Well, if you’re worried about affordability just consider how the climate crisis is, and will continue, to drive up the cost of almost everything and that it will be worse if we do not adopt green solutions.
Short-term vs long-term. People are currently worried about short-term costs to the exclusion of long-term ones. You’re correct that not investing in green solutions has a high long-term cost, but people who are struggling to keep a roof over their heads and food on the table don’t have the mental resources to worry about the condition of the world and its influence on prices a year or a decade or a century from now. And that may not be right, but it’s the way things are.
And it is the job of our politicians and leaders to create policies, rules and innovations to allow canadians to make better choices without them being fully educated on those choices, without making financial sacarafices in the short term, or without significant quality of life changes.
It is hard for climate change denier to use electricifed transit over their car if the transit takes 3x as long, however they are far more likely to use that transit if it is both free and faster than commuting by car. Those are the kinds of feedbacks we need, where people can make the green decision but still personally benefit by saving time, money, or convenience.
I think we’ll just keep blaming insurance companies for being greedy instead of connecting the dots that rising home insurance is largely influenced by increased disaster risk.
Look at Alberta where the insurance companies are paying for cloud seeding to avoid hailstorms which have increased in severity.
I all too often consider the fact that climate collapse with take human quality of life back the better part of a century in the developed world, and much more on the global south. Not to mention the damage to non-human life we’ve been doing, even from the beginning of the industrial revolution, constituting a mass extinction as bad as any in the age of the Earth.
But I owe my housemates two months rent, and now they don’t have any more money either. What can I do? I have to buy the cheapest, and least, of whatever is available.
Well, if you’re worried about affordability just consider how the climate crisis is, and will continue, to drive up the cost of almost everything and that it will be worse if we do not adopt green solutions.
Short-term vs long-term. People are currently worried about short-term costs to the exclusion of long-term ones. You’re correct that not investing in green solutions has a high long-term cost, but people who are struggling to keep a roof over their heads and food on the table don’t have the mental resources to worry about the condition of the world and its influence on prices a year or a decade or a century from now. And that may not be right, but it’s the way things are.
And it is the job of our politicians and leaders to create policies, rules and innovations to allow canadians to make better choices without them being fully educated on those choices, without making financial sacarafices in the short term, or without significant quality of life changes.
It is hard for climate change denier to use electricifed transit over their car if the transit takes 3x as long, however they are far more likely to use that transit if it is both free and faster than commuting by car. Those are the kinds of feedbacks we need, where people can make the green decision but still personally benefit by saving time, money, or convenience.
Maslow’s heirarchy in action.
No matter how bad things are, we certainly can worry about the conditions of the world. However, it’s not very constructive.
I think we’ll just keep blaming insurance companies for being greedy instead of connecting the dots that rising home insurance is largely influenced by increased disaster risk.
Look at Alberta where the insurance companies are paying for cloud seeding to avoid hailstorms which have increased in severity.
Yes. But if you literally can’t afford to go green you don’t have a choice, really.
I am worried about affordability.
I all too often consider the fact that climate collapse with take human quality of life back the better part of a century in the developed world, and much more on the global south. Not to mention the damage to non-human life we’ve been doing, even from the beginning of the industrial revolution, constituting a mass extinction as bad as any in the age of the Earth.
But I owe my housemates two months rent, and now they don’t have any more money either. What can I do? I have to buy the cheapest, and least, of whatever is available.
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