New Scientist 2018 sep

(Jeff_L) #1
52 | NewScientist | 8 September 2018

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LETTERS

I bring good news and
bad news on methane

From Iain Climie,
Whitchurch, Hampshire, UK
Ilkka Savolainen points to the
importance of reducing methane
emissions to combat climate
change (Letters, 18 August).
I have good and bad news.
Much methane is emitted by
ruminant livestock. The good
news is the success of tests on
the methane-reducing effect of
adding the seaweed Asparagopsis
taxiformis to livestock food
(Letters, 18 November 2017).
The bad news is that there are
signs of massive methane releases
from previously frozen deposits
(27 July 2013, p 16). These could
easily outweigh any reductions in
emissions from human activities.
I suspect the current mess is
due to three major blunders. The
first was the emphasis on setting

targets to cut emissions instead of
controlling levels of greenhouse
gases. Second, many measures
that are essential if conventional
wisdom is correct – from reducing
waste and developing alternatives
to fossil fuels to cutting livestock’s
impact – are sensible regardless of
the effect of human activities on
climate change, and would be even
if the world were cooling. Instead
of pursuing such win-win options,
effort was wasted bickering about
whether human activities
mattered. Third, and predictably,
nobody wanted to pay to address
these concerns or to have their
consumer convenience affected.

Neoliberal capitalism
is a Ponzi scheme

From John O’Hara, Mount
Waverley, Victoria, Australia
Whatever value Earth Overshoot
Day may have as a measure of the

From Daniel Hackett, London, UK
Fred Pearce reports how lawsuits over
climate change might bring justice
along the lines of “polluter pays”
(18 August, p 38). But from where
might the payee raise the fines?
From taxes or from energy charges,
no doubt. There is thus a risk of
sending money in circles, unless the

EDITOR’S PICK

fines are all spent on preventative or at
least remedial works. This could make
the exercise of suing nearly pointless,
and could even bring into question the
whole idea of the value of money.
There will be little progress until
some system can be devised in which
economies aren’t pitted against each
other. Until then, the environment will
always be the loser because it has not
been costed or is a common resource,
as in the case of the atmosphere and
the oceans, with their capacity as a
heat-sink. When a truer cost-benefit
analysis of our lifestyle is calculated,
we will all have to admit we are out of
our depth. Fatalism based on religion
will have to be tackled, since humans
are the only agency that could solve
this. So bring on the court cases –
but realise this is but the opening
shot in a massive upheaval.

Polluter pays – but pays to whom?

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