They do. What you actually want is high prices for consumers and low prices for those doing extraction. That’s the idea behind a carbon tax or sabotage aimed at the oil and gas midstream.
So you’re saying high prices lead to increased useage over low prices and low prices lead to increased useage over high prices at the same time? Does this mean average prices lead to decreased oil useage?
Usage has increased no matter the price for decades. Using pure price mechanisms to globally cut fossil fuel use means splitting consumer prices from wellhead prices.
Useage has increased, but for your first comment to make any sense the war’s effect on prices must have caused an increase over and beyond a world in which it didn’t happen.
It does both - there will be an increase in both fracking and renewable energy if oil prices go up.
It’s a bit of a weird infographic. I’d imagine a huge negative side effect is that of production and consumption - producing the war machine and bombing things to the ground is, perhaps not surprisingly, not exactly what one would call sustainable.
Then again, if climate is all one cares about one could argue mankind cannot exterminate itself fast enough.
I appreciate what they’re trying to do, but in the end the Gaza genocide is mostly bad because murdering civilians is bad. If you don’t take issue with mass murder I don’t think you’ll be convinced by any environmental arguments one might make either.
Ya, I feel like the infographic is reaching some to try and connect two rather distant, and not just because it doesn’t really provide any info. Surely the important problem is the western backed ethnic cleansing, mass murder of innocent people, and continuing a cycle of violence that only one side has the power to end, not the incidental impact on oil prices?
Surely driving oil prices higher is a positive effect from a climate prospective, as it makes oil even less competitive with renewable sources?
It also incentivises more production, if you believe the supply & demand story.
Surely, by that logic low prices would also drive demand and increased useage?
They do. What you actually want is high prices for consumers and low prices for those doing extraction. That’s the idea behind a carbon tax or sabotage aimed at the oil and gas midstream.
So you’re saying high prices lead to increased useage over low prices and low prices lead to increased useage over high prices at the same time? Does this mean average prices lead to decreased oil useage?
Usage has increased no matter the price for decades. Using pure price mechanisms to globally cut fossil fuel use means splitting consumer prices from wellhead prices.
Useage has increased, but for your first comment to make any sense the war’s effect on prices must have caused an increase over and beyond a world in which it didn’t happen.
It does both - there will be an increase in both fracking and renewable energy if oil prices go up.
It’s a bit of a weird infographic. I’d imagine a huge negative side effect is that of production and consumption - producing the war machine and bombing things to the ground is, perhaps not surprisingly, not exactly what one would call sustainable.
Then again, if climate is all one cares about one could argue mankind cannot exterminate itself fast enough.
I appreciate what they’re trying to do, but in the end the Gaza genocide is mostly bad because murdering civilians is bad. If you don’t take issue with mass murder I don’t think you’ll be convinced by any environmental arguments one might make either.
Ya, I feel like the infographic is reaching some to try and connect two rather distant, and not just because it doesn’t really provide any info. Surely the important problem is the western backed ethnic cleansing, mass murder of innocent people, and continuing a cycle of violence that only one side has the power to end, not the incidental impact on oil prices?