I have a paper to give this May at a conference where the big topic will be, and has been for some time for the industry, pollution.
All I really want to do is present some practical hardware solutions but I can't simply do that, I necessarily have to address some of the environmental issues head on.
I have to do so in such a way that they know that I am not an expert on the environmental issues.
I will be asking some hard questions, offering up my own answers for discussion and suggesting that if the industry considers the questions to be important, that they may need to seek authoritative answers. (It is always easy to find some good questions, and anyone can do that, it is finding the answers is the tough part).
I will get to have my say, no one can say I am talking nonsense since I say it first, and I finally will get to talk about what I want to talk about.
One of the real problems with any environmental issue is that sensible debate on the issues has been all but eradicated due to the propaganda from all sides but usually most effectively and without scruples from the environmentalists, at least initially.
I guess the road to hell really is paved with good intentions. I can accept that some environmentalists are so convinced of the righteousness of their cause that they can justify to themselves some of their propaganda.
That doesn't mean I think they are justified or right, just that I can understand why they think they are while actually, I find it could be counter productive i.e. dangerously wrong headed.
In some cases where they attack a moderate solution, it creates such confusion that instead of following one path that will achieve some results, the ensuing debate means that nothing gets done.
The fact is that in their ideal world all solutions are workable, so go for the toughest.
In the real world the toughest solutions may be so totally unworkable that nothing is achieved at great expense whereas a more moderate solution would actually deliver some tangible benefits.
JMW