I have to ask myself strange questions sometimes... If animals and all other living creatures are designed to withstand the elements of Earth, why aren't humans? Is the over-domestication of humans the very thing that is causing the most damage to our planet? If so, is something like that even reversible?
The good news is that a wider transition is underway: big wind facilities, solar energy plants and panels on rooftops, and bio gas plants are working hard to tip the scales. But what does energy transition really mean? What does it look like in daily life? And how does it play out in decades to come?
We have become so dependent on fossil fuels to power transportation, indoor climate control, and now they're even trying to control the weather. It is no longer a debate on the damage this causes to all ecosystems of our planet.
Several critical indicators have become more obvious with the passage of time... and to think, people used to argue about whether the release of carbon dioxide into our atmosphere was actually causing legitimate damage?!
We have also increased production of man-made environment modifications (like climate control chem trails) which seriously alter our planet's natural processes. This can create even more problems that may not be seen until the next generation.
Not to mention large disasters like Fukushima, the effects of which have only begun to be witnessed... considering the half-life of radiation.
The use of our primary power resources will eventually become such a burden on our own ecosystem, it has no choice but to be phased out by new innovations.
Existing movements are focusing on two main objectives, both seeming to be the most logical approach:
- Transition to known greener options for providing energy and continuing to improve them, while seeking to uncover unknown technologies.
- Decreasing the use of harmful resources, through improved energy efficient design technologies and actions.
Taking a closer look into everyday life... this would involve the actual removal of all products that do not operate from renewable sources of energy. If we start looking around at the products and technologies we use, I don't even know where to begin!
Starting on a small scale in people's households, and moving up to community facilities, hospitals, factories.
This is a major undertaking, but if we had gadgets and systems to replace what we are already using I believe most people would have an easier time with it.
What do you think? What would be the most difficult gadgets to give up or replace?
I think that placing more portable forms of solar panels and wind turbines on the roofs of homes and buildings would make it a lot easier to negotiate all the smaller gadgets we use inside these places.
They keep developing more and more of these portable systems and many of them are even DIY; like this one, here is a good example...
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