Fear doesn’t work, we’ve known this for decades. If we know what positive steps are being taken, then we can support those or perhaps build on them if you’re able.

What about this?: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20210310-the-trillion-dollar-plan-to-capture-co2 We know corporations are a big part of the issue. Are there ways they’re being regulated?

That fear based, helpless feeling needs to be shot down when ever we see people spreading that. We need to take action, but no one is talking about what we, as a single household, can do. I’m not saying we alone can fix everything. What steps can we do and/or how can we support people who are doing the right thing?

  • Benj1B@sh.itjust.works
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    Theres a lot of research going into carbon sequestration through soil and plant technologies - basically accelerating what would happen naturally by a few orders of magnitude.

    Rapidly filling artifical peat bogs (through things like algae/weeds that are genetically modified to absorb more CO2) would allow for semi-permanent carbon capture as long as no one digs it up again. Similar projects with seaweed are under research as well.

    Personally I think anything to do with carbon capture is a bandaid at best, and failing massive global cooperation and societal change, we’re going to end up needing to geoengineer our way out of the problem. Things that block or impede solar heat absorption to cool the planet - atmospheric aerosols, artificial cloud generation, solar shades out in a lagrange point, basically manipulating conditions to influence how much energy is going into the system. There’s a nonzero chance we fuck it all up but as we hurtle through temperature records and tipping points, the idea of net zero emissions actually having an impact in our lifetimes seems more and more unlikely. There’s too much inertia in the system.

    • vivadanang@lemm.ee
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      solar shades out in a lagrange point

      this seems to be an unpopular option compared to injecting aerosols into the atmosphere but I hope people give it more thought; it’s damn near the only controllable solution we could engineer that we could dial up or down depending on conditions on the ground. injecting more shit into the atmosphere in the hopes that it acts predictably seems to be a wretched way to solve 300+ years of injecting shit into the atmosphere.