Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
![]() |
These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: djhI'm even less sure that mining any minerals can ever be either renewable or sustainableObviously not renewable, but sustainable? How purist can we get - fruitarian? Sure, mining is 'rape of the earth' but so is quarrying building stone, or clay for bricks and pots, ploughing, or even poking a planting hole in a no-dig regime. Even hunter-gatherers did it, unlike primate ancestors - it seems very longtime hard-wired, what humans do (unlike the notion that mean self-interest is 'human nature' - anthropology disproves that).
Posted By: fostertomPosted By: djhI'm even less sure that mining any minerals can ever be either renewable or sustainableObviously not renewable, but sustainable? How purist can we get - fruitarian? Sure, mining is 'rape of the earth' but so is quarrying building stone, or clay for bricks and pots, ploughing, or even poking a planting hole in a no-dig regime. Even hunter-gatherers did it, unlike primate ancestors - it seems very longtime hard-wired, what humans do (unlike the notion that mean self-interest is 'human nature' - anthropology disproves that).
What's sure is that quarrying doesn't have to be the wilful land-and-life desecration and human exploitation that prevails today, not by a long chalk. 'Enough' - I take the point - but 'enough' is vastly different when accompanied by 100% recovery rather than dumping into the biosphere.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenSo overall: "none of them". But they're all better than "no insulation".
Posted By: JontiFostertom,
to me the current situation is driven by two main things. The fact that in my lifetime the world population has more than doubled and this simple fact has a massive effect on natural resources. Secondly the current economic model followed most governments of perpetual growth which is not only illogical but unsustainable. The latter might be challenged in the near future but the population problem I fear is too hot a topic for most to grasp.
Posted By: Nick ParsonsThis is a plentiful and renewable resource, which the Earth is constantly making more ofA fringe factor in the debate when Peak Oil was all the rage, was the belief which the Russian oil industry apparently takes as self-evident, that oil is an exudate that the planet constantly 'makes', or at least brings to the near-surface. Even in the American camp, I saw a report, back then, of worked-out oil fields in the Gulf of Mexico having mysteriously partly re-filled, on re-inspection.
Posted By: WillInAberdeen on decoupling - Most of the growth has come from producing cleverer things, rather than more resource-intensive things.
economic growth is not the problem
Posted By: SimonDthe figures still show a significant increase in resource use linked to growthThat's because
Posted By: fostertomAll trends are towards a) doing much more with b) much less resource, except that so far a) has far outstripped b). So b) needs to accelerateOf those two trends, a) is fundamentally due to population growth, which as Will says is on a weakening curve, whereas b) is strongly growing, for mutually reinforcing reasons.
Posted By: SimonDmany mainstream economists hold dear to this ideology re the essential nature of growthIt's not just an optional belief - it's hardwired into the present money system.