Did i miss something here?
I thought ducking out of Kyoto was saying something about competitiveness.
And before we go overboard in criticising Scorpio7, how much of the environmental legislation is well implemented and effective? How much of it is downright wrong?
And how much of it is adding to the problems of the US economy, and some other western countries?
The popular view is that we live in an age of global warming. Is it true? There are some very strong views about and some say it just isn't proven. Some that we are just in one of those cycles when we are warmer now.
Can anyone say whether catclytic converters on cars are the right way to go? Correct me if i am wrong (i know you will) but i understood that most of the pollution from a car occurs when the engine is cold. The catalytic converter is at its best when it is hot. So the time when it is most needed it is the least use. I also understood that lean burn and modern engine management could have done just as good a job had the industry been told to do something but not been mandated what it should do. (Incidentally, i hear that the way to overcome the problem is to install preheaters to warm up the catalysts. Yeah. Right. So we are all going to sit and wait for the thing to hot up before we drive off.) Of course, i may this totally wrong. But how many cars on the planet have catalytic converters and how many don't. And how much extra fuel is burnt to compensate for the otherwise better gas mileage that could have been had?
Politics and legislation are the bane of everyones lives. In Europe, the trend is toward more and more diesel passenger cars. This may be because they are thought to be less polluting, I wouldn't know. The exception is the UK where the proportion of diesels is actually falling. The reason? taxation. (see SMMT reports). The price of diesel is lower than petrol just about everywhere in Europe except the UK. A phsychological point i guess since the mpg is still better with diesel. But government gets it wrong again. In factlegislation fears are one reason why LPG fuelled cars never made it in the UK, the fear that if it became popular the tax burden would increase and strip all the benefits away again.
So, do catalytic converters represent sensible environmental legislation or bad politics?
How about "renewable" energy? How many of us are pursuaded that oil and gas are bad? Should we use Hydro-electricity? Solar power? Wind farms? well, so far as i can work out, none of them is as popular as they once were. In fact many do quite a bit of harm to the environment themselves. Hence the latest European proposal is for off-shore windfarms. Great for countries with a continental shelf i.e. shallow waters over the horizon. But cheap? No, tax subsidised. In Europe the green target is 12% of power by 2010 or something similar. We're going to be paying for it but is it as green? is it as environmentally friendly as the popular view says it is? There are some who say Natural gas is pretty near as environmentally friendly, uses 1/100 the space of a wind farm and natural gas resrves are pretty much renewable due to gas migration (that one is a bit of a stretch... ).
Take some other "green" issues such as the opposition to incinerators in the UK. Frankly, we know there are some chemicals we need to dispose of carefully. A well controlled incinerator in a well regulated country is a good solution to me. But the "environmentalists are agiants it. The result? well i would suspect a good few more drums of chemicals will be "washed overboard" off the west african coast for a while to come. We are getting to live in a PC world where we dare not challenge the received wisdom of a few pundits and we are paying a price. Not all environmental legislation is well constructed, well intended, well thought out or even any use at all.
So is it wrong to suggest that environemntal legislation should be reviewed? No, not even for reasons of economy. Like everything else, some luxuries are beyond affordability if there is no level playing field. Don't forget that we are not talking about environmental legislation universaly applied but legislation that harms one economy more than another.