I already do quite a lot of that - mob grazing, soil construction, manure etc.The green farming revolution means no more fertiliser. It's the solution, not a problem. "Regenerative Agriculture" is the future, with variations. Why Regenerative Agriculture? - Regeneration International
Those two sentences put together are quite scary. Would you put your hand up to be part of the population reduction, "for the public good"? It wouldn't suprise me if somewhere some bureaucrat is putting together the logistics for a "voluntary population reduction scheme" to save Greta Thunberg's potential grandchildren.Europe and US need to reduce emissions. Reducing population would help.
I think some of the population will accept the sacrifices they will need to make
There's hundreds of veggie initiatives going I doubt there would be a problem at all, it's normal in some communities.I already do quite a lot of that - mob grazing, soil construction, manure etc.
I still use bulk oil based fertiliser, because it works. Not putting it on makes a colossal difference to yields, and I get paid for production not for making the place look pretty for weekend city dwellers wanting a picnic. Also the 30% methane pledge means no animal farming, yet animals are an intrinsic part of the symbiotic system. Can't be all future proofed without manure, but vegans demand animal free farming.
Isn't it ironic?
Yes I agree. Those who think that lifeboat-world is overpopulated should do the noble and decent thing and jump overboard!Those two sentences put together are quite scary. Would you put your hand up to be part of the population reduction, "for the public good"? .......
I agree!The stainless sink in my last house had been there for 20 years or so. The buyers did over the kitchen and I reclaimed it and used it for another 20 years. Eventually it was redundant and I had to scrap it but it was still usable. I could have put it outside behind the shed but I already had a huge catering double drainer double sink which is still there, probably 50 years old. Useful for gardening, paint stripping, other things.
Which brings me to my point - we are going to need something like wartime "Utility" standards for products, with no more throwaway consumerism. Stuff costing twice as much but lasting 10 times as long
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_furniture
Actually peat is a bigger carbon store than even the Amazon rain forest. UK highlands fell to peat not de-forestation and peat is the biggest above ground world reserve of carbon. Peatlands and climate changeI agree!
Disposability and throwaway consumerism fits together with sustainability like eyeglasses on an elk........ (Finnish saying)
They are just not compatible and we will need to come up with whole new ways of doing things.
One of the first things to to is to plant trees because that is probably one of the parts that has the longest lead time. We must necsessarily reforest every square metre of countryside that is not used for food production or other production. Every back yard in town should have at least one tree on it. Trees are at present the only efficient method we have for absorption and long time storage of carbon dioxide. From what I have been able to find out most of the Scottish highlands were forested until medieval times. Time to shoot some red deer and plant new forests. Dartmoor and Exmoor and the other high moors of England were heavily forested until neolithic farmers cut down the trees. The moors and hills of Ireland largely forested as late as the Viking age. The heaths of northern Germany were dense forests still in the late roman era. 40% of Iceland was forested as late as the 9th century. The forest line in the Norwegian mountains receded on average 100 height metres due to large scale brunost production from the late 18th century and onwards. The woodlands of Finland and Sweden have been too heavily logged and though there are trees everywhere the timber volume is small and the quality awful.
All those trees would over time reach an age when they have to be cut down before they rot. Tops and branches can be used for firewood. The timber can be used to build good quality wooden houses and furniture and bridges and just about anything where the carbon is tied up for centuries or at least decades more. Replacing steel and concrete which both emit lots of carbon dioxide in their production.
To keep up food production while reducing the areas of low grade pastures would require better mantainance of the soil on remaining pastures. We need to bring back organic matter and animal manure to the soil.
Yes I agree. Those who think that lifeboat-world is overpopulated should do the noble and decent thing and jump overboard!
The sooner we get out of the Plastic age the better
I've read that with both turbines and solar panels, most of which are made in China mostly using coal power, will produce the same amount of power in their lifetime as their manufacture requires. Big turbines have a very large oil lubrication requirement changed annually. The blades supposedly can't be recycled so will be chopped up and landfill. Even if a big turbines moving parts could be swapped out when it's worn out I bet 100 to 1 a bigger shinier one will be available so old will be binned.
I don't dispute that the above may be cobblers, and that there are very definitely alternative "facts" out there. You do not have to look very far to find experts disputing the MSM experts, all with accredited science behind them. My facts are better than your facts is about what it boils down to, and things like the infamous hockey stick graph don't give much weight to the MSM articles promoting that kind of "science".
We can't , without plastic packaging food would not last anything like as long so we would all starve to death, as the planet cannot produce enough food.
Though obesity levels would decline .
A boff interviewed on Channel 4 last night was saying that the oceans and their ecosystems play the biggest role.Trees are at present the only efficient method we have for absorption and long time storage of carbon dioxide.
About a third of fishing vacuumed from the sea goes to animal feed for meat, and fish food for farmed fish. Both should be off the menu.A boff interviewed on Channel 4 last night was saying that the oceans and their ecosystems play the biggest role.
Eg - The ocean and climate change :
"Coastal ecosystems like mangroves, salt marshes and seagrasses play a vital role in carbon storage and sequestration. Per unit of area, they sequester carbon faster and far more efficiently than terrestrial forests. When these ecosystems are degraded, lost or converted, massive amounts of CO2 – an estimated 0.15-1.02 billion tons every year – are released into the atmosphere or ocean, accounting for up to 19% of global carbon emissions from deforestation."
It doesn't get much of a mention as far as I can tell, but the oceans are also possibly the biggest threat in the form of changing patterns of global ocean currents.
Not that we can sort that as easily as planting trees, but we could stop industrial vacuuming of life forms from the sea, pouring all kinds of waste into them and so on.
View attachment 121237
Unfortunately North sea oil came on under a free-market govt. Profit should have been re-invested UK industry and infrastructure but instead it was frittered away. The Norwegians had more sense.I remember when North Sea oil was first discovered, it was claimed at the time, that as gas was a by product of the oil extraction, that the gas would be free
When government and experts put enough spin on ******** ----it sticks.
The "Richest 1% will account for 16% of total emissions by 2030" ‘Luxury carbon consumption’ of top 1% threatens 1.5C global heating limitOr just not have kids, which is the single greenest act open to normal people.
Most of that land isn't good quality, which is why it is used for animal pasture. Good luck growing tomatoes on moorland farms etc.For a start there will be all that land freed from growing animal food or pasture, could be used for "green manure".
They may not be essential to you, but they are an integral, essential part of the biosphere. How about we reforest the UK, bring back the Wild Wood with its bears and wolves, reduce the human population to a few hundred thousand and declare the planet saved?Animals aren't an essential part of the food cycle at all.
Is that what you would do? Sounds like you could do with some professional advice!Most of that land isn't good quality, which is why it is used for animal pasture. Good luck growing tomatoes on moorland farms etc.
Yes you have put your finger on it - that is the way we are going under unconstrained climate change, whether we like it or not.They may not be essential to you, but they are an integral, essential part of the biosphere. How about we reforest the UK, bring back the Wild Wood with its bears and wolves, reduce the human population to a few hundred thousand and declare the planet saved?
Enter your email address to join: