Originally posted by Sava
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
The Impossibility of Growth
Collapse
X
-
LOL. only 75 years...why the blink of eye in technological innovation!Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostThis is irrelevant.
I have shown already that a recycling rate of 90% only gives 75 extra years of growth.
Surely there would be no incentive over that 75 years to further improve recycling efficiency, right?
Here's a thought, what prevents the recycling rate from exceeding 100% of trash generation? Can't we recycle legacy garbage as well as recycling new trash?
Comment
-
I'm convinced.Originally posted by Sava View PostYou seem to be arguing simply for sustainability.
Eco-socialism... or whatever... is not necessary to achieve this.
Let's just way until corporate fatcats bent on trimestrial results figure out a solution for us.In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.
Comment
-
The volume of the planet is a hard limit.Originally posted by Geronimo View PostLOL. only 75 years...why the blink of eye in technological innovation!
Surely there would be no incentive over that 75 years to further improve recycling efficiency?
Here's a thought, what prevents the recycling rate from exceeding 100% of trash generation? Can't we recycle legacy garbage as well as recycling new trash?
Try reading the #413 again. It will help you.
Unless perhaps you believe we'll turn solar energy into matter.In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.
Comment
-
Sure. or perhaps there is curbside pick up, depending on the technology and how it is distributed geographically.Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostEveryone has 500 tons of organic thrash in their backyard, which have been designed to regenerate cars, windows, golf clubs and computers.Last edited by Geronimo; June 6, 2014, 14:25.
Comment
-
If we had fusion power we could mine frickin' Jupiter economically. My take is it's possible the hard end point will be so far out technologically that we have no idea what that end point will look like and its premature to try to plan for the endpoint now. It will take luck and hard work to realize such sci-fi dreams, but they are actually at least as likely, going on the recent record, as failing to avoid the next few short term Malthusian catastrophes would be.Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostThe volume of the planet is a hard limit.
Try reading the #413 again. It will help you.
Unless perhaps you believe we'll turn solar energy into matter.
Comment
-
Given that recycling is currently only nudged by a smattering of subsidy, weak mandates and weak and fickle economic demand, I think it is ludicrous to look to the current state of recycling as a guide to what will become technically feasible through innovation as we run out of space.Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostBTW, world recycling rates right now are not even 10%.
90% is already incredibly optimistic.
But don't worry. We're just a coming of Jesus Christ away from eternal growth.
Comment
Comment