Going Green

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Postby ich1990 » Wed Sep 15, 2010 7:36 pm

Atria35 (post: 1424457) wrote:Um, could you clarify this? I know that according to the FDA, "organic" means that 95% of the item must be made with natural ingredients- meaning, synthetic pesticides are restricted, livestock must be reared without routined antibiotics, synthetic chemicals in general aren't used. I actually don't mind this, as I am aware of what those chemicals can do and how long they stay in the body. ANd I'm not entirely fond of modern farming practices, as they can affect the ecological systems that surround them.


Certainly. I mean that by avoiding large portions of modern technology (such as synthetic pesticides) we decrease our agricultural yield and therefore are forced to leave a bigger environmental footprint to get the same amount of food (an example. Mass farming causes lots of problems, such as desertification, so it makes sense to try to reduce the amount of farming we have to do to grow our food.

Going "organic" sounds good, like we are getting back to nature and are helping prevent widespread use of harmful chemicals, but is it really helpful or is it a marketing ploy that tries to scare people out of using products grown by these new (and FDA approved) methods? I think a lot of it is marketing and fear mongering.

Plus, organic food is made with pesticides anyways (and no one, the Mayo Clinic, FDA, or USDA claim organic is any safer), so I am not sure what you are gaining by foregoing the latest advances in our chemical technology, spending extra money, and causing more pollution and harm to the environment through inefficiency.
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Postby Warrior 4 Jesus » Wed Sep 15, 2010 7:51 pm

You must have a different understanding of organic food in the US.
Also, I think the step towards organic foods is great. I'm sure there's some marketing and fear mongering going on, but I don't think it would be the main focus. At least, not here in Australia.
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Postby Roy Mustang » Wed Sep 15, 2010 7:59 pm

Where I live, we can recycle just about anything and have pick for that and we do it.

Also, my city has a city recycling place, if the city had to cut down old trees from falling over or lighting hitting them. You could go there and they would give the wood chips for yards that you put the trees in the chipper.


Speaking of more biodegradable materials, did you guys notice how a few months back, SunChips changed their bags to more eco-friendly ones? They're seriously the noisiest chip bags in the history of the modern snack.


I love SunChips and I can tell you that is the truth that they are the noisiest chip bag in the history of moden snack. My fiancee just hates, when I buy a bag and it drives her nuts.

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Postby Yuki-Anne » Wed Sep 15, 2010 11:09 pm

Hmm... what are organic foods like in Australia? Because in America I think they're really just a waste of time and money. They're more expensive, and not necessarily healthier. My mom started buying organic for some reason or another, and it was not a really great thing.

Also, completely off-topic, but Roy, for some reason I picture your fiancee as looking like Riza Hawkeye...
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Postby Warrior 4 Jesus » Wed Sep 15, 2010 11:28 pm

Organic food in Australia is more expensive than regular foods but that's because it's free of pesticides and any other harmful chemicals. No genetic-engineering either. I understand why you'd think they're more expensive but not why you think they wouldn't be healthier. Do you know how much crap they pump into fruit and veg? A lot.
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Postby Cognitive Gear » Wed Sep 15, 2010 11:31 pm

On organic foods:

As with everything, there are two sides to the same story. The wikipedia article has a well written and informative section on the environmental impact.

Basically, depending on how you perform your study, you will get different results. It also depends on what part of the world you live in, since crop yields can be a pretty large factor in determining how safe it is for the environment, and different parts of the world get different relative yields through the same methods.

EDIT: On the topic of Organic being healthier:

There is no scientific evidence to support the idea that organic foods have more nutritional value. There does seem to be some controversy surrounding pesticides, though it should be noted that organic food is not always pesticide free. If the pesticide is derived from plants, the official standards still allow the "organic" label to be used.
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Postby Sammy Boy » Thu Sep 16, 2010 1:58 am

When it comes to environmental issues, I am a simpleton because I don't have a deep understanding of chemistry and am not educated on related disciplines.

The principles I abide by:

1. Don't waste things.
2. Don't litter. Bins will appear in sight if one perseveres.
3. Recycle if it is possible (e.g. bottles, cans, etc.).
4. Get by with minimal energy usage (this is borne out of a desire to save on my power bills more than anything, hahah).
5. Use pubic transport if possible, but safety first (e.g. I would always drive after dark as it's safer).

As for eating meat, I realise I can survive without eating meat. I also realise the feeling of physical weakness from not eating meat will pass with time as one gets used to not eating meat.

However, I like the taste of meat, so I want to continue eating meat. Though I don't eat a lot of it, because I know veges and fruit are good for you. :)
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Postby Warrior4Christ » Thu Sep 16, 2010 6:58 am

CrimsonRyu17 (post: 1424452) wrote:Burning wood is carbon neutral, which means the carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere by burning wood is reabsorbed by the trees that produce the wood. Wood is a renewable resource and I guess it's "natural" in a sense because there are actually fire dependent ecosystems. Some trees even require fire to release seed like the lodgepole and jack pine trees. Burning wood is not harmful to the environment.

Burning oil and other fossil fuels on the other hand is completely different.

Carbon dioxide is carbon dioxide. I don't see why trees would refuse to photosynthesise CO2 coming from a fossil fuel source... And note that not all wood is burnt (so it's not a previously "already-full quota" system). I understand that there's other poisons like carbon monoxide with fossil fuels, but that's the only difference I see... It kind of muddies the definition of "carbon footprint" if CO2 is source-dependent.

ich1990 (post: 1424433) wrote:Another example is hybrid cars. Many people think they are going green because they buy partially electric or wholly electric vehicles. The reality is the power they are using had to come from somewhere, and that somewhere is probably that coal plant just outside of town. So, while they thought they were helping the environment, they are really just shifting the CO2 production (and the bad feelings associated with it) to a different location. Ironically (and yes I know I am not using the word properly), when you add the power loss from transporting the electricity to the vehicle (as well as the environmental damage caused by using and throwing away all of those batteries) to the equation, hybrid and electric vehicles actually have a net-negative affect on the environment.

Indeed - I saw a study on total energy required (extraction, refinement, distribution, efficiency in kinetic motion) for different fuel types for vehicles, and it concluded that turbo diesels were the most energy efficient - above hybrids, electric cars, perhaps hydrogen fuel cells too.

Rewin (post: 1424475) wrote:I'm going to have to argue with you on this one. Modern chemicals used on crops are highly monitored and regulated and I know of no farmer in my area whose cancer has been even remotely traced to these chemicals, nor is there anything showing that those in rural areas get cancer more frequently than those in urban areas.

I saw a video about a child in Paraguay that died a few hours after accidental exposure to chemicals sprayed on the soy crops next door. (Why spray it on food then??)
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Postby Syreth » Thu Sep 16, 2010 9:06 am

Electric cars are actually very good news for us who live in areas with renewable energy. Where I live, cities everywhere are powered by dams, which are an extremely efficient form of energy that doesn't have an impact on the environment to the extent that other forms of power might (though some would argue that the impact that it does have on the environment, small as it may be, should be avoided - e.g. the impact that a dam has on the migration of salmon). Basically, powering a car with electricity doesn't necessarily create pollution, depending on your power source.

When it comes down to it, I don't really understand why anyone would be outspoken against taking responsibility for how we affect the world around us.
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Postby Nate » Thu Sep 16, 2010 10:34 am

Warrior4Christ wrote:Carbon dioxide is carbon dioxide.

No one is disputing that. It's like the "volcano" red herring]in addition[/i] to that. So now you have the CO2 that would be released normally, and a whole lot more. That's where the problem lies.

I'm not sure how much CO2 is released in burning wood as opposed to burning fossil fuels though. Like, I don't know how much equivalent coal/gas it would take to equal the amount of CO2 given off by burning wood. Maybe more? Maybe less? I'm not sure. I don't know where one would find that information, but it's possible that you could burn say, 20 logs of wood and give off as much CO2 as a small piece of coal. In that case, the coal would have a greater negative effect, because you'd have to burn more of it to equal the same amount of heat as the wood, which would result in much more CO2 released.

But again, I don't know if that's the case. It is possible though.
it concluded that turbo diesels were the most energy efficient - above hybrids, electric cars, perhaps hydrogen fuel cells too.

I don't think anyone will dispute this either but the problem is that diesels produce more pollution. I don't see how the efficiency really matters. If it came out that child labor was super efficient I don't think anyone would be singing the praises of child labor (libertarians, perhaps).
I saw a video about a child in Paraguay that died a few hours after accidental exposure to chemicals sprayed on the soy crops next door. (Why spray it on food then??)

The problem here is you're talking about Paraguay, Rewin is talking about more modernized countries like the US that have things like the FDA and such to determine if chemicals are safe or not. So, your point is kind of moot...unless Rewin lives in Paraguay (pretty sure he's in the US though).
Syreth wrote:When it comes down to it, I don't really understand why anyone would be outspoken against taking responsibility for how we affect the world around us.

The biggest reasons are, as far as I can tell, these:

1. People want to be able to live their consumerist extravagant lifestyle without guilt. These are the kind of people who buy SUV's "just to make environmentalists mad." They don't give a crap about the repercussions of their actions, they only care about themselves (since most of them wouldn't be alive after the earth got run down anyway, what do they care?).

2. There's a sense of "God's coming back and this world will be destroyed anyway so it's stupid to try and save it!" Yes, I actually heard someone (who used to be a member here no less) actually say that trying to keep Earth habitable for life was stupid because of the second coming. I think they said something like "Guess what your reward will be for saving the planet that's going to be destroyed anyway? NOTHING!"

Which, y'know, is kind of the equivalent of "This person is going to die someday anyway so it's stupid to give him medical attention!"

3. Capitalism. That doesn't seem to make sense, but the problem is the insane capitalists who adhere to it like it's a religious doctrine handed down on high from God only care about making money. Trying to save the environment is kind of expensive, and to them, any laws that would prevent corporations from plundering and pillaging the environment are evil. So when you tell companies "Please reduce the amount of smoke your factory produces" these people whine and scream about money and "ebil gubment interference" because to them if a company makes more money by making a cloud of smoke so thick and high it looks like the tower of Mordor, that's their right!

Those are the biggest reasons. I'm sure there's others.
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Postby Mithrandir » Thu Sep 16, 2010 11:06 am

ShiroiHikari (post: 1424478) wrote:Regarding discussion of global warming: Let's not and say we did. Seriously, that's a very controversial subject that should probably be left off these boards.


I would rather we didn't and said "we didn't," but as long as we don't go there, I'll be mollified. ;)
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Postby Syreth » Thu Sep 16, 2010 11:39 am

Nate (post: 1424676) wrote:1. People want to be able to live their consumerist extravagant lifestyle without guilt. These are the kind of people who buy SUV's "just to make environmentalists mad." They don't give a crap about the repercussions of their actions, they only care about themselves (since most of them wouldn't be alive after the earth got run down anyway, what do they care?).

2. There's a sense of "God's coming back and this world will be destroyed anyway so it's stupid to try and save it!" Yes, I actually heard someone (who used to be a member here no less) actually say that trying to keep Earth habitable for life was stupid because of the second coming. I think they said something like "Guess what your reward will be for saving the planet that's going to be destroyed anyway? NOTHING!"

Which, y'know, is kind of the equivalent of "This person is going to die someday anyway so it's stupid to give him medical attention!"

3. Capitalism. That doesn't seem to make sense, but the problem is the insane capitalists who adhere to it like it's a religious doctrine handed down on high from God only care about making money. Trying to save the environment is kind of expensive, and to them, any laws that would prevent corporations from plundering and pillaging the environment are evil. So when you tell companies "Please reduce the amount of smoke your factory produces" these people whine and scream about money and "ebil gubment interference" because to them if a company makes more money by making a cloud of smoke so thick and high it looks like the tower of Mordor, that's their right!

Oh yeah. I am very familiar with those lines of reasoning. Some of my good friends unfortunately hold those beliefs, however contradicting they may be. It makes for good fun times when the topic comes up.
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Postby Shao Feng-Li » Thu Sep 16, 2010 11:50 am

Mostly just regarding the OP-

I'm all for saving money, doing things cheaply. Often that crosses over with "being green." (You wouldn't believe how many things you can clean with lemons, salt and baking soda xD). I think the green stuff is just stupid hype. More than anything, I think it's big companies jumping on a bandwagon. Not that I can blame them, lol. Big money in organics and what not. General Mills and Campbell's making a killing.
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Postby Nate » Thu Sep 16, 2010 11:58 am

Shao Feng-Li wrote:I think the green stuff is just stupid hype. More than anything, I think it's big companies jumping on a bandwagon.

Because we all know how much companies love to spend money for absolutely no reason.

Wait, what?
Big money in organics and what not. General Mills and Campbell's making a killing.

This is totally true though. The whole "organic" thing is a money-making scheme TO THE MOON. I went to Wal-Mart and they were like "HEY ORGANIC SPAGHETTIOS" and I was kind of interested until I saw they were 2.50 a can. Brand-name Spaghettios sell for like 1.25. I COULD GET TWO CANS FOR THE PRICE OF THEIR ONE CAN. It's ridiculous!
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Postby mechana2015 » Thu Sep 16, 2010 12:03 pm

Sammy Boy (post: 1424639) wrote:As for eating meat, I realise I can survive without eating meat. I also realise the feeling of physical weakness from not eating meat will pass with time as one gets used to not eating meat.

However, I like the taste of meat, so I want to continue eating meat. Though I don't eat a lot of it, because I know veges and fruit are good for you. :)


I personally prefer the Michael Pollan method regarding food - Eat Food, Not Too Much, Mostly Plants. Meat isn't bad to eat, unless you have an ideological aversion to it, so long as you don't eat too much or eat it exclusively. If you want to go for the extra benefit, try to avoid meat that comes from feed lots, since the animal conditions arn't as good in feedlots and the animals are typically fed differently.
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Postby Shao Feng-Li » Thu Sep 16, 2010 12:19 pm

Because we all know how much companies love to spend money for absolutely no reason.

Wait, what?


Nate's never worked for Walmart. But I relize what I said didn't make much sense (I've been awake since 1 AM...) I mean, when big companies go green, it just seems like another money making scheme XD A company could bee like totally lying about it and people would be like "yay green! :D!". I dunno.

This is totally true though. The whole "organic" thing is a money-making scheme TO THE MOON. I went to Wal-Mart and they were like "HEY ORGANIC SPAGHETTIOS" and I was kind of interested until I saw they were 2.50 a can. Brand-name Spaghettios sell for like 1.25. I COULD GET TWO CANS FOR THE PRICE OF THEIR ONE CAN. It's ridiculous!


lol, cheaper to make your own spaghetti. That's just gotta be a farce or something.
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Postby Nate » Thu Sep 16, 2010 12:37 pm

The thing is "going green" actually means something. I don't know if you can just slap a "green" label on a product with absolutely nothing to back it up. This would mean that someone, somewhere, has to test the product and ensure it conforms to certain standards. This, of course, would cost money, and as I said, most companies don't like to spend money that they don't have to. This is why companies whine and try to prevent environmental laws from passing, because it means they have to shell out more money to ensure everything meets the standards. If there were no laws to reduce pollution, you can bet most companies would pollute as much as they wanted because it's honestly just cheaper to do.
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Postby mechana2015 » Thu Sep 16, 2010 12:58 pm

Yeah, slapping a sticker on the side is possible, which is why some places put links to websites with more details or specify how they're doing environmentally friendly projects. For example, the Futurama moves were all produced to be 'carbon neutral', and they link to a site (http://www.newscorp.com/energy) describing how they did it. The Wal-Mart supercenter around here has an extensive network of skylights to light their stores during daylight hours, if I remember right, so that would be a concrete observable method for 'greening up' that is more evident than just slapping a sticker on something.
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Postby Yuki-Anne » Thu Sep 16, 2010 1:19 pm

Okay, I wanted to know what the standards are for slapping a "green" label on something. There are several organizations that certify products "green," but it's not uncommon for companies to participate in "greenwashing," which is basically slapping a "we're green!" sticker on the product and calling it good.

Here are some links that I found helpful:
http://www.greenfudge.org/2010/07/06/greenwashing-do-you-know-a-real-green-label-from-a-false-one/
http://www.ecohomemagazine.com/green-building/greenwashing-what-you-need-to-know-about-environmental-claims-and-what-you-can-do-about-them.aspx?page=5
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainable_business
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_14000
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Postby Shao Feng-Li » Thu Sep 16, 2010 4:22 pm

Nate (post: 1424699) wrote:The thing is "going green" actually means something. I don't know if you can just slap a "green" label on a product with absolutely nothing to back it up. This would mean that someone, somewhere, has to test the product and ensure it conforms to certain standards. This, of course, would cost money, and as I said, most companies don't like to spend money that they don't have to. This is why companies whine and try to prevent environmental laws from passing, because it means they have to shell out more money to ensure everything meets the standards. If there were no laws to reduce pollution, you can bet most companies would pollute as much as they wanted because it's honestly just cheaper to do.


Meh, maybe. Even corporations are made of people knowing that they need a place to live and there are many people out their ready to demonize a big company no matter what. Not saying companies don't do bad things and what not. And don't forget that the "going green" folks make a fair amount of money too.

The Walmart here though is supposed to be greener. It's supposed to be the first of its kind. The most noticeable thing is the lighting system. I suppose though that their being green saves them money in the long run anyway. Lower utilities, costumers find it attractive, etc.

I'm mostly just speculating about things anyway. But you know, going green is awful expensive for the consumer. You'd think that Clorox would entice customers to buy their "green" products by reducing the price. They're often more expensive, but "worth it for the environment!" Like, the greenest thing a consumer could do would make their own cleaners where they could. (you still have to buy some things, but borax, vinegar, salt, lemons, baking soda, etc. are super cheap.) I haven't done any hard studying about any of this, just some stuff I've thought about.
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Postby ich1990 » Thu Sep 16, 2010 7:40 pm

Nate (post: 1424676) wrote:I don't see how the efficiency really matters. If it came out that child labor was super efficient I don't think anyone would be singing the praises of child labor (libertarians, perhaps).
Ooh, that is some serious bait you are throwing out there. To avoid de-railing the topic, I will just say that yes, yes I do support child labor. And anyone wanting to talk about it with me can do so via PM.

3. Capitalism. That doesn't seem to make sense, but the problem is the insane capitalists who adhere to it like it's a religious doctrine handed down on high from God only care about making money. Trying to save the environment is kind of expensive, and to them, any laws that would prevent corporations from plundering and pillaging the environment are evil. So when you tell companies "Please reduce the amount of smoke your factory produces" these people whine and scream about money and "ebil gubment interference" because to them if a company makes more money by making a cloud of smoke so thick and high it looks like the tower of Mordor, that's their right!
Could you provide an example of this? I don't know as though I have ever encountered anyone who thinks this way. They all realize that if they turn the Earth into a desert it would be kind of bad for business.
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Postby blkmage » Thu Sep 16, 2010 8:24 pm

Efficiency as a broad metric is important because it's a general measure of how much waste is or isn't generated. Now, obviously, it isn't the only metric, because there's things like whether or not the waste generated is more or less harmful than some other waste or whether or not it's renewable or whatever.

I don't think corporations are run by people in top hats and monocles twirling their moustaches and cackling as they pave over some fertile ground, but I don't think they tend to be as environmentally conscious about their operations as they should be. That's not because they're negligent, but because they just don't think about it. And that's to be expected. I don't think most people (and hence, by extension, businesses) think far enough ahead to measure their environmental impact until they're made aware of it or are forced to deal with it.
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Postby Nate » Thu Sep 16, 2010 8:43 pm

ich1990 wrote:yes, yes I do support child labor.

Eh, I don't classify that as child labor, but I guess it technically would be from a legal sense. I wasn't talking so much about 14 or 15 year olds getting jobs...to me, that isn't child labor. Nor would things like a kid who wanted to mow people's lawns or walk their dogs or something (I think those are allowed anyway?).

I was talking about like 7 or 8 year olds. I would at least hope everyone here can agree that if it was somehow discovered that employing 7 or 8 year olds at factories and warehouses was more efficient for some bizarre reason, that no one would support it.
Could you provide an example of this? I don't know as though I have ever encountered anyone who thinks this way.

"Drill baby drill." And that's just from two years ago.

I can't think of any specific examples. I would normally say something like "BP OIL SPILL" but that was more a problem of negligent mishandling than willful maliciousness (the net effect on the environment is the same in the end, but I'm not going to call them evil for it).

However, the very fact that things like the FDA exist is proof enough that MOST companies are not going to go out of their way to make things better than they have to. If companies could get away with marketing sugar pills as magic weight loss pills and charge a hundred bucks a bottle you can bet if the FDA wasn't around that some of them would definitely do it.

Not all companies are evil. I'm not going to make that claim. Nor am I going to say if standards didn't exist, that every company would throw away their standards. The problem I am going to say is that if the FDA and the EPA didn't exist, and an unscrupulous company was able to make money hand over fist by polluting and lying, they would do it. At that point, if you don't have government intervention to stop it, then they can make tons of money and the "good" companies that would spend extra money to make things better would go out of business, because the unscrupulous company would be able to take more losses (since they're spending less) and the public would likely never know (or even care) about their lack of principles.

I mean there could be like a hundred sexual harassment lawsuits filed at Nabisco every year and I wouldn't know anything about it. Some companies, if they could get away with secretly polluting in shady dealings, would totally do it. Bobby Kotick is one of those people...we should be "thankful" he's in the video game industry instead of somewhere that could do real harm.

But that's where I stand on it. There's always The Jungle which admittedly is fiction. It's also more about the poor treatment of workers in general than the unsanitary conditions of meat packers of the time, although the latter is what everybody remembers it for. Also to be fair, when it was published, meat packers tripped over themselves to ask the government to create standards and inspections to assure the public their meat was safe and clean. Though, as far as I'm concerned, it was only because the book made them look bad. If the book had never been published, would meat packers have been clamoring for the government to establish these bureaus or create these regulations? nope.avi

Sure, probably a decent amount of those meat packers were actually clean and sanitary. Great! But, there were sleazy unclean meat packers that totally would have kept doing what they were doing if the book had never been published. And the public never would have known. So, that's why I'm a bit critical, because businesses have already proven willing to cut corners when it comes to sanitation and health, and if there weren't environmental legislation on the books there'd be a few who would cut corners there too. And as I said before, if it turns out to be more profitable to pollute than to be green, it only takes one or two companies to really do massive amounts of damage.

Man this post was longer than I thought it would be.
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Postby mechana2015 » Thu Sep 16, 2010 9:01 pm

An example of an industry that wasn't well regulated destroying things to make money would be the paper industry. The byproducts were and in some cases still are dumped straight into rivers, killing practically everything in them. One of the more recent cases where local residents have fighting to have a live river rather than a dead toxic waste stream was as recent as this year, in the Pigeon River. Another polluted river is the Fox River in Wisconson. There are other examples worldwide, including lake Baikal, and the Uruguay river.
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Postby Davidizer13 » Thu Sep 16, 2010 9:54 pm

Shao Feng-Li (post: 1424752) wrote:But you know, going green is awful expensive for the consumer. You'd think that Clorox would entice customers to buy their "green" products by reducing the price. They're often more expensive, but "worth it for the environment!" Like, the greenest thing a consumer could do would make their own cleaners where they could. (you still have to buy some things, but borax, vinegar, salt, lemons, baking soda, etc. are super cheap.) I haven't done any hard studying about any of this, just some stuff I've thought about.


I don't know about chemicals, but I know in the case of foods and fuel, the less environmentally-friendly product is often heavily subsidized - we aren't paying the true cost of these goods. For example, the cost of a gallon of gas, adjusted for the costs of the environmental damage that oil extraction, refining and combustion cause, would be closer to 5 or 6 dollars. The same concept applies to other goods, too. Also, there's an economy of scale working - more of the "regular" product is being made, so it's cheaper per unit to produce.

A possible line of argument for the environmentally friendly product is that it will cause less problems down the road, so in the long run, it is actually cheaper than saving now and having to fix the problems the alternative causes. I'm not quite sure how much I agree with this, because even with better products, you're still having to produce the containers for them and expending a considerable amount of energy to transport the product to the store. (In fact, much of the energy that goes into food production goes into transportation.)

As a whole, I agree with the goals of the environmental movement, and we've waited far too long to act on these issues that are now the key sticking points - I read an environmental science textbook from the early/mid-1990s that had discussions of almost all the issues we're facing down now (anthropogenic climate change, alternative automobile propulsion, renewable energy, overpopulation, etc), and little has changed since then about the facts of the issues.

Because of this, there are some scientists that believe that we've done these things for long enough that the things we've done to the earth are now irreversible, or can't be reversed in a human lifetime. Even if we stop all CO2 emissions tomorrow, it might take 50 years or more for its effects to turn around.

In the meantime, there's an emerging field known as geoengineering - basically, it involves actively changing the environment to reverse global warming - things like fertilizing the oceans with nutrients for photosynthetic algae, pumping sulfur dioxide into the air to reduce the amount of sunlight that reaches the earth, and building these concrete barrels to improve ocean circulation in the Gulf of Mexico to encourage algae growth (and dissipate hurricanes). The main problem I have with it is that we don't know the effects of these actions, and by implementing them on a global scale right away, it might make things even worse.
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Postby Nate » Thu Sep 16, 2010 10:46 pm

I know you were talking about it mostly neutrally but no more global warming talk? Please? XD Just pretend everyone agrees with your personal feelings on it and so it's unnecessary to mention, I think it would be better for everyone that way.
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Postby ich1990 » Thu Sep 16, 2010 10:53 pm

Nate (post: 1424864) wrote:I was talking about like 7 or 8 year olds. I would at least hope everyone here can agree that if it was somehow discovered that employing 7 or 8 year olds at factories and warehouses was more efficient for some bizarre reason, that no one would support it.
I guess I would generally agree with your hypothetical, although if 8 year olds could cure cancer by working labs or something (and there wasn't any harm to the kids) then I would probably disagree. In fact, if the kids are doing pretty much anything productive and there isn't any harm to the kids I would probably disagree. Heck, my eight year old sister goes out to work in the family business all the time and it is great for her and great for us.

"Drill baby drill." And that's just from two years ago.....

I can't think of any specific examples. I would normally say something like "BP OIL SPILL" but that was more a problem of negligent mishandling than willful maliciousness (the net effect on the environment is the same in the end, but I'm not going to call them evil for it).
Okay, I understand your general ideas and pretty much agree with them. Still, that is just one example--and one with a debatable environmental fallout at that. My point is that not all companies are bad and that it is easy to point fingers at the wrong thing if we insist on making the straw-man Evil Shady Company the environmental enemy number one. It sort of sounded that way from your previous post, which is why I asked for my details. Glad we could clear that up.
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Postby mechana2015 » Fri Sep 17, 2010 4:33 am

Ich, my previous post was an answer to you regarding the request for examples of industries or companies. Another even more specific example would be a news article I just happened across about Cabot Oil and Gas, who've been accused of, through their process of collecting natural gas, rendering a Pennsylvania town's water supply both undrinkable and FLAMMABLE. The company refuses to consider the possibility that they're at fault.
http://www.cnn.com/video/?/video/us/2010/09/13/griffin.gas.danger.cnn
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Postby ich1990 » Fri Sep 17, 2010 12:20 pm

mechana2015 (post: 1424919) wrote:Ich, my previous post was an answer to you regarding the request for examples of industries or companies. Another even more specific example would be a news article I just happened across about Cabot Oil and Gas, who've been accused of, through their process of collecting natural gas, rendering a Pennsylvania town's water supply both undrinkable and FLAMMABLE. The company refuses to consider the possibility that they're at fault.
http://www.cnn.com/video/?/video/us/2010/09/13/griffin.gas.danger.cnn
Okay, thanks for the examples. I guess there are a few not-so-smart companies out there. I mean, look at what it cost them! They have to truck in clean water, and the townspeople are suing the heck out of them. To be fair, I guess they were following EPA guidelines. Just goes to show that you have to use your head about this stuff and that government can't always be trusted to tell you to do the right thing. When it is your investment capital at stake, you have to hold yourself to even higher standards than what the government requires; it is cheaper that way.
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