I am an environmentalist!
There I've said it. I believe that we are damaging the environment and over consuming the resources that we have and making little attempt at redressing the balance.
I also believe that there is time to make a difference and to redess the balance. That we can do something about it, find more resources, use them better, repair the environmental damage and live a better and happier coexistence with other life on this bit of wet rock.
However, I don't, for one moment, believe that we will. The world will carry on and life will continue to evolve and eventually we will cease to be an important part of it. The majority of the world's wealth and power is too greedy, too short sighted and too selfish, and much of the rest of us just tag along because we don't know what else to do.
Yes, there is a tipping point, a theoretical tipping point based on climate records and industrial output among other things. The tipping point is fairly soon, a matter of a few years away at our current rate of environmental impact. With concerted action we can hold off the tipping point and bring things back from the brink.
What that means in reality is we stop producing CO2 and methane now. We stop consuming fossil fuels by burning now.
We immediately reduce the consumption of energy to a small fraction of what it is now.
Sadly, human civilization has an inertia that prevents any immediate action on almost anything. We can all wail in grief in unison over the death of a famous person but we seem unable to stop ourselves driving the car a short distance when we could walk or cycle. We can't stop buying exotic fruit that has been flown halfway around the world. We can't leave the heating off, by choice, until it is really cold.
In a many million years time more intelligent beings will look back at our time and see us as no more then a momentary catastrophe much like we see the extinction of the dinosaurs. We will be no more then a few inches or feet of archeological digging. An anomaly of heavy metals, toxic chemicals and plastics with a scattering of radioactive isotopes.
In the meantime I will do my part in reducing the effects that we will have on our future and attempt to set some sort of example, even if, globally, it is futile. I just hope not.
As for replacing big diesel lorries how about
Smith's Electric Vehicles.
Or canal barges.
Or trains.
Or over head power lines over one lane of the motorway for powering electric, long haul lorries like trolley buses but also with batteries so they can still pull off to do local deliveries.
And for very local deliveries
human powered vehicles.
It's just a thought, but not one I am allowed to write a thesis on. :wink: