don’t want to be the main hub.
Eco-organizations (Extinction Rebellion, Greenpeace, etc.)
could inform their supporters about the book, and maybe provide downloads.
From time to time I hear news of social media sites where
stuff can suddenly go viral, and reach a huge audience. Magicians known as influencers can encourage
surges of interest. All I know is
Facebook.
My book’s three big assets are (1) the immense number of
sources. I’ve been doing the research
for 25+ years, read 600+ books, and countless papers, articles, and
websites. (2) It’s designed for folks
who have a serious interest in learning.
Lots of hyperlinks, and a generous bibliography. (3) I wasn’t working to generate rent money,
so I was free to invest lots of time and take deep dives into fascinating side
trips.
OK! If you want a
copy, send a note to [email protected] (not FB Messenger). Please feel free to share the book with
others.
[Note: This is a new section from the rough draft of Wild, Free, & Happy. This is probably the end of the body text. These samples start with sample 01, and follow the sequence listed HERE (if you happen to have some free time).
Helter
Skelter
Stephen Pyne has spent a lifetime thinking about
fire. Without the ability to use fire as
a powerful tool, humans could have never migrated out of tropical Africa and
colonized the outer world.
When human
pioneers eventually reached the Fertile Crescent in the Middle East, they
discovered plant and animal species that were especially ideal for
domestication. This region became known
as the Cradle of Civilization. Its
development enabled us to accelerate our long and painful march to the
staggering eco-horrors of today.
Pyne is
especially concerned about industrial fire.
Its combustion of fossil fuel results in carbon emission levels that are
turbocharging an angry swarm of catastrophes.
“Our ecological effects have had the impact of a
slow collision with an asteroid… together we have so reworked the planet that
we now have remade biotas, begun melting most of the relic ice, turned the
atmosphere into a crock pot, and the oceans into acid vats.”
Fire made us the unusual creatures we have become. Our colonization of the world was like a
spreading human wildfire that expanded across unspoiled wildernesses in
search of fuel. We enjoyed feasting on
megafauna until they became scarce, at which point we advanced into new
regions. Over time, hungry humans ran
out of unoccupied territory to expand into.
Oh-oh!
Groups had to revise their menus to include different food
sources. Aggressive groups could attempt
to smash their way into territories inhabited by other groups. As the millennia passed, and populations
grew, friction between groups increased and spilled blood became more
common.
Weaker groups were more likely to be swept aside. For example, of all the surviving wild
cultures, the San people have the oldest DNA.
Their time-proven way of life was incredibly sustainable. Their original homeland territory was vast,
but over time, farmers and herders eventually snatched most of it away, forcing
the San to retreat to the harsh Kalahari Desert. By the 1970s, their traditional way of life
had taken a serious beating.
Alfred
Crosby summed up a bedrock lesson of history: “Winning streaks are rarely
permanent.” Like the traditional San
people, most of the countless wild cultures that once existed sooner or later
got blindsided by stuff like disease, colonization, capitalism, genocide,
urbanization, and so on. The wild
cultures that still survive are not safe and secure. Intruders from the outer world rarely enjoy a
warm and fuzzy reputation for being kind and caring ladies and gentlemen.
Meanwhile, in the fast lane, the human wildfire learned
how to paddle down rivers, sail across oceans, roll on railways, drive across
continents, fly through the clouds, zoom to the moon, vaporize cities, produce
enough food to feed billions, blindside a stable climate, exterminate vast
forests, and turn Earth into a loony bin for hordes of lost and confused
primates.
Big History is a million-page catalog of countless bloody
dog-eat-dog conflicts between tribes, nations, religions, and empires. The strongest usually triumphed over the
weakest, because the weak had no right to what they could not defend. But those who remained in the fast lane were
still vulnerable to getting blindsided by brutal surprises.
Sadly, glowing screens and motor vehicles are more
precious than wooly mammoths or healthy planets. The wizards of progress are guiding us toward
a future of unimaginable prosperity, decarbonized energy, and tremendous achievements
in family planning. Everyone will
eagerly cooperate. Really? Well, if you believe it, it’s true!
Animal
in the Mirror
Pyne noted, “Without fire humanity sinks to a status of
near helplessness, a plump chimp with a scraping stone and digging stick,
hiding from the night’s terrors, crowding into minor biotic niches.” In other words, an ordinary wild animal.
Since Neanderthals disappeared from the stage, our closest
living relatives are now the chimps and bonobos, with whom we share up to 99
percent of our genes. They have lived in
the same forests, in the same way, for several million years, without degrading
their ecosystem, starting a fire, or fooling around with tools fancier than
sticks or stones. They luckily benefit
from their isolation, and the fact that their traditional habitat does not
contain valuable resources that are tempting to greed monsters from outer
space.
In his book Grandfather,
Tom Brown shared a beautiful story he heard from his mentor Stalking Wolf, a
traditional Apache from desert country, who traveled widely over the years,
from the Amazon to Alaska, living off the land, and learning from it. One time, while in Alaska as winter
approached, he frantically had to stock up on food and firewood for the coming
months.
A bit later, when the snows arrived, he became fascinated
by the ptarmigans, birds that survived in the frigid climate by their wits
alone, sleeping in cozy snowdrifts. They
belonged in this arctic land, like the lizards belonged in Death Valley. Lizards could not survive in Alaska, and
ptarmigans could not survive on the desert.
With the use of specialized tools, our species could
survive almost anywhere. But Grandfather
felt uncomfortable because humans without fire and tools can only survive in
special ecosystems. He deeply wanted to
genuinely belong somewhere, like the ptarmigans and lizards. Over the passage of time, their way of life had
become fine tuned for surviving in the ecosystems they inhabited.
Dear reader, this is a tremendously important point. Animals that are wild, free, and happy are
perfectly at home in the wild ecosystems they inhabit. Like squirrels in an oak forest, they live
where they belong, and remain intimately attuned to their habitat.
Our hominin ancestors fanned out across the planet, and
eventually generated assorted impacts, including numerous extinctions. Today, most of the mob of eight billion no
longer lives and thinks like healthy wild animals. A number of cultures have developed
worldviews and lifestyles that are self destructively unclever, and ferociously
brutal to the family of life.
Jay Griffiths
wrote that humans evolved as highly alert nomadic hunters and foragers. “We were made to walk through our lives
wildly awake.” Modern lifestyles are
often mind-numbing routines — the opposite of the freedom we so deeply
need. When healthy wildness deteriorates
into passive obedience, we become vulnerable to the burning pain of cage
rage. Very often, the daily news seems
to be a barrage of batshit crazy cage rage stories from a wheezing world.
Timothy
Scott Bennett concluded that we modern consumers
were born and raised in captivity, something like zoo animals, the opposite of free,
wildly awake, and at one with the land.
Robin
Wall Kimmerer is a Potawatomi biologist.
One of the spirits in their tribal traditions is Windigo, a monstrous
demon cursed with a voracious appetite.
The more it eats, the hungrier it becomes. In the old days, Windigo was notorious for
hunting too hard, and not sharing with others, leading to hunger times.
Later, uninvited pale faced invaders from outer space
smashed into tribal lands. Native folks
were stunned by their pathological foolishness.
Around the world, colonists have now created countless Windigo
whirlwinds of mining, deforestation, industrial agriculture, overhunting, and
insatiable shopping.
Today, the hurricane of daily news from around the world
shouts that the Windigo spirit has become a horrific global superpower. Billions of folks everywhere eagerly dream of
having more, more, more. Even the
superrich are maniacally grabbing and hoarding as much status glitter as possible. This is not the path to a balanced and
healthy future.
The
Future?
In the preceding pages, I have explored my core question:
how did things get to be this way? Now
what? Humankind is deep in overshoot,
and zooming down the path to a treacherously exciting future without brakes or
safety nets. My computer has a wonderful
Undo function that can easily vaporize a sequence of mistakes. Nature does not. If you broke it, you bought it.
For folks who have more than a dozen working brain cells,
the growing number of climate change reports and news stories are
overwhelming. It’s not a fake news hoax
(unless you pretend it is). Indeed,
folks who yank off their blinders can discover a nonstop firehose of
heartbreaking stories about floods, furious storms, heat waves, droughts, crop
failures, melting glaciers, massive wildfires, and on and on — week after week
after week.
Our foolishly unclever culture, hobbled by limited
understanding and foresight, has successfully conjured into existence a
colossal whirlwind of bad juju. Eight
billion consumers, with their famously big brains, are stampeding down the fast
lane to a turbulent blind date with the rough justice of overshoot. How embarrassing!
Fare
Thee Well!
Dearest reader, congratulations! One way or another, you’ve arrived at the skanky
rear end of this word dance. Pressure is
visibly rising around the world, rivets are popping on the Titanic, and the
global circus has become a freakshow of wildfires, climate catastrophes,
conspiracy theories, religious fanaticism, cocky neofascism, merciless
dog-eat-dog greed, berserk cage rage, pathological status seeking,
fire-breathing patriarchy, and all-purpose bad craziness. Something seems to be out of balance. Like the old Chinese proverb warns, we are
living in interesting times.
OK! I’ve said what
I needed to say. I hope you’ve had some
kind of meaningful experience with my literary monsterpiece. Good luck!
Do your best!
An
Innocent Booboo?
Finally, a weird idea.
Kindling the first domestic fire by spinning a fire drill stick was not,
in any way, an obvious thing for a wild African primate to do. The uncomfortable possibility is that maybe just
one individual ancestor (a kid?) discovered it purely by accident, and it
consequently unleashed two million years of change and catastrophe, and created
the global horror show outside your window.
Whoops! Undo! Undo! Undo! Shit!
[Note: This is a new section from the rough draft of Wild, Free, & Happy. It’s finally getting closer to the home stretch. These samples start with sample 01, and follow the sequence listed HERE (if you happen to have some free time).
Welcome
to the Anthropocene
Scientists enjoy categorizing, ranking, and naming. In the realm of Earth history, they have
broken the process down into a series of epochs — like the Pliocene,
Pleistocene, Holocene, etc. In the
mid-1970s, some folks began feeling a need to create a new epoch, the
Anthropocene, an era when human activities generated substantial eco-impacts.
Science has not yet agreed on an official definition. Some say it started with the explosive
impacts of the Great Acceleration, which began in 1945. Others say the Industrial Revolution (~1780). Others say the Neolithic Revolution, the dawn
of agriculture and civilization, which began about 12,000 years ago.
Dan Flores
believes that it began much earlier, during the late Pleistocene, as humans
migrated out of Africa. When they
arrived in new regions for the first time, megafauna species were hit hard,
resulting in a series of extinctions. He
wrote, “The Pleistocene extinctions, in other words, look very much like the
first act of the Anthropocene, the beginnings of what we now call the Sixth
Extinction.”
These early ancestors were successful predators because they
benefitted from technological advantages including spears, slings, blades, warm
clothing, and fire. High-tech teams were
able to kill powerful prey. Their
high-tech advantages enabled humans to successfully colonize much of snow
country — despite the fact that their lean and nearly hairless bodies were
finetuned by evolution for tropical climates.
Close your eyes and imagine what northern Eurasia and the
Americas would look like today if they had never been colonized by hominins — a
vast, astonishing, Serengeti-like wild paradise of abundant life! Wow!
Wild, free, happy… and perfectly healthy and sustainable! Imagine that!
When our ancestors first wandered in, snow country was home
to a variety of huge animals that had enjoyed living there for a very, very
long time — grazers, browsers, predators, and so on. A number of these species were originally
from tropical regions of Africa and Asia, like the elephant, rhino, and
sabertooth families. Over time, these
tropical megafauna species gradually evolved traits that improved their ability
to survive in the cooler climate, like warm coats of thick fur.
Snow monkeys (Japanese macaques) are interesting
primates. Like our hominin ancestors,
they originated in tropical Africa several million years ago. Over time, their ancestors wandered off into
the outer world, and eventually migrated from Korea to Japan more than 300,000
years ago. Some now live in Japan’s
chilly regions, where snow might cover the ground for four months, in depths up
to 10 feet (3 m), and temperatures can plunge to -4°F (-20°C).
Snow monkeys adapted to snow country via a long slow process
of evolution. So now, when winter
approaches, their thin summer fur automatically grows and thickens into luxurious
warm coats. During the summer, they
build up body fat by feasting at the warm season buffet. In winter months, they survive on stored body
fat, and rough foods like leaves and bark.
They huddle together to keep warm.
They don’t use fire. They’ve
lived 300,000 years in Japan, and they’re still alive today because humans have
allowed them to continue existing.
Also around 300,000 years ago, Homo sapiens emerged in Africa. From there, we migrated out of the tropics,
and eventually colonized most of the world, including regions having temperate
or arctic climates. Instead of gradually
evolving beneficial adaptations like the snow monkeys did, our clever
technology boosted our ability to keep warm and survive in chilly places.
In modern cultures, a belief in human supremacy is the
norm. Our limitless brilliance is the
mother of infinite miracles. We’ll
easily fix climate change, save the world, colonize Mars, and enjoy endless
love, peace, and happiness! The notion
of Anthropocene has an aroma of human vanity.
We are the most powerful and important critters on Earth!
Welcome to the Pyrocene
The four primordial elements are earth, water, air, and
fire. Fire has existed on the planet for
more than 400 million years, long before the dinosaurs. It will continue burning long after the human
circus moves off the stage, as long as there is fuel, oxygen, and spark.
One mind-altering day, my brain crashed into the work of Stephen
Pyne, the
author of more than 30 books about fire, and one of the world’s foremost
experts on fire history. He described an
extremely crucial turning point in Big History: the domestication of fire. The earliest evidence of this has been found
in South Africa, inside Swartkrans Cave.
It dates to about two million years ago, long before the emergence of Homo sapiens. The two primary suspects are Homo erectus, or an
earlier australopithecine hominin. Did
we drive these predecessors off the stage?
Much later,
Homo sapiens inherited the knowledge of fire making, and this
ability eventually enabled us to become the dominant species on Earth, and the
planet thrashing demolition team of today.
Greek mythology includes the story of Prometheus, a sassy man
who stole fire from the god Zeus and gave it to humans. Stories say that he was the inventor of the
fire drill, the tool for kindling flame.
He boldly violated forbidden limits, and the gods severely punished
him. His theft initiated the dawn of
human misery.
As discussed earlier (see Mother Africa), the domestication
of fire began in the same general timeframe as a wave of megafauna extinctions
in Africa. Was this a coincidence? Peter Ungar noted, “…the sudden appearance of
large concentrations of artifacts and animal remains around two million years
ago surely signals a change in the role of hominins in their world.
Our ancestors had grabbed a place at the dinner table with
the large carnivores. Hominins were
eating antelopes, hippos, horses, giraffes, and elephants. Stone tools gave hominins better access to
meat and marrow.
Pyne thinks that the Anthropocene idea is too limited. It is rooted in the emergence of agriculture
and civilization. But the primary event
that made these changes possible was the domestication of fire. So, instead of the narrower time window of
the Anthropocene, he recommends the creation of a broader epoch called the Pyrocene (pyro means
fire). It would include the events of
the Anthropocene. The Pyrocene would
close the curtains on the ancient Ice Age, and usher in the new and turbulent
Fire Age.
Pyne described three categories of fire.
·
First fire is natural, sparked into flame by
lightning, volcanoes, etc. Its fuel is
wood and vegetation. This fire has
existed for 400 million years.
·
Second fire is anthropogenic, ignited by
hominins. It enabled agriculture,
civilization, early industry, soil destruction, deforestation, and the massive
expansion of human inhabited regions.
Its fuel is wood and vegetation.
· Third
fire ripped open the trap door to hell.
Growth of the industrial era eventually required far more fuel than
firewood could provide. The
heartbreaking mistake was to introduce the fire breathing monster to fossil
hydrocarbons (coal, oil, gas). Suddenly,
humankind had access to a million times more energy dense combustible
fuels. Shit! Trouble ahead!
Carbon Cycle
NOAA
calls carbon “the chemical backbone of life on Earth. Carbon compounds influence the Earth’s
temperature, make up the food that sustains us, and provide energy that fuels
the global economy.”
Carbon is an element that exists in the atmosphere, oceans,
living organisms, rocks, soils, sediments, fossil fuel reservoirs, etc. This is called the carbon pool. The pool is a magic act that allows the flow
of carbon throughout the ecosystem, which is vital to the survival of the
family of life. The pool includes both carbon sources and carbon sinks.
A carbon source emits more carbon than it absorbs. Major sources include the burning of coal,
oil, and gas, and the emissions from making concrete.
A carbon sink absorbs more carbon than it releases. For example, a forest is a carbon sink, and
it absorbs and stores carbon as it lives and grows. The two primary sinks in the global carbon
cycle are the land and the water.
The atmosphere is neither a source nor sink. It constantly absorbs carbon emissions, and
it’s constantly a source of carbon for plant life to absorb. In the atmosphere, carbon is allowed to pass
back and forth between sources and sinks — something like a train station, an
ongoing flow of in and out.
Prior to the industrial era, the carbon load in the
atmosphere was a relatively stable closed loop — the volume of incoming carbon
from sources was similar to the volume of outgoing carbon absorbed by sinks.
Today, that stable closed loop is long gone. When fossil energy is burned, CO2
is released into the atmosphere. From
there, the water sink absorbs some of it, and so does the land sink. Unfortunately, these two sinks cannot absorb CO2
as quickly as it’s now being emitted, so the growing surplus accumulates in the
atmosphere. Here
is a chart that displays the explosive growth of global CO2
emissions from 1900 to 2020. Note that
what the land and ocean sinks can’t absorb builds up in the atmosphere.
With the fantastically tragic mistake of industrialization,
humankind unleashed a planet roasting monster that is raging against the
vitality of life on Earth — a furious roaring bonfire of fossil carbon. This monster had been safely and harmlessly
sleeping underground for millions of years.
Unfortunately, some goofy smarty pants could not leave it alone, and all
hell broke loose. Big Mama Nature
screamed!
The normal and natural balancing act of atmospheric carbon
got slammed. In 1850, the atmosphere
contained 280 ppm of CO2 (parts per million). In 2024 it’s up to 426 ppm and growing. Consequently, the CO2 content of
the atmosphere is now higher than at any time in the last 3.6 million years,
and its volume is skyrocketing now. The
planet’s climate is going batshit crazy, and the worst is yet to come. Ooops!
Global
CO2 Emissions is a chart showing carbon emissions from 1800 to 2006. The four nations that emit the most carbon
are highlighted. Note the enormous surge
of carbon emissions since 1930!
As we burn fossil energy day after day, year after year,
faster and faster, enormous amounts of ancient carbon are released into the
atmosphere, where it constantly accumulates, clobbers climate stability, and
generates heat waves, droughts, catastrophic floods, monstrous storms, and huge
wildfires. Earth is getting hotter and
hotter. Thawing permafrost is releasing
huge amounts of methane. Glaciers are
shrinking, sea levels are rising, the family of life is getting brutally
bludgeoned. Circle what is wrong in this
picture.
If humankind suddenly went extinct next week, the permafrost
would continue thawing, releasing additional methane, trapping more heat, and
further boosting the temperature of the atmosphere and oceans. And every day we keep burning like
crazy. The pyromania genie cannot be put
back into the bottle. Sorry kids!
[Note: This is a new section from the rough draft of Wild, Free, & Happy. It’s finally getting into the home stretch, maybe four more to go (or fewer). These samples start with sample 01, and follow the sequence listed HERE (if you happen to have some free time).
Electric
Supply and Demand
There are two flavors of
electricity. Power plants generate
alternating current (AC) electricity and feed it into the grid. AC is impossible to store — use it or lose
it. But if AC is converted to direct
current (DC) electricity, it can be stored in battery systems. Then, when demand increases, the stored DC
power can be converted to AC, and fed back into the grid.
In a conventional power system,
centralized plants generate the electricity and feed it into the grid for
distribution — a hub and spoke design.
Throughout every day, demand for power rises and falls. When demand rises, more power must quickly be
fed to the grid. To do this, secondary
generators are kept running on standby, providing a “spinning reserve.”
Renewable energy systems are quite
different. There is no central
production plant with a spinning reserve backup. Generation is provided by a scattered network
of solar panels and/or wind turbines.
They are installed at sites likely to generate the most power, and these
are often not located close to existing grids and energy consumers.
In addition to the normal daily ups
and downs of end-user demand, power generation cannot be carefully
managed. The challenge here is intermittency. Solar panels do nothing at night, or when
heavy clouds move in, or when their collectors are covered with snow, dust,
bird droppings, etc. Wind turbines take
a nap when the breeze fades away, or when their blades are coated with
ice. The strength of sunbeams and
breezes is variable, uncontrollable, and often unpredictable.
Mitch
Rolling noted, “In Minnesota, wind farms produced electricity only 34.67
percent of the time in 2016.” Vaclav
Smil wrote, “The best offshore wind turbines produce electricity 45% of the
time, and photovoltaic panels 25% in ideal locations — while Germany’s solar
panels produce electricity only 12% of the time.”
Wind and solar systems don’t have a
spinning reserve generator for backup.
So, to reliably respond to shifts in demand, surplus generation can be
stored in batteries. When demand
increases, stored power can be released to the grid.
Imagine living on the 60th
floor of a skyscraper when the region’s renewable energy production has been
hobbled by intermittency for days or weeks, and the batteries are drained. No power, water, lights, elevators, etc. This challenge will increase as the grid
transitions from fossil energy to renewable.
Vaclav Smil noted that existing
energy storage systems have far less capacity than needed to maintain reliable
power delivery. “It is still impossible
to store electricity affordably in quantities sufficient to meet the demand of
a medium-sized city (500,000) for only a week or two, or to supply a megacity
(more than 10 million people) for just half a day.”
Opposition
As mentioned earlier, many
fundamental components of industrial civilization can only be produced with the
high temperatures made possible by fossil energy (steel, concrete, solar
panels, wind turbines etc.). Thus,
current technology does not allow us to actually decarbonize the global
economy, or even come close.
A number of U.S. counties and
localities are creating rules to prohibit the construction of wind and/or solar
installations. In 2023, 411 U.S.
counties had established some restrictions on renewable energy
installations. Rural folks don’t want
their countrysides blemished with unsightly power towers and access roads. Leave us alone!
In 2024, USA
Today reported, “Local governments are banning new utility-scale wind and
solar power faster than they’re building it.”
New wind turbine projects have been banned in 23 counties of North
Carolina, in all 120 counties of Kentucky, in all 8 counties of Connecticut, in
all 14 counties of Vermont, and in 91 of Tennessee’s 95 counties.
Poor nations can’t afford to make
costly investments in renewable energy, and wealthy nations are not eager to
generously provide them with enormous financial assistance. Folks in wealthy nations aren’t interested in
radically simplifying their lives.
There are 193 nations in the
world. At international meetings, they
proudly announce their optimistic goals for transitioning to renewable energy
within several decades. Given that
extended timeframe, it’s tempting to assume that technological miracles, yet to
be invented, will somehow save the day.
Optimistic goals are easy to announce.
Fulfilling them is another story.
Vaclav Smil noted that China and
India are still expanding coal extraction and coal-fired power generation
plants. In other regions, there is
strong opposition to new rules that restrict the expansion of natural gas
infrastructure. Coal mining communities
don’t want to shut down the mines. The
petroleum industry remains hard at work.
In Iowa, the term “climate change”
can sound like an obscene demonic hoax. Chris
Gloninger, a TV weather forecaster, foolishly spoke those two words during
a live broadcast. Viewers exploded with
rage. He got death threats, quit his
job, and moved out of the state.
Overshoot
And now, dear reader, the plot of
this word dance makes a sudden swerve into a dangerous lane. The soundtrack gets speedy screechy loud and
scary. A vicious monster steps out of
the shadows and into the spotlight. The
audience screams. Alas, the actual
planet smashing boogeyman is far more horrifying and powerful than climate
change. Its name is overshoot,
and it cannot be easily swept away with clever gizmos, delusional optimism, or
clueless indifference.
In an earlier chapter, I mentioned
William Catton, the author of Overshoot. He defined carrying capacity as “the
maximum population of a given species which a particular habitat can support
indefinitely.” Overshoot is “the
condition of having exceeded for the time being the permanent carrying capacity
of the habitat.” Today, humankind’s
tremendous impacts on the entire planet far exceed the limits. Way too many critters are living way too
hard, we don’t understand what we’re doing, and we have no interest in
stopping.
In his book Collapse, Jared
Diamond wrote about the Viking colonization of Iceland, which is now “the most
heavily damaged country in Europe.”
Since settlement in A.D. 870, most of the original trees and vegetation
have been destroyed. Half of its soil
has been moved into the ocean. Large
areas that were green when the Vikings first landed are now “a lifeless brown
desert without buildings, roads, or any current signs of people.” The Vikings were low-tech amateurs, and
climate was not a primary factor in this disaster.
Today, the rapidly growing mob of
8+ billion hungry horny primates is mindlessly beating the living crap out of
the planet in countless ways. It’s very
important to understand that climate change is merely one component of
overshoot, the huge whoop-ass monster we have conjured into existence.
William Rees
explained that the impacts of overshoot include climate change, ocean acidification,
freshwater depletion, mass extinctions, deforestation, plunging biodiversity,
soil/land degradation, falling sperm counts, pollution of everything, etc. “Climate change is the best-known symptom of
overshoot, but mainstream ‘solutions’ will actually accelerate climate
disruption and worsen overshoot. The
global economy will inevitably contract, and humanity will suffer a major
population ‘correction’ in this century.”
Seibert
& Rees wrote, “Overshoot is a genuine existential threat. Climate change alone is capable of making
large patches of Earth irreversibly uninhabitable for humans in this century
and ultimately jeopardizing global civilization.”
The safe and effective cure for
overshoot is obvious, but the medicine is bitter. “We argue that the only viable response to
overshoot is a managed contraction of the human enterprise until we arrive
within the safely stable territory defined by ecological limits. This will entail many fewer people consuming
far less energy and material resources than at present.”
Meanwhile, many talking heads are
telling us exactly what we want to hear.
We can relax and comfortably continue working and shopping. We just need to buy an electric car, become
vegans, have one child or none, and enjoy a wonderful life. The magic verb that speeds our pilgrimage to
eco-utopia is “decarbonize.” Clean green
renewable energy will save the Earth.
William Rees disagrees. The last thing we need to do is shift the
mining industry into high gear, and produce 1.39 billion batteries for the
world’s transport fleet. We’ll also need
a huge number of batteries to provide backup power for the electric grids
around the world. Producing huge numbers
of solar panels and wind turbines will require even more mining, smelting, and
manufacturing.
[Note: This is a new section from the rough draft of Wild,
Free, & Happy. It’s finally getting into the home stretch, maybe four
more to go (or fewer). These samples
start with sample 01, and follow the sequence listed HERE (if
you happen to have some free time).
Great
Acceleration
Readers with gray hair are acutely
aware that they have spent their entire lives in a hurricane of explosive
change. I was born in Michigan, and
spent my first 18 years in West Bloomfield Township, a suburb of Detroit. In 1950, it was home to 8,720 people. In 2020, there were 65,888!
When my grandparents were born in
the late 1800s, there were 1.3 billion people on Earth. When I was born in 1952, there were 2.6
billion humans. Today, just during my
lifetime, the mob has more than tripled, zooming past eight billion. We continue growing like a voracious planet
eating swarm.
In 2000, J.
R. McNeill published Something New Under the Sun, a fascinating (and
shocking) book on the environmental history of the twentieth century, when
cultures blind drunk on gushers of cheap oil spurred a population
explosion. In his 2014 book, The
Great Acceleration, McNeill narrowed his focus to the catastrophic changes
that have occurred since 1945 — perhaps the most destructive era since the
Chicxulub asteroid wiped out the dinosaurs.
This explosion was propelled by a
fossil fuel bonfire that enabled industrial civilization to sharply increase
food production. Look at this
mind-blowing graph [Here]. The curve of energy consumption closely
corresponds with the curve of population growth.
William E. Rees, writing in
2023, noted a daunting factoid: “Half the fossil fuels ever consumed have been
burned in just the past 30-35 years.”
(As much as 90% of it has been burned since the early 1940s).
Fossil energy is not renewable, and
the remaining reserves are shrinking every day.
Currently, this bonfire has propelled a turbulent joyride of titillating
decadence. Humankind has far exceeded
the planet’s carrying capacity in countless ways.
Bill McGuire is a professor
emeritus of Geophysical & Climate Hazards at University College
London. He wrote Hothouse Earth,
and was a contributor to the 2012 IPCC report.
McGuire warned that “there is now no chance of dodging a grim future of perilous,
all-pervasive, climate breakdown.” In
today’s snowy regions, winters will be brief or go extinct, and summers will
get toasty. We’re gliding toward a world
“that would be utterly alien to our grandparents.”
The other night was a full
moon. It stirred some powerful
feelings. Once upon a time, that same
moon shined down on the woolly mammoths.
It made Neanderthals smile. It
glowed upon our ancient tree-dwelling ancestors, and on the age of
dinosaurs. It lit the night when there
was no life on Earth. The moon remembers
so much.
Global
Energy
It’s vital to comprehend the major
limitations of renewable energy. The
International Energy Agency (IEA) is an organization that focuses on global
energy consumption. Their 524-page World
Energy Outlook 2022 report revealed some daunting statistics.
First, a vocabulary lesson. “Primary energy consumption” measures
total energy demand. “Final
energy consumption” is a subset of primary — it’s just the amount of energy
consumed by end users, such as households, industry, and agriculture. It is the energy which reaches the final
consumer’s door and excludes that which is used by the energy sector itself.
With regard to global final
energy consumption, 80% of it is provided by fossil energy, and 20% is provided
by electricity — and about 95% of this electricity is currently generated with
nonrenewable fossil energy. In addition
to this, the GND plan also requires that the global fleet of cars, trucks,
trains, etc., must be switched to “clean, green, carbon-free power.” It can’t.
Vaclav
Smil warned us. “We are a fossil-fueled
civilization whose technical and scientific advances, quality of life, and
prosperity rest on the combustion of huge quantities of fossil carbon, and we
cannot simply walk away from this critical determinant of our fortunes in a few
decades, never mind years.”
It’s absolutely impossible to
radically decarbonize our current way of life because electricity can’t provide
the power needed for many processes that are fundamental to life as we know
it. The concrete, steel, and other
essential components of solar panels, wind turbines, hydro dams, and electric
vehicles cannot be made with electricity.
Alice
Friedemann discussed critical shortcomings of the renewable energy
fantasy. “All contraptions that produce
electricity need high heat in their construction. They all need cement made at 2600°F
(1426°C).” There is no known way to make
cement with electricity.
Making steel for wind turbines
requires 3100°F (1700°C). “Solar panels
require 2700° to 3600°F (1500° to 2000°C) of heat to transform silicon dioxide
into metallurgical grade silicon.” Nuke
plants still on the drawing board, in theory, might be able to generate 1562°F
(850°C), but this is not hot enough for making cement, steel, glass, and lots
of other stuff.
Vaclav Smil agreed. Sharply cutting back, or ending, the use of
fossil energy, would blindside our party.
For example, he mentioned cement, steel, plastic, and ammonia. He calls them “the four material pillars of
modern civilization.” The GND does not
explain how the four could be produced solely with renewable electricity. They also don’t explain how trucking,
shipping, rail transport, and flying could largely be carbon-free in a decade
or so, if ever.
Smil reminded us that the
large-scale production of highly potent synthetic
ammonia fertilizer led to a dramatic increase in agricultural yields. More food could feed more mouths. Of the eight billion people alive in 2022, he
estimated that the existence of 40 to 50 percent of them was only made possible
by the bigger harvests enabled by ammonia fertilizer, a product made from
natural gas (fossil energy).
The steel industry is dependent on
coking coal and natural gas, and its emissions contribute substantial amounts
of greenhouse gases. Smil wrote, “But
steel is not the only major material responsible for a significant share of CO2
emissions: cement is much less energy-intensive, but because its global output
is nearly three times that of steel, its production is responsible for a very
similar share of emitted carbon.”
Cement is made of limestone and
clay. Concrete is made of cement, water,
sand, and rock. Andrew Logan wrote,
“After water, concrete is the most consumed material on Earth.” Making high-performance concrete requires
heating calcium carbonate, a process that releases CO2. Additional CO2 is released by the
kiln, which burns fossil fuel to generate a temperature of 2,700°F
(1,482°C). This intense heat cannot be
generated by using electricity.
Jonathan
Watts noted that the four biggest causes of CO2 emissions are
coal, oil, gas, and concrete. He called
concrete “the most destructive material on Earth.” Its global production has increased 25-fold
since 1950.
Smil’s bottom line: “With current
technologies, and for the foreseeable future, you simply cannot make cement,
steel, plastic, or ammonia absent fossil fuels.” Fossil energy is essential for making potent
fertilizer, manufacturing farm equipment, and operating the machines. It enables the processing, packaging,
refrigeration, and distribution of the nutrients that keep countless folks on
life support.
Nonrenewable
Mining
Fossil energy is essential for
manufacturing wind turbines, solar panels, batteries, electric vehicles,
pavement, power transmission grids, and on and on. All of them are made of materials extracted
from the Earth. The mining, crushing,
hauling, and smelting of mineral resources are extremely dependent on fossil
powered technology.
Walter
Youngquist mentioned an old geologist saying, “If it can’t be grown, it
must be mined.” The GND dream seems to
assume that the planet’s reserves of strategic minerals are essentially
limitless — a cookie jar that never empties, no matter how fast we eat them, century
after century.
The dream involves an extensive
redesign, replacement, and expansion of most of the global infrastructure used
for power generation, distribution, and consumption. The dream envisions that every nation on
Earth, from the richest to poorest, will eagerly cooperate to complete the
transition within 20 or 30 years.
Seriously?
Frik
Els was thrilled by the GND optimism.
He is the editor of Mining.com, a news source for the mining
industry. He praised the efforts of
frontline GND proponents Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Greta Thunberg, calling
them “mining’s unlikely heroines.”
Why? Because the GND would be a
multi-trillion-dollar godsend for mining and manufacturing corporations, and
their lucky stockholders.
Vaclav Smil provided an
illuminating example. A typical lithium
car battery weighs about 990 pounds (450 kg), and contains lithium, cobalt,
nickel, copper, graphite, steel, aluminum, and plastics. To make just one battery, extracting those
ingredients would require crushing and refining 40 tons of specific ores. To access and fetch those 40 tons of
ore-bearing rock, 225 tons of worthless rock would first have to be moved out
of the way. Folks, that’s one battery
for one car!
In 2021, Simon
Michaux wrote a 1,000-page report for the Geological Survey of Finland, a
government bureaucracy. It documented
the results of a study done to determine if it was possible to replace fossil
energy with electricity generated by renewable methods, on a global scale.
In 2019, the global transport fleet
included about 1.41 billion cars, trucks, buses, and motorcycles, of which 1.39
billion used Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) technology. To shift the fleet to Electric Vehicle (EV)
technology would require 1.39 billion batteries to store their electricity. Also, the world’s gas stations would need to
be replaced with charging stations that can deliver renewable energy.
As mentioned, making batteries
requires enormous amounts of mineral resources.
The Geological Survey of Finland wondered if there were adequate mineral
resources on Earth to make 1.39 billion batteries for vehicles (282.6 million
tons of batteries). Their study
concluded: “No, not even close.”
Batteries typically have a working
lifespan of only 5 to 15 years. Michaux
warns that current mining production, and existing mineral reserves, are
insufficient to manufacture even the first generation of renewable
technology. “What are the theoretical
options for running industrial systems on renewable energy? The geologists can’t think of any.”
Christopher
Ketchum noted that a full-scale U.S. transition to renewable energy
technology would require a massive surge in the production of critical
metals. Estimates predict that this
could increase demand for them by 700% to 4,000%.
Alice Friedemann noted the heavy
impacts associated with renewable energy.
“Mining consumes 10% of world energy.
Wind, solar, and all other electrical generating machines rely on
fossil-fueled mining, manufacturing, and transportation every step of their
life cycle.”
Jon Hurdle wrote about
recycling solar panels. “Today, roughly
90 percent of panels in the U.S. that have lost their efficiency due to age, or
that are defective, end up in landfills because that option costs a fraction of
recycling them.”
Seibert
& Rees noted that renewable energy devices have limited lifespans. Solar panels and wind turbines last an
average of 15 to 30 years, DC inverters last 5 to 8 years, batteries last 5 to
15 years. Unfortunately, the materials
used to create the highly complex physical infrastructure for the entire system
are not made of magic fairy dust. Nor
are the bodies, motors, and batteries of electric vehicles. They have their roots in strip mines,
smelters, chemical plants, toxic waste dumps, oil refineries, and on and
on.
Many tons of steel and concrete are
needed to manufacture and install each wind turbine. To make a solar panel, you need stuff like
cobalt, gallium, germanium, indium, manganese, tellurium, titanium, and
zinc. To create the computer hardware
needed to operate the grids, you need to fetch stuff like platinum, rhenium,
selenium, gold, strontium, tantalum, gallium, germanium, beryllium, yttrium,
and pure silicon.
Another essential component of
modern living in a world of eight billion is extensive networks of well-maintained
roads. Walter
Youngquist noted that in the U.S., there are more than 2 million miles of
paved roads and highways. About 94% of
these miles are asphalt — a material that is 90% crushed rock, and 10% bitumen
(a sticky black byproduct of petroleum refining). “Asphalt is easy to put in place, and far
less expensive in terms of energy expended and cost of materials than
concrete.”
In 2007, the American Concrete
Pavement Association reported that about 500 million tons of asphalt are placed
in the U.S. each year. Doing this
consumed 1.45 billion gallons of diesel fuel (5.488 billion liters). Asphalt typically needs resurfacing every 8
to 10 years.
Concrete can last 30 to 40 years
before resurfacing, and it’s strong enough to better carry the weight of heavy
loads. About 60% of U.S. interstate
highway system pavement is concrete.
Fossil energy is absolutely required for the production of asphalt and
concrete. This energy is nonrenewable,
and so is our way of life.
[Note: This is a new section from the rough draft of Wild, Free, & Happy. It’s finally getting into the home stretch, maybe four more to go (or fewer). These samples start with sample 01, and follow the sequence listed HERE (if you happen to have some free time).
Climate
Confusion
Climate change is an idea that makes many people sweat and
squirm. Poorly informed folks say it’s a
hoax spread by lunatics. Religious folks
might have faith that climate change is God’s will. Other folks, who pay close attention to the
news, perceive that climate trends have obviously swerved into spooky new
patterns that potentially endanger the status quo for everyone everywhere.
Folks who believe that climate change is real and important
tend to be divided into two groups. (1)
Techno-optimists feel confident that the threat of climate change can and will
be resolved via human brilliance. (2)
Techno-skeptics perceive that the danger is powerful, intensifying, overwhelming,
and destined to destabilize life as we know it.
On the center stage of mainstream discussion, the spotlights
are usually kept shining on the optimists. They celebrate the miracles of new technology
that will eliminate climate change, and steer us into the fast lane to
utopia. Everything is under
control. Our prosperous way of life is
safe and sound.
Samuel Alexander
added that the “techno-fix” approach is politically and socially
palatable. “It provides governments,
businesses, and individuals with a means of responding to environmental
problems (or appearing to) without actually confronting the underlying issues.”
Wackernagel & Rees neatly summed up the clumsy predicament:
“The politically acceptable is ecologically disastrous while the ecologically
necessary is politically impossible.”
Big Mama Nature is
not amused. She doesn’t care what we
believe. This is her circus, we are her
monkeys, and Mama is pissed! We’re
monkeying around with extremely destructive games, while screeching and
chattering. Life is but a dream!
Secret Weapons
Joseph Goebbels, the
Nazi Propaganda Minister, brilliantly convinced war weary Germans that they’d
soon be saved by an amazing technological miracle. The human mind has a spooky ability to
develop a powerful blind faith in almost any idea, no matter how goofy. Literally, nothing is unbelievable.
Albert Speer was in Hitler’s inner circle. In March 1945, German defeat was
inevitable. In the final weeks, Hitler
revealed his brilliant plan to the German people. What seemed to be a rapidly approaching
brutal defeat was actually a cunning trap!
He was luring the enemy armies into an ambush where they would soon be
obliterated by a new and terribly powerful secret weapon!
Just days before the
fall of Berlin, Speer made a visit to the western front. While German cities were smoldering heaps of
rubble, rural folks enjoyed a hopeful blind faith in the secret weapon
nonsense, and were eagerly awaiting a glorious victory. Speer was surprised that many top-level Nazis
also believed this.
Ghost
Dance
By 1889, the once vast herds of bison on the U.S. plains had
nearly been driven to extinction. To the
native people, this monstrous tragedy felt like the end of the world. Lame
Deer, a Lakota medicine man, described the Ghost Dance movement, a
desperate effort to conjure a powerful act of spiritual healing.
Dancing would roll up the all the crud of the white man’s
world, like a dirty carpet. This would
uncover once again “the flowering prairie, unspoiled, with its herds of buffalo
and antelope, its clouds of birds, belonging to everyone, enjoyed by all.”
The Ghost Dance movement spread from tribe to tribe. Dancers were not allowed to have things from
the white world: liquor, guns, knives, kettles, or metal ornaments. They would dance for four days. Whites feared an armed uprising, so they
attacked the dancers. During the Wounded
Knee massacre, 153 Lakota people were exterminated.
Electric
Car Dance
Today, drivers concerned about climate change are being persuaded
to abandon their old-fashioned petroleum powered machines, and acquire one of
the new and luxurious electric powered wheelchairs. Marketing wizards assure us that the
batteries in these wheelchairs will someday be charged with “clean green”
electricity produced by solar panels, wind turbines, and other cool
gizmos. Currently, the primary source of
energy used to generate electricity for charging stations is fossil fuel, often
natural
gas.
The motorized wheelchair fad began a few years before my
father was born in 1913. Ford was an
early leader. In the previous 300,000
years, humans primarily got around on foot — a cheap, healthy, practical, and
climate friendly mode of transportation.
Newborn infants squirt out of the womb with two astonishing
miracles at the ends of their legs.
These happy feet allow us to wander through forests, prairies, deserts,
wetlands, and mountains. They propel us
while swimming and dancing, and they’re quite useful for kicking and stomping
troublesome annoyances.
Happy
Thoughts
In the Peter Pan story, Tinker Bell is the
fluttering fairy of magical thinking: “Just think a happy thought and you can
fly!” We’re so lucky to live in a golden
age of happy news! Scroll your
phone. Read the paper. Turn on the radio or TV. It’s not hard to find soothing climate change
news.
The core message assures us that we have a plan, and we’re
making significant advances on important goals.
Some issues are more challenging, and will take additional time. Climate change is a complicated rascal, but
we know what we’re doing. Everything is
under control. It’s not too late. Relax!
For example, Wikipedia’s 100% Renewable
Energy page reported: “Recent studies show that a global transition to 100%
renewable energy across all sectors – power, heat, transport, and desalination
well before 2050 is feasible… worldwide at low cost.” Elsewhere, eco-warrior Bill
McKibben wrote that “we have the technology necessary to rapidly ditch
fossil fuels.”
On the other hand, many educators deliberately limit what
they tell their students, to avoid souring their precious innocence (don’t
scare the children!). News organizations
often limit coverage of unpleasant stories that could disturb their audience
and/or advertisers. Politicians who
promise quick and easy solutions win more votes.
Rupert Read wrote, “Environmentalists are often accused of
being doom-mongers… I think that almost all environmentalists incline in fact
to a Polyanna-ish stance of undue optimism.”
Kevin
Anderson noted that this undue optimism was the product of something like a
conspiracy theory. “Half of global emissions come from just ten percent of the
population. The top one percent are
responsible for twice the amount of carbon as the bottom half of the world’s
population. The inequality in in who
is causing emissions is obscene.” “We’re
heading for collapse of modern society, and the collapse of most of our
emblematic ecosystems.”
At the same time, this elite one percent is primarily
responsible for framing the global discussion on climate change. They are especially interested in perpetual
economic growth, boosting their personal wealth, and keeping business as usual
in the fast lane for as long as possible, by any means necessary.
Sharply reducing emissions would sharply disrupt business as
usual. So would doing nothing,
disregarding climate impacts, partying like there’s no tomorrow, and letting
nature clean up the bloody mess.
Green
New Deal
Anyway, climate change sucks.
It’s largely caused by a mob of eight billion critters generating way
too many carbon emissions. A primary
source of carbon-rich pollution is the combustion of staggering amounts of
fossil fuel.
Shazam! The quick and easy solution is perfectly
obvious! We just abandon our naughty
addiction to dirty energy, and replace it with clean green renewable energy. Hooray!
State of the art technology will allow us to painlessly glide into a
beautiful green utopia that requires no significant lifestyle sacrifices.
In this great healing, solar panels, wind turbines,
batteries, and electric motors play starring roles. The climate-saving magic word here is decarbonize. In a number of nations, this crusade has
gradually been growing since 2018 or so.
The main U.S. version of this movement is called the Green New Deal
(GND).
The GND vision is to make radical, gargantuan, and super
expensive changes around the entire world over the next 20 to 30 years. Ideally, every nation would eagerly
cooperate, and this would allow humankind to gradually reduce the brutality of
the beatings that Big Mama Nature receives every day. Then, miracles happen, and future generations
maybe enjoy a smoother journey into the future.
What could possibly go wrong?
Well, as noted earlier, ongoing CO2 emissions are
increasing, and they are accumulating in the atmosphere, where they will
persist for thousands of years. John Gowdy
concluded, “The effects of fossil fuel burning are irreversible
on a time scale relevant to humans.”
We’ve started something we cannot stop.
In 2021, Megan
Seibert and William E. Rees released a free report that provided a vigorous
critique of the GND’s shortcomings and fantasies. It’s a competent intro, and it’s fairly easy
to read — “GND proponents are appallingly tolerant of the inexplicable.”
Vaclav
Smil is an energy theorist, the author of How the World Really Works,
and 40 other books. He’s a sharp critic
of the GND’s pipe dream of a full-scale transition from fossil energy to clean
green renewable energy. He calls it
science fiction. “Heavy doses of wishful
thinking are commingled with a few solid facts.”
Smil smirked at the GND’s juicy promises. “Who could be against solutions that are both
cheap and nearly instantly effective, that will create countless well-paying
jobs, and ensure care-free futures for coming generations?” Many others agree with Smil’s skepticism.
We talk about two categories of energy: nonrenewable
(fossil), and renewable (wind, solar, etc.).
Nate Hagens clarified this subject.
Geese and oak trees are “renewable.”
Solar collectors and wind turbines are “rebuildable.” They have a working lifespan of up to 20-30
years, at which point they must be periodically replaced, until the time when
civilization rusts in peace. Their
components are not designed to be recycled in an affordable and eco-friendly
way. Many go to landfills. Some are considered to be toxic waste.
William
Rees explained how our dreams of “solving” global warming have deep roots
in magical thinking. Proposed
“solutions” are compatible with perpetual economic growth and business as
usual. We can pretend to save the world
while mindlessly enjoying our cool toys until the lights go out. Yippee!
During its evolution, the GND mindset has been an
intoxicating cornucopia of heartwarming utopian fantasies. We’d have 100% renewable energy by 2030. Decent jobs for everyone. Free college education. Single-payer healthcare. Adequate housing. Healthy affordable food. Public transportation and high-speed
rail. Perpetual economic growth. And so on.
(See Wikipedia’s Green New Deal section.)