chrisch
Contributor
No, there is definitely a "climate change industry".
The global carbon offset market is valued at around $145 billion.
Al Gore, the discoverer of Man Bear Pig, will probably become a billionaire based upon the carbon offset industry.
And there are examples like Solyndra, where piles of federal money is used to subsidize the industry.
And there are all of the national/international climate change bureaucracies funded with public money.
The climate change industry might not be as big as the defense industry, but it most definitely exists.
OK then let's go with your definition. What is the issue with this "industry"? Do you think that the jobs that it creates are somehow wrong? All those people paying their mortgages and taking vacations do not contribute to the wider economy just like people in the "computer industry". (Whatever that is).
Do you feel government subsidies to promote US industry over foreign industry is wrong? Like farming for example? Or just a personal issue with Mr Gore for some reason (I think you will find most Presidents and Veeps tend to get very rich as a result of office - it's why they do the job)
What exactly are "climate change bureaucracies"? There is the IPCC which might fit in that description. It does not carry out research nor monitor climate. It's costs are minuscule and most academic and research contributions are voluntary and unpaid. Data is taken from bodies such as NOAA. NOAA is government funded but what proportion is described as "climate change" is arguable. I have heard many times of NOAA Nitrox 1 and Nitrox 2. How much research is done that benefits the diving community?
I am trying to understand what is the problem. Maybe that's why I don't see it (whatever it is) as an industry as such. There are climate management issues in many industries, the energy industry and the transport industry for example. Defence is much easier to define. Anyway perhaps you would be kind enough to outline what you see as the way forward? How do we manage the world to make it a better place for the next generation? We sure do not need all those nuclear weapons, but they are here and someone somewhere is employed building them, looking after them and then decommissioning them. It's a stupid waste of money, taxpayer's money, but it isn't going away any time soon. People vote for it. Let's see the upside. Stopping anthropogenic global warming is cheap by comparison and the upside is a lot easier to see.
Last edited: