freediver wrote on Nov 24
th, 2024 at 12:21pm:
Daves2017 wrote on Nov 24
th, 2024 at 9:31am:
freediver wrote on Nov 23
rd, 2024 at 10:29pm:
lee wrote on Nov 23
rd, 2024 at 7:54pm:
freediver wrote on Nov 23
rd, 2024 at 7:47pm:
Do you have a point Lee, or are you just trying to ask the dumbest possible questions?
No.
Didn't think so. Perhaps now we can get back to Dave explaining why he thinks we aren't allowed to use coal in Australia.
It’s my understanding we are in the process of closing down our coal fired power stations primarily because of there age and climate damage ( if you believe it).
This assists us in meeting the Paris agreement.
The buzz wording is “ transition away from coal”.
So while coal cannot in the future be used to generate electricity in this country because it’s bad for the environment it’s perfectly ok for us to ship it overseas to be used to generate electricity.
Just like uranium, coal under goes some miracle at sea which means it’s no longer a dangerous pollution source?
Sorry the late reply, been walking the cat.
You are inventing the contradiction.
Not really, though I'm not sure he saw my answers to his quesions.
Quote: It is OK to ship coal overseas, now. It is OK to use coal locally, now.
No it's not (if AGW-CO2 is real, and a
climate catastrophe is emerging; as a majority of the world's climate scientists are claiming.....and increasinly appears to be true)
Quote: Note the consistent use of present tense, which results in an entirely consistent set of actions.
No it doesn't.
Oz is the one country in the world - a vast sunny desert with windy coastlines, and a small population - which could transition to near zero emissions within a decade.
Quote:Most other developed, and even some developing countries, are way ahead of us on the transition.
Yes.
Quote:Why did you shift from metallurgical coal to thermal coal? Can you tell the difference?
Admittedly I had to answer some fairly basic questions from him...
Re metallurgical coal, its days are also numbered, as green hydrogen fired smelters come on line.