advocacy
Jane Goodall-ing with Elon Musk’s early, conservative critics, Part II: Eco-types
Interviewees' archetype of an environmentalist was “high status, liberal, female, and white”. Elizabeth May (Canadian Green Party leader) fits this perfectly.
advocacy
Interviewees' archetype of an environmentalist was “high status, liberal, female, and white”. Elizabeth May (Canadian Green Party leader) fits this perfectly.
electricity
“We protected the world from nuclear power” rings differently than “we protected the world from nuclear power, and in retrospect it cost the health of a hundred communities poorer than ours”.
energy
There's a big difference between gun violence rates in the United States and Canada -- and in the fugitive methane emissions rate in the US and British Columbia, too.
energy
The particulars of our places punish the general tool, whether a Swiss Army Knife or the Hydrogen Ladder. We use tools fit-for-purpose, instead. So a Hydrogen Star is proposed.
hydrogen
Scoring rubrics can be helpful, but from 17th century farming to pondering hydrogen uses today, they can steer us in the wrong direction.
energy
This critique of the Hydrogen Ladder goes to the top of the Hierarchy of Disagreement to refute the central point of arguments against hydrogen in personal transport and households.
electricity
Can we map insights from biology (a very complex system) to our energy systems (which are also very complex)?
efficiency
Herbert Spencer summarized Darwin as “survival of the fittest” and not “survival of the most efficient”. Setbacks are inevitable and it’s resilience – not efficiency – that mitigates their impact.
energy
Efficiency has value, but in complex systems it's still subordinate to resilience.
energy
It is a cliché that digital cameras killed Kodak, but it deserves to be a cliché that Fujifilm survived. This example and many others suggest that while efficiency helps us in the short term, resilience carries us to the long term. We should consider this as we think about energy.