Quantcast Will the financial crisis overshadow global warming? - Not Just for Profit

Will the financial crisis overshadow global warming?

| 7 Comments | No TrackBacks
By Digoy Fernandez ONE of the unintended casualties of the present financial crisis is the temporary sidelining of the Global Warming debate from front and center in the attention of the world and its leaders. While understandable, we hope that the world will not lose focus on this very important aspect of our survival as a species on this planet. The falling price of crude oil is welcome, of course. But it may also deflect efforts aimed at conceptualizing and bringing to actual production various alternative fuels and their respective machinery. Low crude prices should not tempt car manufacturers, for example, to keep on producing gas guzzling SUVs, but make them realize that the reprieve may be temporary. In this era of difficult funding and credit, we hope that enough wise financial institutions and foundations find the motivation to support the development of alternative fuels and machines that use them. On the other hand, one unintended beneficiary of the decline in global economic activity and production may be the ability of the planet to regenerate itself. Hopefully, less harmful economic and personal activity would mean less greenhouse gases produced, and a chance to make up for lost time in the battle to clean our air. It will also mean less rapacious use of non-renewable resources as production winds down, and economic necessity forces firms to become more efficient and smart in the use of their resources. Even now, we see signs of a slight decline in the throw-away mentality that has long been the bane of those advocating the wise use of non-renewable resources. Recycle and Reuse may just catch fire with ordinary citizens! Maybe even the sardines and tuna stocks of the world will be given a chance to replenish themselves. Except that hunger and food will probably be the last need of man left, even as we shed off other non essential needs and desires. There is still hope, after all, for the move to alleviate pressure on the world and its resources, even in the face of a financial crisis.

No TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://blogs.inquirer.net/cgi/mt/mt-tb.cgi/6503

7 Comments

Thoughtful post and well written. Please write more on this if you have time.

We should be more concerned about Global Warming and Climate Change because Typhoons are getting much stronger and there are greater incidence of Flooding. take for example the recent Typhoon Ketsana which devastated some countries in South East Asia.

Aanu83 crynbdogmtpb, [url=http://xgrtfmlfxeev.com/]xgrtfmlfxeev[/url], [link=http://cuuahyrjgobi.com/]cuuahyrjgobi[/link], http://agohcgqahcar.com/

You have blog nicely done yes? I am French and I am no so good with my English but I am liking to learn. You are welcome to me yes?

At the rate our environment is getting destructed we should expect more typhoons in the future. Natural calamities and man-made disasters are two different things but both deal with global warming. In order to prevent global warming from becoming worse certain projects are brought to a halt which may not be too favorable for our economy but an economy which puts the life of the citizens in danger cannot be a good economy.

clearwater beach Realtor

We hope that enough wise financial institutions and foundations find the motivation to support the development of alternative fuels and machines that use them. On the other hand, one unintended beneficiary of the decline in global economic activity and production may be the ability of the planet to regenerate itself. Hopefully, less harmful economic and personal activity would mean less greenhouse gases produced, and a chance to make up for lost time in the battle to clean our air.

Best regards, Alex CEO of youtube downloader

On the other hand, one unintended beneficiary of the decline in global economic activity and production may be the ability of the planet to regenerate itself.
Best regards, Katya, CEO of mp3 burning software, iscsi for dummies

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by published on October 30, 2008 9:00 AM.

Greed powered the bottom line! was the previous entry in this blog.

What is happening to long term plans and portfolios? is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.