Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

IllWorry8404 t1_ivf5ap5 wrote

I think most debates are like that, but if you can’t even engage with other people on stage explaining why your policies are better than the other guy’s how good are you going to be locking horns with Putin/ MBS/ etc? I was underwhelmed by his entire campaign.

10

IllWorry8404 t1_ivf6e47 wrote

Yeah. You’re right. Leaders never engage with each other on the phone or at a summit. I’m sure they just sit aside and let the wind take them where they need to go. Putin is a notoriously difficult fuck to deal with - long before he invaded his neighbor. He has made leaders, Americans included, look out of their league more than once. Personally, I’d rather not have an empty suit in office that can deal with the shit leaders and our Allies, but to each their own.

8

kinky-proton t1_ivf9ect wrote

Incentive govs to phase out coal soon, mine included. Im guessing it means funding other energy projects.

We had an event that made natural gas way more expensive so they fired up the coal stations.

On a practical level, investment in a gas pipeline from Nigeria into Morocco is the best way to change that, it'd provide natural gas (that Nigeria just burns rn ) to 15 african countries and export some to Europe.

2

RealisticCurrent2405 t1_ivffjsc wrote

Lowering the commodity price of coal, letting India and China pump more of it

1

loudin t1_ivfg06n wrote

Maybe he can try to phase out coal in the US first before going abroad.

3

toolttime2 t1_ivfoweh wrote

After Japan’s nuclear accident from the earthquake they are going back to coal. More safe and more reliable

−7

OriginalCompetitive t1_ivfzuzx wrote

Google it if you really want to know. But in short, he bankrolled a war room of lawyers who spent the decade filing lawsuits, pushing regulatory changes, funding state and local legislation and initiatives, and anything else they could think of to target individual coal plants and drive them out of business.

And as your comment shows, it was a largely thankless task. He’s an unsung hero of the environmental movement.

24

GI_X_JACK t1_ivg03qf wrote

I am going to say "no he didn't".

Ultimately, its the work of engineers designing the systems, not the financial contributions which make change.

Money doesn't do anything, it just gets other people to do the actual work, while giving credit to people who made billions on, well others hard work.

It doesn't give any details on what this plan is, or how the $500 million was spent, so its a big "we don't know".

Lets say we had a system like Norway, where the oil industry was public and not private, and then used the revenue to pivot away from domestic consumption of oil, we wouldn't need the "charity".

We'd also have more accountability on where that 500 million was spent, and what this "plan" for solving global warming actually is.

But here we are, with this private charity, with no transparency, and a plan that is "just trust me bro", and suddenly he's the greatest person alive? Surely you jest.

−14

OriginalCompetitive t1_ivg2pmm wrote

Ok, but it goes both ways. If money doesn’t do anything except get other people to do the real work, and it’s those other people who are responsible for actual events, then the rich owners of oil companies also don’t really do anything, and it’s the front line engineers who actually drill for oil who are truly responsible for the evils of climate change. Right?

The fact is that money organizes activity in our world. If you want to imagine a different world where everyone follows the Norwegian model, go for it. Meanwhile, Bloomberg used his money in the actual world to make a huge positive contribution to reducing greenhouse emissions.

14

GI_X_JACK t1_ivg4qty wrote

Did he?

OK, so itemize where that money actually went.

Or what is in that plan he has?

And how come no one else is getting credit besides bloomberg?

In the actual world, men like Bloomberg, especially his contributions politically, both economic and his positions in office cancel out anything he might have done as charity.

If you want a REAL compare and contrast, I'll go with NJ Gov Phil Murphy. Like Bloomberg, Murphy used to work in finance. Like Bloomberg, Murphy is rich.

Murphy ran on a campaign of not just bringing offshore wind to NJ, but an articulated, public plan on bringing the entire industry along with building the turbines, and put this right on the debate floor and part of his campaign.

Bloomberg as a "plan". What is it? can we read it? he donated $500 million. To what? How was this money spent?

The original statement: "Bloomberg did more than any other person to end the use of coal".

Can you back that up with anything other than "$500 million given to unknown sources" and "just trust me bro"

−9

Sharp-Ad1824 t1_ivg7tj9 wrote

Seems he woke up rambling something with no plan of action.

1

nyaaaa t1_ivgazba wrote

> And as your comment shows, it was a largely thankless task. He’s an unsung hero of the environmental movement.

Even according to their own website they did barely anything.

https://www.beyondcarbon.org/timeline/

Guess it worked on you.

I also don't see any significant impact on coal plant retirements beyond what would normally have happened. Good timed PR move.

https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=50658

−7

james_d_rustles t1_ivhczcx wrote

I think there’s a reasonable middle ground here. I’m not a fan either of crediting billionaires with fixing complex issues after they throw a tiny fraction of their net worth at it and get hailed as a hero.. but on the flip side, money does certainly help, and the fact that they’re deciding to spend their money on some issue can’t be completely overlooked. Let’s give credit to all the engineers and hard workers who are making these types of things possible with technological advancements, and we can also make note of the fact that having that much money is fucking obscene to begin with, but I’d still rather the billionaires spend their money on these types of initiatives instead of buying social media vanity projects or manipulating the stock market.

2

GI_X_JACK t1_ivho08p wrote

Here is a reasonable middle ground:

Why don't you itemize what you've actually done. Perhaps with that 1 billion go start a company. Perhaps you can even make money on it.

And then show some actual leadership done, other than just showing a dollar amount and vauge plan.

1

GearSilent6772 t1_ivhxig8 wrote

Because of the lack of ability to efficiently store energy that is overproduced during peak generation, 100% renewable is not a current option in the next 7 years. Renewable have to have a "ballast" to be able to be reliable. As of now, without fossil or fission power, it is not reliable enough to sustain a developed nation, let alone a developing nation.

3