• @Pretzilla@lemmy.world
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    114 months ago

    All true and all, but it’s an ironic framing that implies saving human lives, since human population growth is the biggest driver by far.

    Saving all diversity of life on the planet and preserving quality of life should be the stated objectives.

    • @yessikg@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 months ago

      Population growth is not the biggest factor, that is just fascist/racist propaganda. We are just used to overconsuming

    • @Skasi@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      human population growth is the biggest driver by far

      I argue that the biggest driver for CO2 emissions at the moment is not population growth, but rather the rise of the quality of living in high population low income regions such as China, India, etc.

      preserving quality of life should be the stated objectives

      Does that mean you also want the many inequalities to remain? CO2 emissions per person are spread as unequal as wealth. Demanding that people are allowed to continue living far above the carrying capacity of the Earth while others live far below is not a solution to the problem.

      People argue something along the lines of “spending a lot of energy gives a good quality of life” and to some extend this is true. Though when people spend an hour or two to drive to work in a private car 5 days a week that doesn’t seem like a good quality of living to me.

      To fight climate change without having to miss out on a good quality of living it’s important that people get the most “bang for their buck” as far as CO2 emmissions are concerned. I argue that things like watching Formula 1 drivers, owning private jets or even just doing long communes to work by car are among the WORST bang for your CO2-buck anybody can get. Riding a bike, having a picnic in a local park or commuting via public transportation (which lets you do other things like playing on your phone, reading a book or chatting with people while waiting) seem to be way better options.

    • @MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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      64 months ago

      In that case, why are Chinas emissions hoing up, when its population is shrinking?

      Population growth matters, but the real issue is consumption. Intresstingly people have fewer children in urbaized socitied, when they have all basic material needs meet and womens rights are improved. So we just have to meet everybodies needs to a reasonable level and have to reduce emissions. Population is solving itsrlf at that point. If we did that global population would peak before 2050 and fall to about 6billion by the end of the century.

    • @pearsaltchocolatebar
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      24 months ago

      You’re not going to get the people who can affect change to care by putting forth quality of life and life on the planet as driving factors.