• @AlternatePersonMan
    link
    English
    386 months ago

    There’s easier, more effective battles to fight. People aren’t giving up their SUV’s, and they are a symptom of a bigger problem anyway. Good public transportation could eliminate millions of cars, roads, and road maintenance.

    A few other ideas:

    • Coal power is disgusting and doesn’t even make sense economically anymore.
    • Cruise ships and mega yachts should flat out be banned. They use a ton of energy and dump sewage right into the ocean
    • Heavily tax gas powered lawnmowers. They have a surprisingly large environmental impact because they have no pollution controls and often burn a mixture of oil and gas.
    • @grue
      link
      English
      466 months ago

      The increase in SUVs isn’t driven by people’s natural preferences; it’s driven by automakers being incentivized by stupid CAFE standards to push SUVs on them. Those bad regulations are what we need to fix.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      7
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      Also bunker fuel being burned in ocean shipping. Since there very little regulation they burn some of the worst sulfur-emitting fuel. A single container ship emits the equivalent of something like a few hundred thousand every car on the planet, as I recall

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        66 months ago

        The biggest container ships produce more emissions than every car on the planet. Granted, I think there’s at most a half dozen of those in operation, but that’s still 6x more than every car on Earth.

        I remember hearing that during COVID lockdowns the first year, an estimated 50% of cars were off the road and total annual emissions dropped 2%.

        • oo1
          link
          fedilink
          36 months ago

          Is there a souce for that?
          It doesnt seem consistent with this one
          https://ourworldindata.org/co2-emissions-from-transport

          but this is limited to CO2 emissins, so i’m wondering what type of emissions are being counted is there any data on that.

          I had a quick look at the “all GHG” data in EDGAR and that also seems to shows road transport quite a lot larger than shipping.
          But I’d need to spend a bit longer looking at the data to figure out if i’m using it correctly.

          Could it be based on Particulate matter emissions??
          PM emissions don’t do much if anything to directly intensify climate change - not like GHGs

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            26 months ago

            Yeah it really doesn’t seem to track with my knowledge in regards to shipping efficiency. AFAIK those big ass container ships are on par if not more efficient than a train.

        • @ConfidentLonelyM
          link
          English
          26 months ago

          I just found that the 16 largest Ships emit as much as all cars. Did not check the source further.

          But that really depends on how you measure and define pollution. As others have pointed out container ships are still pretty efficient. But of course they should get better too. Like everything!

          Source: https://cedelft.eu/publications/the-basic-facts-how-do-the-emissions-of-ships-and-cars-really-compare/

          As I have said, I did not fact check it further because it is quite late here. Just wanted to give information to that claim and please correct your statement (:

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            26 months ago

            Appreciate it, because you and I probably read the same stats but I was pulling it from memory from whenever I heard it (like 7-10 years ago).