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Herb's avatar

I believe that fossil producers and consumers are locked into a kind of codependency. Thus unlike most people who either primarily blame the producers as Berman does or the consumers as you do I see the need to focus on both supply and demand.

We should demonize the fossil fuel producers and we can still recognize that ultimately as you point out it is the incredible all but miraculous energy density of fossil fuels that makes their use so addictive and irresistible.

That’s why the clean energy transition will inevitably take decades and during these decades the world will increasingly suffer or unimaginable climate extremes.

Humanity was truly both incredibly blessed and cursed when fossil fuels were first discovered.

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Wayne Teel's avatar

Can you agree and disagree simultaneously? It seems that I do. These entities are to blame, and we are to blame. We buy what they are selling, and they are using propaganda to sell more. "We have met the enemy and 'he' is us". The us in this case is everyone that uses fossil fuels, which includes the companies extracting them. The fossil footprint of extraction is a component of the problem. So are the militaries in a variety of countries, especially the US, used to protect our "right" to extract fossil fuels from other countries. Subdividing the blame is silly. It is a system, and most of us are trapped in that system and very few are making a legitimate effort to change that system. Governments, corporations, and consumers are all too blame. My main complaint about your approach is that it does not admit clearly there are players in this system actively working to prevent any systemic change and most of these are corporate who are buying their politicians.

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