• @kippinitreal
    link
    326 days ago

    I have a different take, renewable have arguably crossed the threshold for mass adoption so moving away from fossil fuels is inevitable. These seems like the death pangs of a dying tumour trying to claw its way to relevance. Look at Saudi Arabia’s desperate attempts to diversify away from petrodollars.

    Renewables are now cheaper, better for your citizens & most importantly much safer for national security, compared to fossil fuels. It is a no brainer for all nations to switch away.

    Atleast I hope I’m right.

    • daisy lazarus
      link
      English
      156 days ago

      seems like the death pangs of a dying tumour trying to claw its way to relevance.

      Chef’s kiss 👌🏻

      We all hope you’re right.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      96 days ago

      That is why China and the EU invest so much into green tech. China needs to import a lot of its fossil fuels via ships and the US still has the biggest navy and China would have some problem solving something like the Red Sea Crisis right now. For the EU Russia was a massive wake up call. The only big one who does not see this is the US, which has a lot of fossil fuels.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        45 days ago

        The only big one who does not see this is the US, which has a lot of fossil fuels.

        It’s even worse, incentive-wise: The US has a lot of “good” oil, which needs less refinement. They sell that stuff, since it’s valuable.

        They also pretty much have the best refineries for low-quality oil, which they can buy for cheap.

        So, they industry, imports and exports rely on oil.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    24 days ago

    I feel like maybe we did these in the petrostates to get them out of the way. The next one is in Brazil with (hopefully) Lula. Let’s see how it goes.