Ask HN: What are you doing about climate change?
I use some of my limited free time to work on different scalable collective intelligence approaches:
- https://felix.unote.io/collective-intelligence
- https://github.com/canonical-debate-lab/paper
- https://www.societylibrary.org/
- https://felix.unote.io/hacker-news-scores
We need radical changes right now. But every potential solution seems so far away in the future, that it's difficult to believe in them.
I'd like to get inspired and see what you're doing about the situation.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 91.2 ms ] threadRecent interesting book: Less is More by Jason Hickel https://www.jasonhickel.org/less-is-more - all technological measures etc. will not help if we don‘t also find a way to get rid of the obsession with permanent economic growth.
Not using crypto currencies.
Not contributing to increase the population of humans.
I live a fairly simple life and try not to waste things. These things might be beneficial to the climate, but my main reason is that I'm cheap.
Also, I must say that I'm glad the more fanatical vegetarians haven't succeeded in their campaign against meat eaters. I suffer from gastrointestinal issues, and when I'm flaring I temporarily have a very meat-heavy diet because it's easy to digest and nutritious whereas veggies go right through me and worsen symptoms.
No. Climate change is an engineering problem and technology is the solution.
Also, depending on your hackerness, you could adapt window air conditioners.
From what I've seen, solar PV for heat only really makes sense if you're using a heat pump. But solar thermal for heat can be good, though. http://builditsolar.com has a number of DIY heating projects for X,000 USD in materials.
[0]: https://hvacdirect.com/perfect-aire-12-000-btu-22-seer-quick...
Or, reducing it, by using many fewer gallons per freight-pound using one efficient and relatively pollution controlled diesel engine to haul up to 45,000 pounds of freight (and 35,000 pounds of truck plus empty trailer) rather than many smaller vehicles in many more trips.
Or both.
Ideally, once I get the money and family visas figured out, I’d like to live off grid.
Now that I have seen with my mind's eye how much mind-bogglingly nauseating, horrible activity goes into each of these minute objects, I just don't have the stomach for it anymore.
If you are not afraid of a life-changing realization, I invite you to choose one of these objects which you purchased new and trace its journey before it became yours.
For example, a phone case plus its immediately discarded labeling. It's typically made of some kinds of multiple-component plastic. So, oil is mined, with all the dirt which comes with that. (By dirt I mean hazardous byproducts dumped into the atmosphere and water, biosphere shaved down to make space for all this, water used for running the factory, and all the exponential supporting dirt for the people who are working at the factories, like driving to work, coffee machines at the office, etc.) Then it is transported (diesel) to the refinery, where it is refined, with all the dirt which is involved. Then the components are transported (diesel) to the plastics factory, where it is made into plastic (dirt). Then it is transported (diesel) to the phone case factory, where it is made into phone case (dirt.) The packaging takes a similar, but separate route (lots of diesel and dirt). Then it is combined together and packaged up and transported (more diesel), first to the reseller, then to the seller, then to you, 3 different diesel routes. All along the way, people are performing menial labor for shit pay in hazardous conditions. Finally, it arrives at your doorstep, you tear the packaging off and toss it away, for it to be diesel-transported to the landfille. You probably use the phone case for a year tops and then discard it (diesel, landfill).
I know there is the whole "be the change you want to see" but there is also a culture of overestimating your own impact. The largest effect of your efforts is to make you feel good about yourself and your own life.
I'm not wasteful at all and have a small carbon footprint but I don't think that any of those choices are because of climate change. I'm also alarmed when I see people use climate change to justify big life decisions. Deciding to not have children is a completely valid life choice. But I think that there is a serious problem with your personal priorities and perception of the world if you want children and don't have them because of climate change.
Be the change by taking political action. I also like to donate to projects every month.
https://mashable.com/feature/carbon-footprint-pr-campaign-sh...
I've tried to learn about it but I don't know where to start. All the information I find is superficial, aka useless.
The only thing I know with a certain degree of certainty is that I should reduce my meat consumption and I'm trying to apply it. Other than that, there's nothing I can take to the bank. The whole recycling thing seems at first sight like a fraud, but I'm not sure because I don't know how to learn more, so maybe it's not a fraud. Who knows? Only the experts. Who do we trust as experts? I don't know.
Some of us are a lot more concerned about economic and opportunity inequality among people who have already been born then about problems created by climate change for those who can afford to create the next generation.
For many of these folks whose debt is keeping them from starting families, they have accumulated medical debt from having to accept higher deductibles on health insurance plans that they can afford to buy, educational debt to earn an over-priced degree at a university that still supports way too many do-nothing administrators, and huge mortgages from being forced to purchase overpriced homes near where they work thanks to the snob-zoning which has been passed in many of these same real-estate markets by the folks who already own homes and have started families, which they often turn around and try to justify in the name of "protecting the environment."
It's also something that looks like it's going to hit some of the poorest parts of the world the hardest in terms of increasing storm severity, flooding, drought, damage to crop yields etc. If you want to tackle economic and opportunity inequality you need to take that into account.
Energy audit at home. Better insulation, buying more efficient appliances, and thermal solar are often WAY better returns on investment than electric solar.
Work from home. Commuting to another building both makes me unhappier, is more expensive, and dumps tons of CO2 into the atmosphere for no reason.