clarionreef
Advanced Reefer
- Location
- San Francisco
Kalk,
Perhaps more scientists should listen to Rush Limbaugh when driving around, no?
Then they could hear your views expressed from the source.
Heres another thread in the "coral-list" dialogue.
This time from Dr. Mark H Tupper, Senior Scientist
Palau International Coral Reef Center
PO Box 7086, Koror, Palau 96940
Steve
Hi listers,
I think James, Jeff and Alina are right on the money when they talk about
vehicle emissions and today's "bigger is better" SUV mindset. I doubt that
the public has any realization of the degree to which vehicle emissions
contribute to greenhouse gases. A quote from the California Cars Initiative:
"In California, transportation accounts for over 40% of greenhouse gas
emissions. Nationally the number is around 33%. Globally it's 20% and rising
fast, especially as car-starved China, India and Russia add to their
fleets." So, if we can agree that global warming and climate change are
adversely affecting coral reefs, then vehicle emissions are one of the major
culprits. But have governments or the auto industry made any attempt to
educate the public on this issue? If so, I must have missed it...
This is one of the most challenging problems our environment faces, given
the long history of our deep-rooted "car culture" lifestyle in North
America. It's amazing to me that with sky-high gas prices unlikely to change
while there is continuing war in the Middle East, people still want to buy
the biggest, most expensive SUV they can. For example, in the last decade,
Hummer went from a cottage industry aimed at producing exclusive (and
enormous) vehicles for celebrities, to a major automaker producing over
100,000 SUVs per year. And as Jeff said, how many of those are ever taken
off-road? And while DaimlerChrysler has been touting their advances in PHEV
technology (plug-in hybrid electric vehicles that can get 100+ mpg), they
were busy reviving the 425 horsepower Hemi engine and stuffing it into
4-door family sedans, and then developing a 500 horsepower V-10 for their
SUVs and pickup trucks. Do soccer moms really need to go 0-60 in under 5
seconds and cruise the highway at over 170 mph, which just 10 years ago
could only be done with a $200,000 exotic sports car? No. It would be
illegal anyway. Has DaimlerChrysler sold any mass-produced PHEVs yet? No.
Why not? Because hybrids are for nerdy enviro-geeks like us. Nobody else
would pay the premium price charged for them when they could get a "real"
car for less. In North America's car culture, big and powerful is sexy;
small and efficient is lame.
Sorry if this post seems too much about vehicles and not enough about coral
reefs, but I'm trying to address one of the root causes of coral reef
decline. We might say that greenhouse gases and resulting thermal stress are
a root cause of decline but they aren't the ultimate cause. They are a
symptom generated by human activities - a symptom that happens to trigger
its own set of secondary symptoms, including coral bleaching and disease. In
addressing the ultimate cause, the question is, how do we change the mindset
of an entire nation from one of spending all their disposable income on
unnecessary luxuries to one of moderation and conservation?
Cheers,
Mark
Dr. Mark H Tupper, Senior Scientist
Palau International Coral Reef Center
PO Box 7086, Koror, Palau 96940
tel (680) 488-6950; fax (680) 488-6951
and
Adjunct Research Associate
University of Guam Marine Laboratory
UOG Station, Mangilao, Guam 96923, USA
tel (671) 735-2375; fax (671) 734-6767
Perhaps more scientists should listen to Rush Limbaugh when driving around, no?
Then they could hear your views expressed from the source.
Heres another thread in the "coral-list" dialogue.
This time from Dr. Mark H Tupper, Senior Scientist
Palau International Coral Reef Center
PO Box 7086, Koror, Palau 96940
Steve
Hi listers,
I think James, Jeff and Alina are right on the money when they talk about
vehicle emissions and today's "bigger is better" SUV mindset. I doubt that
the public has any realization of the degree to which vehicle emissions
contribute to greenhouse gases. A quote from the California Cars Initiative:
"In California, transportation accounts for over 40% of greenhouse gas
emissions. Nationally the number is around 33%. Globally it's 20% and rising
fast, especially as car-starved China, India and Russia add to their
fleets." So, if we can agree that global warming and climate change are
adversely affecting coral reefs, then vehicle emissions are one of the major
culprits. But have governments or the auto industry made any attempt to
educate the public on this issue? If so, I must have missed it...
This is one of the most challenging problems our environment faces, given
the long history of our deep-rooted "car culture" lifestyle in North
America. It's amazing to me that with sky-high gas prices unlikely to change
while there is continuing war in the Middle East, people still want to buy
the biggest, most expensive SUV they can. For example, in the last decade,
Hummer went from a cottage industry aimed at producing exclusive (and
enormous) vehicles for celebrities, to a major automaker producing over
100,000 SUVs per year. And as Jeff said, how many of those are ever taken
off-road? And while DaimlerChrysler has been touting their advances in PHEV
technology (plug-in hybrid electric vehicles that can get 100+ mpg), they
were busy reviving the 425 horsepower Hemi engine and stuffing it into
4-door family sedans, and then developing a 500 horsepower V-10 for their
SUVs and pickup trucks. Do soccer moms really need to go 0-60 in under 5
seconds and cruise the highway at over 170 mph, which just 10 years ago
could only be done with a $200,000 exotic sports car? No. It would be
illegal anyway. Has DaimlerChrysler sold any mass-produced PHEVs yet? No.
Why not? Because hybrids are for nerdy enviro-geeks like us. Nobody else
would pay the premium price charged for them when they could get a "real"
car for less. In North America's car culture, big and powerful is sexy;
small and efficient is lame.
Sorry if this post seems too much about vehicles and not enough about coral
reefs, but I'm trying to address one of the root causes of coral reef
decline. We might say that greenhouse gases and resulting thermal stress are
a root cause of decline but they aren't the ultimate cause. They are a
symptom generated by human activities - a symptom that happens to trigger
its own set of secondary symptoms, including coral bleaching and disease. In
addressing the ultimate cause, the question is, how do we change the mindset
of an entire nation from one of spending all their disposable income on
unnecessary luxuries to one of moderation and conservation?
Cheers,
Mark
Dr. Mark H Tupper, Senior Scientist
Palau International Coral Reef Center
PO Box 7086, Koror, Palau 96940
tel (680) 488-6950; fax (680) 488-6951
and
Adjunct Research Associate
University of Guam Marine Laboratory
UOG Station, Mangilao, Guam 96923, USA
tel (671) 735-2375; fax (671) 734-6767