Updated: 9/11/06; 6:59:32 AM.
Gil Friend
Strategic Sustainability, and other worthy themes of our time
        

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

Steve Yastrow on Tom Peters' blog wonders why "global warming" is the Issue most poorly marketed?

Many comments (64 by the time I got my licks in), but most of them with relatively little knowledge of cutting edge initiaitves inthis space.

My late night two cents, posted there:

1. The science is not as confused as many people (even here!) seem to think it to be. In addition to the overwhelming majority of scientific opinion that has concluded "global warming" (I do like "global weirding"; Arthur Waskow calls it "global scorching") is a real concern, and the very substantial concern of re-insurance giants like Swiss Re and Munich Re (who can't afford even the risk of the scientists begin right, much less the reality), there's the physics of the thing. As I wrote 9 years ago: "Simply put, if we shift the amount or the nature of energy society adds to the atmospheric engine, the engine--our climate and weather--will change its behavior. It can't do anything but that. There may be dispute over how it will change, in what patterns, how quickly, and who will benefit or suffer. There can be no dispute over whether it will change. The laws of physics take care of that one." (See <a href="http://www.natlogic.com/resources/nbl/v05/n15.html,">http://www.natlogic.com/resources/nbl/v05/n15.html,<;/a> Weather or not: Risk and the physics of climate change.)

2. The other problem is that most folks -- business people, environmentalists, government regulators, commenters here -- are still in the grip of the dangerously obsolete aassumption that better environmental performance will cost money. The reality is that it can be a sound business investment with very handsome ROI. (See my recent <a href="http://www.natlogic.com/resources/nbl/v13/n06.html">http://www.natlogic.com/resources/nbl/v13/n06.html<;/a> and <a href="http://www.natlogic.com/resources/nbl/v14/n01.html,">http://www.natlogic.com/resources/nbl/v14/n01.html,<;/a> and Amory Lovins' <a href="http://www.OilEndgame.com)">Winning the Oil Endgame</a>). Or talk to the CEOs and CFOs of companies like DuPont, BP, STMicro -- and now <a href="http://radio.weblogs.com/0109157/2005/05/09.html#a938).">GE</a>
9:55:18 PM    comment []  trackback []

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