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The World Is Getting Hotter
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<blockquote data-quote="binky" data-source="post: 400427" data-attributes="member: 490"><p>they also grow fast so can be used for fuel and replaced quite quickly - carbon neutral...</p><p></p><p>the real problem is that we won't really know the answer for many years, the fear factor is 'did we miss a chance to prevent a disaster' which is my take on the whole issue. However that article is contradicted by my first posting that shows CO2 and temperatures have steadily risen in the last 18 years. I do kind of like his philosophy about the oil shale - I'm not against such things as they do patch up the land afterwards, but it is also destroying a natural eco-structure - very hard to predict what we might destroy with it.</p><p></p><p>I've been working on some listed buildings lately, I juts don;t get the 'preserve in aspic' mentality. Preserve yes, but sympathetic improvements may keep the building alive a lot longer???</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="binky, post: 400427, member: 490"] they also grow fast so can be used for fuel and replaced quite quickly - carbon neutral... the real problem is that we won't really know the answer for many years, the fear factor is 'did we miss a chance to prevent a disaster' which is my take on the whole issue. However that article is contradicted by my first posting that shows CO2 and temperatures have steadily risen in the last 18 years. I do kind of like his philosophy about the oil shale - I'm not against such things as they do patch up the land afterwards, but it is also destroying a natural eco-structure - very hard to predict what we might destroy with it. I've been working on some listed buildings lately, I juts don;t get the 'preserve in aspic' mentality. Preserve yes, but sympathetic improvements may keep the building alive a lot longer??? [/QUOTE]
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