I'll go out on a limb and guess that this is not the last such story we will read in coming years:
Low-emissions coal-fired power technology, or so-called clean coal, probably needs a further $15 billion of investment and 10 more years of research and development to be ready for commercial use, Credit Suisse Group said.
Almost there!
Comments
View as Threaded
stevenearlsalmony Posted 6:21 am
01 Nov 2008
In the 1980s, this extremely inequitable method of distributing wealth and arranging business activities was called a "trickle down" economy. We have been repeatedly told how this 'rational' economic scheme is good because it "raises all ships." And yet, from my limited scope of observation, the billion people living on resources valued at less than one dollar per day and the additional 2.7 billion people being sustained on two dollars per day of resources now appear to be stuck in squalid conditions. The 'ships' carrying these billions of less fortunate people {ie, more people than lived on Earth in the year of my birth} do not appear to be lifting the poor out of poverty.
What are the self-proclaimed Masters of the Universe, the self-appointed brightest and best, doing to merit the 100 million dollars in bonuses they have set aside for themselves, even as their self-enriching Ponzi games are leading to the loss of tens of trillions of dollars of economic wealth? The idea that taxpayers' bailout funds are underwriting such fraudulent behavior and pathological greediness strikes me as somehow not quite right.
Steven Earl Salmony
AWAREness Campaign on The Human Population,
established 2001
http://sustainabilitysoutheast.org/index.php
Permalink
amazingdrx Posted 3:22 pm
01 Nov 2008
Bring on the studies that call for a decade long delay in each of these areas.
Just turn the old talking point back on them. remember the answer to climate change a few short years ago? "More study", turned into "more research".
Then go with the stuff that works now, renewables and conservation. By the time the research is over we won't need any of it.
http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin
Permalink
frflyer Posted 5:01 pm
02 Nov 2008
I have a new blog on energy solutions and climate change at.
http://energysolutionswecanbelievein.blogspot.com/
Steven Earl Salmony
Your post is right on, if off topic maybe.
A Pew Foundation study found that between 1983 and 2004, the bottom 80% of Americans only got 11% of the growth in wealth.
The top 1% got 33%
The next 4% got over 25%
The top 20% got 89%
Permalink