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I haven't put in the urls for all the links here, so those whom get the

digest will need to go to the website to access the links.

 

INDUSTRY'S PLAN FOR US

_http://www.precaution.org/lib/07/prn_the_industry_plan.071025.htm_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/07/prn_the_industry_plan.071025.htm)

By Peter Montague

 

[Rachel's introduction: The fossil fuel corporations have a plan for us, and

it does not include any substantial investment in renewable solar energy.

Their plan is focused on " geo-engineering " -- which means re-engineering the

oceans, the atmosphere and the earth itself to make it possible to continue

burning fossil fuels. U.S. EPA is on board with the plan.]

 

It now seems clear that the coal and oil industries are not going to

allow the United States to curb global warming by making major

investments in renewable sources of energy. These fossil fuel

corporations simply have too much at stake to allow it.

 

Simple physics tells us that the way to minimize the human

contribution to global warming is to leave the remaining fossil fuels

in the ground -- stop mining them as soon as humanly possible. This

obvious solution would require us to turn the nation's industrial

prowess to developing solar power in its many forms as quickly as we

can -- we would need a " _'Manhattan Project' for Energy_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/06/prn_manhattan_project_for_energy.051115.htm)

, " as the

strategy journal of _the top U.S. military planners_ (http://www.jcs.mil/)

said recently.

 

Look at the relative size of our current government investments in

solar vs. fossil fuels. In 2007 the federal Department of Energy spent

_$168 million_ (http://www.precaution.org/lib/solar_budget_168m.070308.htm)

on solar research. On the other hand each year since

1991 the U.S. government has spent 1000 times that amount -- $169

billion -- subsidizing the flow of oil from the Middle East,

_according to the Joint Chiefs of staff_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/06/prn_manhattan_project_for_energy.051115.htm) ,

our top military planners.

And that figure doesn't include what consumers paid for the oil

itself. If our solar investment remains one-tenth of one percent of

our investment in oil, there will be no solar power to speak of in our

future.

 

A rapid shift to renewables based on solar would not be easy and I

don't want to minimize the effort required. It's stupendously large.

But we've undertaken heroic industrial projects before -- and with

notable success. We mobilized quickly and massively to defeat the

combined industrial might of Germany, Japan, and Italy in less than

five years after Pearl Harbor. The original _Manhattan Project_

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Project) turned

a physicist's theory into a working A-bomb in less than 6 years; just

building the gaseous diffusion plant near Oak Ridge, Tennessee was a

scientific, engineering and industrial feat of astonishing magnitude

and complexity. The _Marshall Plan_

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Plan) successfully rebuilt Europe after

WW II. Our Man-on-the-Moon program succeeded just 11 years after the

Russians tweaked out national ego by launching Sputnik into orbit in

1957.

 

Yes, a shift to solar-powered renewables would be difficult, but it's

doable. Unfortunately, any plan to shift from fossil fuels to solar

has three fatal flaws, from the viewpoint of Big Oil and Big Coal:

 

1. The fossil fuel corporations have an enormous investment in fossil

infrastructure and they own vast quantities of fossil fuels that they

plan to exploit with little real effort over the next 50 years. They

have been making excellent profits for a century and, as fossil fuels

get scarcer, prices will only rise. In 2006, ExxonMobil reaped profits

larger than any other corporation in history ($39.5 billion). If the

U.S. does not invest seriously in renewable alternatives, we'll have

no choice but to pay whatever price the fossil corporations demand.

Just a few days ago oil hit $90 a barrel; eight years ago it was

selling for $10 a barrel. No wonder _ExxonMobil now has a book value

larger than the national budget of France_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/resolved_corps_shall_take_us_seriously.070812.htm\

) . Naturally, they intend to

maintain their market share, even if it means doing everything in

their power to thwart progress.

 

2. The fossil fuel business is 100 years old and fully understood. No

surprises lie ahead. But renewables? Who knows which renewables will

win out in the marketplace of ideas? If Uncle Sam were to invest as

much money in solar power as it has so far invested in the Iraq war

(roughly $800 billion), who knows what new technologies would emerge?

(Incidentally, if we maintain our current solar research budget at

$168 million per year, it will take us 4761 years before we have spent

as much on solar research as we have, so far, spent in Iraq.) New

technical innovations could be very unsettling for complacent

industries like coal and oil. For them, innovation spells trouble.

Innovation could render them irrelevant in a decade or two and they

could disappear just like the makers of whale-oil lamps and buggy

whips 100 years ago.

 

3. Coal and oil are highly centralized. It's their nature. Whoever

owns the fossil fuels, the big central power plants, and the

distribution systems can call the shots. But solar? The sun shines

everywhere and it's free. Suppose some woman at MIT develops a solar

panel that you paint onto your roof (from a can you buy at Home

Depot), attach some wires, and start generating your own electricity?

Central control disappears. This would be like tossing a hand grenade

into the current corporate/political structure. Of course even right-

wing politicians love lefty-sounding slogans like " power to the

people, " but they don't mean real power like electricity or hot water

or home-made hydrogen for transportation fuel. (Check out the Nova TV

program, " _Saved by the Sun_ (http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/solar/) , " which

briefly mentions paint-on solar

panels.)

 

No, a serious plan to focus the nation's industrial prowess onto a

solar-powered rebirth will not be allowed by the fossil corporations.

Instead we'll be offered a rolling circus of technical fixes aimed at

keeping coal and oil streaming out of the ground. The circus is

already well under way.

 

A Sulfur Parasol to Blot Out the Sun

 

Just this week the New York Times published _a proposal to attach a

fire hose to some lighter-than-air balloons_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/cooling_the_globe.071024.htm) for the purpose

of

injecting at least a million tons of sulfur particles into the upper

atmosphere, to create a giant parasol to cool the planet. Such a

scheme might further deplete the Earth's ozone shield, which remains

frayed from DuPont's earlier botched experiment with _CFCs_

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haloalkane#Chloro_fluoro_compounds_.28CFC.2C_HCFC.\

29) . And it

could create large-scale acid rain. But contemplating these clownish

Rube Goldberg solutions may at least relieve the stress of facing what

really needs to be done.

 

A new word enters our vocabulary: Geo-engineering

 

Instead of allowing the U.S. to make the transition to solar power,

the fossil corporations have evidently decided it's better to

re-engineer the oceans and the atmosphere -- and perhaps even the

planetary orbit of the Earth itself -- to make it possible to continue

burning fossil fuels for another 50 years.

 

Grand schemes for re-engineering the planet now have their own special

name -- geo-engineering. The word means, " global-scale interventions

to alter the oceans and the atmosphere so fossil corporations can

continue business as usual. "

 

The fire-hose-and-balloon project is only one of many " geo-

engineering " schemes in the works.

 

Fertilizing the Oceans with Iron

 

There are serious plans afoot to _dump huge quantities of soluble iron

into the oceans_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/fertilizing_oceans_with_iron.070923.htm) as

fertilizer, intending to stimulate the growth of

plankton, which will then eat carbon dioxide from the air. As the

plankton die, their carcasses will sink to the bottom of the ocean,

carrying all that carbon dioxide with them, where it will remain

for... for... well, actually, nobody knows for how long. How long

might it be before that dormant carbon dioxide comes back to bite us?

Nobody knows. Would such a plan disrupt life in the oceans? Nobody

knows. But private firms are pressing ahead with large-scale ocean-

fertilization experiments as we speak. (They are hoping to get rich

selling " carbon credits " to polluters so the fossil corporations can

continue contaminating the atmosphere with carbon dioxide. We might

well ask the ethical question, who gave these cowboys permission to

run geo-engineering experiments in the world's oceans?)

 

This is all very reminiscent of earlier plans to _bury nuclear waste

in the floor of the Pacific Ocean_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/seabed_radwaste_disposal.19980101.htm) , on the

theory that the seabed has

lain dormant for many millions of years. But that plan never caught on

because few people could develop sufficient confidence that the future

would unfold exactly like the past. There was that nagging doubt...

what if we've missed something important and we turn out to be wrong?

What if our understanding is flawed? There was too much at stake, and

the plan was shelved. (With carbon dioxide, of course, there's far

more at stake.)

 

Mirrors in Orbit

 

Now there's a new plan to rocket _mirrors into orbit_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/mirrors_in_space.060302.htm) around the

earth. Another parasol to block sunlight. The mirrors would consist of

a mesh of aluminum threads a millionth of an inch in diameter, " like a

window screen made of exceedingly fine metal wire, " says Lowell Wood

at Lawrence Livermore Lab, who dreamed up the idea. The only drawback

to this plan mentioned so far is its enormous dollar cost: to reduce

incoming sunlight by 1% would require -- get this -- 600,000 square

miles of mirror, which is larger than the combined areas of Arkansas,

Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia,

Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Maine, South Carolina, West Virginia,

Maryland, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, New Jersey,

Delaware and Rhode Island.

 

Of course the U.S. has a long history of large-scale interventions

above the clouds. In 1962 we conducted an experiment called _Starfish

Prime_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starfish_Prime) " in which we exploded

a small nuclear weapon (equivalent to 1.4

million tons of TNT) 400 miles up in the atmosphere, just to see what

would happen. What happened came as a complete surprise to the

geniuses who set off the blast. The explosion left so much residual

radiation trapped in space that the world's first communication

satellite -- Telstar, which was launched after Starfish -- failed

because it encountered crippling levels of radiation. Ultimately,

one-third of all the low-orbit satellites in space at the time were

disabled by the residual radiation from Starfish Prime. Another

unanticipated cost of Starfish was the temporary shutdown of

communications and electrical supply in Hawaii, 1300 kilometers from

the blast. Who knew?

 

Project RBR

 

Despite lessons supposedly learned from Starfish, just last year the

Pentagon proposed _a project called RBR_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/communication_disruption.060814.htm) ( " Radiation

Belt

Remediation " ). The RBR project would generate " very low frequency

radio waves to flush particles from the [Van Allen] radiation belts

and dump them into the upper atmosphere over one or several days. "

(There are two Van Allen radiation belts; the one closest to earth

lies 400 to 4000 miles in the sky.) The stated purpose of the RBR

project is to " protect hundreds of low earth-orbiting satellites from

having their onboard electronics ruined by charged particles in

unusually intense Van Allen radiation belts 'pumped up' by high-

altitude nuclear explosions or powerful solar storms. " It seems the

Pentagon is making plans for conducting nuclear warfare above the

clouds. But I digress.

 

Luckily a small group of scientists from Britain, New Zealand and

Finland (organized as the " British Antarctic Survey " ) caught wind of

the RBR plan and actually gave it some thought. They concluded that

RBR would " significantly alter the upper atmosphere, seriously

disrupting high frequency (HF) radio wave transmissions and GPS

navigation around the world. " The world's commercial (and military)

transport systems are now almost completely dependent upon _GPS_

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Positioning_System)

navigation, so disrupting the global GPS system would create economic

chaos, not to mention loss of life. Who knew?

 

A Plan to Change the Earth's Orbit

 

As pressure builds on the fossil corporations to quit contaminating

the atmosphere with CO2, plans for geo-engineering the planet grow

ever-more grandiose and desperate. There is now talk of moving the

Earth 1.5 million miles out of its orbit around the sun, to compensate

for doubling carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere. Ken Caldeira of

Stanford University has calculated that moving the Earth in this

fashion would _require the energy_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/mirrors_in_space.060302.htm) of five thousand

million million

hydrogen bombs (that's 5,000,000,000,000,000 hydrogen bombs). No doubt

the Pentagon is studying it with considerable interest.

 

The Biggest Geo-engineering Project: Carbon Sequestration

 

Now, the biggest earth-based geo-engineering project of all is in the

late stages of development by the coal and oil industries, and _is

about to be " regulated " by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/epa_to_regulate_carbon_sequestration.071011.htm)

(EPA). This is the plan that convinces me that the fossil

corporations have no intention of allowing the U.S. to make a rapid

transition to solar power. This Big Fossil plan is called CCS,

short for " carbon capture and sequestration " and it, too, closely

resembles dozens of previous unsuccessful attempts to figure out what

to do with radioactive waste.

 

Carbon sequestration is a fancy name for what used to be called the

" kitty litter solution " to radioactive waste: bury it in the ground

and hope it stays there. Carbon sequestration is a plan to capture

gaseous carbon dioxide from coal-fired power plants (and perhaps from

other industrial operations as well), turn it into a liquid, and _pump

it into the deep earth or perhaps into the ocean_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/burying_the_problem.19980101.htm) , where it will

remain for an unknown period of time. Professional optimists employed

by the fossil industries claim the unknown period of time is

" forever. " But how can they be sure?

 

Saving the Coal Industry

 

The future of the coal industry, in particular, is at stake. Without

carbon sequestration, the coal industry will not survive. Just this

month the state of Kansas refused to license the construction of a new

coal-fired power plant simply _because of its carbon dioxide

emissions_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/kansas_rejects_coal_plant.071019.htm) . This is

the first time a coal plant has been turned down

merely because of its contribution to global warming. The hand writing

is on the wall: Big Coal is doomed unless they can find some way to

demonstrate that " clean coal " is more than an advertising slogan. This

is what carbon sequestration geo-engineers are being paid to do.

 

Saving the Oil Industry (and the Automobile Industry)

 

But there's more at stake than just the coal industry. The oil

industry, too, is depending on " carbon sequestration " to convince the

public that continuing to burn fossil fuels is safe. Even the car

companies have recognized that their future depends upon convincing us

all that carbon sequestration will work -- and work forever.

 

We know this is really, really important to the fossil corporations

because some of the biggest names in global industry are underwriting

" geo-engineering " solutions for the carbon dioxide problem at some of

the most prestigious U.S. universities. The Center for Energy &

Environmental Studies at Princeton University is conducting geo-

engineering studies (_1.4 Mbyte PDF_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/princeton_cmi_6th_annual_report.070201.pdf) )

funded by BP (the _felonious_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/bp_pleads_to_felony.071025.htm)

oil corporation formerly known as British Petroleum) and by Ford

Motor, the troubled SUV manufacturer. Geo-engineering work at

Stanford University is being _supported_

(http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2007/february28/bensonsr-022807.html) by

ExxonMobil, by General

Electric, by Schlumberger (the oil-drilling services giant), and by

Toyota.

 

To convince the U.S. environmental community that geo-engineering

carbon dioxide is the only way to go, the _Stanford geo-engineering

group_ (http://gcep.stanford.edu/research/geoengineering.html) has linked up

with _NRDC_ (http://www.nrdc.org/) (Natural Resources Defense Council).

Together, they are publishing clever propaganda masquerading as

science. For example, in a recent _letter_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/nrdc_defends_carbon_sequestration.070501.pdf) to

California legislators

they say, " We only wish to address the science of CCS [carbon capture

and sequestration] here. " So we are expecting a scientific argument.

Instead, the letter tries to persuade legislators to support carbon

sequestration using arguments that have nothing to do with science.

 

The letter is peppered with distinctly unscientific language like

" perfectly safe " to describe the fossil corporations' favorite geo-

engineering solution. " Perfectly safe " is not a scientific concept. It

is a political concept.

 

To be fair, deep in their letter NRDC and friends add a few caveats to

their " perfectly safe " claim. For example, they say, " Leakage is

conceivable but it is unlikely in well-selected sites, is generally

avoidable, predictable, can be detected and remedied promptly, and in

any case is extremely unlikely to be of a magnitude to endanger human

health and the environment if performed under adequate regulatory

oversight and according to best practices. " [Emphasis in the

original.]

 

So carbon sequestration will be " perfectly safe " if it occurs

at " well-selected sites " and if performed under adequate

regulatory oversight and according to best practices. " [Emphasis

in the original.]

 

Let's examine these caveats. Are these scientific concepts? Do they

even refer to anything in the real world?

 

Human History: Selecting Sites for Dangerous Projects

 

What experience do humans have siting dangerous facilities at only

" well-selected sites " ? I am thinking of the atomic reactor in Japan

sited near an earthquake faults and _recently shut down by serious

earthquake damage_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/quake-prone_nuke_provokes_worry.070725.htm) . I

am thinking of the U.S. radioactive waste site

proposed for Yucca Mountain in Nevada where government and private

engineers felt the need to _falsify data to make the site appear

acceptable_ (http://www.precaution.org/lib/radwaste_hot_potato.050606.htm) .

How do NRDC and Stanford propose to avoid a repeat of

these fiascos when it comes time to site dozens or hundreds (perhaps

thousands) of sites for pumping carbon dioxide into the ground?

 

Human history: Best practices with Dangerous Technologies

 

And that about " best practices " ? Does this phrase take into account

actual human experience with power plant operators photographed

_asleep in the control room_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/nrc_lax_nuke_regulator.030928.htm) of nuclear

reactors? Or young men deep in

missile silos relieving their boredom by _getting drunk_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/drunk_in_titan_missile_silo.19820716.htm) or

_taking

drugs_ (http://www.precaution.org/lib/drugs_in_missile_silos.19820501.htm)

while standing ready to launch intercontinental ballistic

missiles armed with hydrogen warheads?

 

Will Every Nation Abide by the NRDC/Stanford Prescription?

 

After the U.S. begins injecting billions of tons of liquid carbon

dioxide into the earth, won't China, India and other countries do the

same? If they do, can they be counted on to choose only " well-selected

sites " and to follow only " best practices " for the next hundred years?

Who will oversee carbon sequestration in Nigeria or Uzbekistan?

 

How do NRDC and Stanford imagine that standards for site selection and

" best practices " will be enforced around the globe? Have NRDC and

Stanford published solutions to these problems? Or are they just

putting empty words on paper hoping to fool clueless legislators into

adopting untestable technical solutions that the fossil corporations

are paying them to promote?

 

But the most dubious part of the NRDC plan to geo-engineer carbon

sequestration is their claim that is will be " perfectly safe " if

performed with " adequate regulatory oversight. " Can NRDC and their

friends at Stanford point to any instances of large-scale industrial

enterprises that currently have " adequate regulatory oversight? "

 

Everyone knows that regulators quickly get captured by the industries

they are supposed to regulate. There is a substantial body of social

science literature on this point. Regulators are poorly paid, but if

they look the other way at regulatory violations, they may find a

lucrative job awaiting them when they retire from government. Less

sinister but more pervasive is the simple fact that regulated

corporations spend a lot of time befriending regulators, dropping by

to say hello, asking about the kids, gaining their trust and

ultimately their allegiance. Are NRDC and Stanford prepared to deny

this indisputable history of regulatory collapse? Have they examined

the dismal record of the Food and Drug Administration, the Consumer

Product Safety Commission, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the

Securities and Exchange Commission? Are they prepared to design and

describe regulatory institutions that do not suffer from these same

fundamental human flaws? Or are they just blowing smoke?

 

So let's examine these caveats just a bit more.

 

1. What actual experience to do humans have designing anything to be

kept out of the environment forever? Answer: None. Absolutely

none. In this context, then, what can " perfectly safe " possibly mean?

 

2. What human regulatory institutions can NRDC and friends point to

that have proven adequate? Let's see. The regulatory system for

preventing the proliferation of nuclear weapons? Today, 40 years after

the inception of the non-proliferation treaty, Israel, India, North

Korea, Pakistan -- all have The Bomb despite heroic efforts to prevent

its spread. The only reason Iraq and Syria don't have a nuclear weapon

is because Israel bombed their nascent nuclear power plants to

smithereens.

 

What about the regulatory system for controlling the discard of

radioactive waste? Radioactive waste is loose at _thousands of

locations around the planet_

(http://www.powells.com/biblio/17-9780262632041-1) . In hundreds (perhaps

thousands) of

instances we do not even know where the stuff has been dumped. This

technology was developed by the smartest people in the world with

unlimited budgets -- yet at places like the gold-plated Los Alamos

Scientific Laboratory in New Mexico (now renamed the Los Alamos

National Laboratory), plutonium, americium-241, strontium 90 and other

supremely dangerous radioactive elements were buried in shallow pits,

or simply _dumped into mountain canyons_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/los_alamos_dumped_nuke-waste.19970514.htm)

without any records kept of

their whereabouts. The kitty litter solution. And this was a federal

scientific laboratory under strict military surveillance and control

at the time. Can we expect the fossil corporations under the watchful

eye of EPA (wink, wink) to do better?

 

How about the regulatory system for curtailing the widespread

destruction of wildlife and human health from hormone-disrupting,

cancer-causing chlorinated chemicals? The arctic, which has no

industrial enterprises to speak of, is among the _most heavily

contaminated places on earth_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/07/prn_arctic_boys_disappearing.070912.htm)

because the chemical regulatory system

failed to consider how chemicals migrate once they are released into

the environment.

 

So where can we find real-world examples of this " adequate regulatory

oversight " that NRDC and Stanford say will be necessary to make carbon

sequestration " perfectly safe " ?

 

Maintaining vigilance for hundreds or thousands of years?

 

Elsewhere in their letter, NRDC and the engineers from Stanford say

they believe carbon sequestration can be maintained for millions of

years, but they say, if something goes wrong, rapid response will be

possible.

 

Is this really true?

 

Again, let's return to the debates over radioactive waste from the

late 1970s. Back then scientists were a bit more candid: they admitted

they knew of no way to pass information reliably to future generations

describing the location of radioactive waste dumps. Given human

history and the evanescence of human institutions, they could not

imagine a way to reliably warn future generations about dangers buried

in the earth. At one point they considered writing a huge warning

across the face of the moon using symbols because they had no idea

which human languages would survive thousands of years into the

future. Have NRDC and Stanford published their solution for this

problem?

 

Why should we assume that humans a hundred years from now -- let alone

500 or 5000 years from now -- will be able to monitor for carbon

dioxide leaks, locate them, and take rapid action to control them? The

prudent assumption would be that humans will NOT have those

capabilities. It seems to me it would be unethical to design our

technologies based on untested and untestable (and wildly optimistic)

assumptions about future humans and their social organizations. Who

gave us the right to make decisions now based on assumptions, which,

if they are wrong, could destroy the planet as a place suitable for

human habitation -- which is precisely what the carbon sequestration

researchers are intending to do.

 

With the future of the human species at stake, isn't a little humility

in order? Will these geniuses find themselves staring into the mirror

one day toward the end of their shameful careers muttering, " Who

knew? "

 

But ordinary people who aren't subsidized by energy or automobile

corporations are asking the same sorts of common-sense questions they

asked 20 years ago when the same sorts of brainy university types were

telling us it was " perfectly safe " to bury radioactive waste in the

ground:

 

** What if these scientists and engineers turn out to be wrong?

 

** What if there's something important they haven't thought of?

 

** Are these people infallible or are they human? They can't be both.

 

** Isn't it unethical to claim that something will be " perfectly safe "

when as a scientist you know you can't be perfectly sure?

 

** When the fossil corporations impose their plan on us and begin

large-scale carbon sequestration, won't that become a powerful

incentive to reduce federal funding for conservation, renewables, and

solar power? Then won't we have all our eggs in one basket? And didn't

our grandmothers tell us that was a bad idea?

 

** After the fossil corporations impose carbon sequestration on us,

won't we be saddled with even more killer fly ash choking the air, and

even more toxic bottom ash threatening groundwater supplies? Won't we

have even more destruction from mountain-top-removal coal mining, plus

the enormous waste of water and land in the mid-western and western

coal states? " Clean " coal will still be one of the dirtiest and most

destructive forms of energy. And oil will still keep dragging us into

endless bloody resource wars because we will still need to funnel more

and more of the world's remaining petroleum into our astonishingly

wasteful and inefficient enterprises. Is this really the direction we

want to be going? Is this a plan we can explain to our children with

pride? Is this a plan that will give our children hope?

 

** Would carbon sequestration truly be reversible if we discovered far

in the future that it was a mistake? If not, who can claim that it is

ethical to proceed?

 

** If radioactive waste and carbon dioxide are so dangerous and so

hard to manage, how does it make sense to steer the nation and the

world onto a course that will guarantee continued production of these

lethal substances far into the future?

 

** With the survival of humans at stake, isn't this a classic and

urgent case for applying the _precautionary principle_

(http://www.precaution.org/lib/pp_def.htm) ?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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