Yes, I read all about the bike lanes. We have them here too and they're a great addition to an urban environment but the trick, at least it is around here, is to get people actually using them. Sure there was lots of demand that they be built and by now, this place should look like Amsterdam given the amount of people who said they would switch to cycling if there was a proper infrastructure. Still waiting on that European cycling culture to make an appearance.
These feeble little steps are not enough though, that's why Andrew Weaver said the quiet part out loud. 1.5 C is a done deal, full stop. There's now way "we" are going to bike lane or ban private planes out of it that's all just smoke, mirrors and wishful thinking.
The pandemic lockdown of 2020. Now there's something that was foisted on us by the government that actually reduced emissions and put us on track to averting 1.5C. Mmmmm imagine if that lockdown was not only permanent but escalated every year.
So....how to bring the emissions of the average European in line with those of the average Angolan? They still need their emissions lowered, at least according to Biden. Oh, and speaking of Biden, the guy with his finger on the nuclear button, I hope he hasn't gotten any ideas form watching The 100.![]()
Where exactly is "here"? And what exactly has been done? There are many ways of pretending to do something, and as a monument for 'See?! We did it, and it didn't work!', it can be very useful as an argument.
All I can do is describe what I have seen done here, Copenhagen, Denmark, and how it works.
And it does work - albeit still not enough:
Climate Change Performance Index (Scroll down to list of countries. I only just stumbled on this and I don't know how reliable it is. For instance, I don't see how China and the USA can be so close. But I like that they have left #1, 2 & 3 open because not one single country lives up to what needs to be done.)
It is obvious to everybody (or it ought to be) that "feeble little steps are not enough" and that you can't "bike lane or ban private planes out of it." It's a little like the cheese model of COVID-19 prevention: Nothing works on its own, but many (effective!) things in combination do! So bike lanes + banning private jets + first and foremost shifting from fossil fuels to wind and solar + X + Y + Z. It's all necessary.
The lockdown lowered emissions somewhat, but not enough, obviously. Some things could be learned from it, for instance WFH, which probably had the biggest impact and didn't affect people's lives negatively in most respects. Some people would even like to continue doing it but aren't allowed to do so. I assume that reduced travelling, i.e. emissions from jets, also contributed.
So limiting plane trips to what could be powered by E-fuel or solar and wind-generated hydrogen would probably make the travel industry want to do their utmost to find a way live up to that kind of restrictions. I assume that it would still take a number of years before the jets got back up in the air again, which wouldn't seriously hurt anybody.
However, I think that airlines (along with the fossil-fuel industry) would probably consider it a better investment to rile up people used to traveling by jet against any politician who proposed such at thing.
Industrialists are the ones who primarily benefit from CO2 emissions, and they are the ones who decide what people and politicians think. And they usually get what they pay for.
I think I stopped watching The 100 after the first two seasons, and I don't remember much, so I don't get your reference.