It is all very well the political elite telling us to cut our footprint while travelling around in jets to spread the message, just like Al Gore does. But if we curtail our freedoms to make our environmental impact less, while others do not, then this could encourage tit-for-tat approaches. "I can't be bothered because most people I know don't bother." This is altogether different from the argument, "If everybody thought that way, then nobody would cut their carbon footprint", since you are talking about extremes and this is highly unlikely.
So, how about having incentives for keeping your carbon footprint low? Perhaps we could dawb the doors of the worst offenders with a skull and crossbones, and put roses on the most virtuous. Al Gore would have a pile of skeletons in his driveway, since it appears he is one of the worst offenders, and perhaps the biggest hypocrite of them all.
Maybe a simpler way would be to have a sliding scale of tariffs for energy use, just like a tax rate that goes up in different bands.
I've often pulled out the argument that I would help the environment by buying a fuel guzzling Hummer. Sounds a bit counter-intuitive, but I do low mileage each year and so would take it away from a high-mileage user, thus saving the planet!
[All the above is a mute point if our actions are making very little difference to the planet and the change in temperature is predominantly caused by variations in global temperatures that have happened throughout history. But for this argument, I assume our carbon is a nasty carbon.]
So, how about having incentives for keeping your carbon footprint low? Perhaps we could dawb the doors of the worst offenders with a skull and crossbones, and put roses on the most virtuous. Al Gore would have a pile of skeletons in his driveway, since it appears he is one of the worst offenders, and perhaps the biggest hypocrite of them all.
Maybe a simpler way would be to have a sliding scale of tariffs for energy use, just like a tax rate that goes up in different bands.
I've often pulled out the argument that I would help the environment by buying a fuel guzzling Hummer. Sounds a bit counter-intuitive, but I do low mileage each year and so would take it away from a high-mileage user, thus saving the planet!
[All the above is a mute point if our actions are making very little difference to the planet and the change in temperature is predominantly caused by variations in global temperatures that have happened throughout history. But for this argument, I assume our carbon is a nasty carbon.]