I wonder if that really is a far sighted decision, when you just watch the mud slide disaster in Columbia a few days ago.
The governments in South America are all near sighted or blind. And deaf.
I wonder if that really is a far sighted decision, when you just watch the mud slide disaster in Columbia a few days ago.
I'm not saying it is an OK thing. I am just saying why are we amazed that it is being done. Every one of us wants to look after #1. The man in (what ever third world country you want to plug in) looks at the people in the developed countries that have automobiles, nice houses, TVs, and the list can go on and on and he wants the good life for himself and his children. Why should he not be expected to use what ever resources he has in what ever way he can to obtain that good life. To say that he should not be allowed to do so is to say sorry you’re too late. We destroyed half (modestly) the world but that's all we can allow. You will just have to do with a mud & grass shelter, no roads, now clean water, no electricity, ..... Get real it is not going to happen if he can help it.
Unless we are willing to completely kill man’s quest to do better for himself and his own by doling out the exact same things to every living being on earth man and forbidding anyone from having even the tiniest bit more than his neighbor man will continue to use what ever resources he can to improve his well being. That is just human nature and you can not change it. You can only restrict it. But this has been tried before and it doesn’t work.
Again this does not make it right. I never said it did. I just said why are we amazed and shocked when we find out about it. Furthermore I do not think we should criticize those people for trying to better themselves even when they are burning the forest. If we want them to stop burning the forest then we have to give them an alternative path to the “good life.” If you know what it is and you can convince even a very small fraction of the people in the developing world to do it then you are going to be the next multi billionaire. I am not saying we should not be looking for that answer/s. Believe me there are a lot of people doing just that, but until we give the man in the grass and mud shelter an alternative way to join the rest of us in the affluent life do not criticize him for burning the forest.
I agree w/ Rick.This is exactly what's going on Ed. I think the main benefit to pointing out issues like this is bringing up American awareness to problems we inadvertently create, often just by giving people the aspirations to live like us. Tom Friedman has what I consider a very good book out titled Hot Flat and Crowded. His contention is that there are huge energy technology creations and investments to make, and the developing world needs to "leap frog" past our present (oil based) technologies into these new and efficient ones to provide that standard of living that the majority of the worlds population is aspiring to achieve.
Again this does not make it right. I never said it did. I just said why are we amazed and shocked when we find out about it. Furthermore I do not think we should criticize those people for trying to better themselves even when they are burning the forest. If we want them to stop burning the forest then we have to give them an alternative path to the “good life.” If you know what it is and you can convince even a very small fraction of the people in the developing world to do it then you are going to be the next multi billionaire. I am not saying we should not be looking for that answer/s. Believe me there are a lot of people doing just that, but until we give the man in the grass and mud shelter an alternative way to join the rest of us in the affluent life do not criticize him for burning the forest.
His contention is that there are huge energy technology creations and investments to make, and the developing world needs to "leap frog" past our present (oil based) technologies into these new and efficient ones to provide that standard of living that the majority of the worlds population is aspiring to achieve.
Actually it does make it right. That does not mean it is wise but certainly "right" for the people that live in the forest. Most people that actually live in the jungle areas being developed aren't really looking for a way to improve their lives. They don't feel there is anything wrong with their lives as they are. Sure they want more money to buy stuff but most of them would not trade their forest for a new way of life if given a choice. It is not local people that are clearing forest and planting oil palm, it is large companies from the outside world. The local people will not realize profits from that production yet they suffer the loss of the forest and it's local resource value. The outside world will have oil and the local people will not have charcoal to cook dinner with.
I agree with the things you said, in fact we started a company in the Peruvian Amazon that is doing exactly what you say needs to be done. We purchase waste wood that would otherwise be burned and sell it to craftsmen here in the USA. The concept does give opportunity to local people and a reason not to sell their land to companies that want to cut it down. Give people a choice and a chance and they may make the right decision.
It is not the man that lives in a grass hut that is burning the forest, it is all of us that live in the "advanced" world. We want to stop using fossil fuels in favor of renewable bio fuels. Guess where big companies will produce bio fuels. Not here in North America because we don't want it done in our yard.
Videos like the one that started this thread really target human emotion to promote a one sided point of view.
Is the majority of the worlds population aspiring to achieve the standard of living we have? I think the majority of the worlds population is much more realistic.
We want to stop using fossil fuels in favor of renewable bio fuels. Guess where big companies will produce bio fuels. Not here in North America because we don't want it done in our yard.
I'm not so sure they are more realistic. His book is a good read, and he's spent allot of time in India and China. He details a conference he spoke at to Chinese auto manufacturers that includes discussion very similar to the one we are having about " who has the right to stop us (the growing Chinese middle class) from enjoying the same level of consumption and standard of living as the Americans".
Some of this is very scary.
Not exactly since there are a bunch of big corn ethanol projects going bust in the US now. I've been in the MW where a bunch of this is going on, and the environmental damage caused by mass agriculture in this part of our country makes the impact of an ethanol plant a drop in the bucket. There is no shortage of ethanol supportors in the MW (NIMBY's are very rare).
But that's just corn, and the GH gas and other economics of corn as energy are crap compared to other plant materials. There are other great ideas for biofuels, but the biggest impediment write now is the low (temporay) cost of oil, and the rising cost of food.
There's some great promise for algae based biofuels that are orders of magnitude more efficient than any terrestrial based plants, but presently oil rules all big R&D so who knows if any of this will see the light of day.
More realistic as to how it relates to the remaining rainforests and the people that live in that zone. The Chinese middle class don't live in a still "natural" environment. Perhaps no one has a right to stop them from enjoying the same level of consumption as us. But I have always felt that people that permanently live in a region should decide how it is managed. At the moment China is buying nearly all the lumber in Peru and they have contracts to purchase every last bit of it until it is gone. Then they will likely consume all the bio fuel produced on the land that is left behind. It is going to happen and you are right it is scary.
Most people that actually live in the jungle areas being developed aren't really looking for a way to improve their lives. They don't feel there is anything wrong with their lives as they are. Sure they want more money to buy stuff but most of them would not trade their forest for a new way of life if given a choice. It is not local people that are clearing forest and planting oil palm, it is large companies from the outside world. The local people will not realize profits from that production yet they suffer the loss of the forest and it's local resource value. The outside world will have oil and the local people will not have charcoal to cook dinner with.