143 points by andsoitis about 3 hours ago | 123 comments | View on ycombinator
vaylian about 2 hours ago |
andsoitis about 3 hours ago |
cryptoegorophy about 2 hours ago |
terespuwash about 2 hours ago |
magneticnorth about 3 hours ago |
gwbrooks about 2 hours ago |
Trying to tell poor nations to remain poor -- or telling rich nations to consume less -- is a losing game. There's evidence that as societies get richer, their populations demand cleaner air, water, etc. And, as another commenter mentioned, a realistic hope is that the whole green-tech stack matures to the point where it can compete on price.
We'll either make lower-carbon/lower-warming solutions work at near-market rates, in a way that allows personal and national economies to grow, or it'll just be talk for the next 50 years as well.
fschuett about 3 hours ago |
cramforloin about 1 hour ago |
tonymet about 2 hours ago |
linohh about 2 hours ago |
doktor2un about 2 hours ago |
dust42 about 1 hour ago |
30 years later it looks like he was right.
Edit: the IPCC was founded in 1988 thus people started in the 70ies to understand that there will be a problem but there was a very long period of inactivity. Personally I am quite optimistic that fusion will become commercially available before 2040.
And dear downvoters, dont shoot the messenger.