For most of his time on
earth, man has been a minor consumer of the earth’s stores of energy.
With the discovery of fire man began to increase his demands and draw on
the short-term energy stores that had been accumulated over scores of
years or even centuries by woody plants. In the last hundred years with
the invention of the internal combustion engine and a huge increase in
population man has begun to tap the planets long-term energy supplies of
oil and natural gas at an alarming rate. We have shaped a world where
our lifestyles revolve around and are dependent on oil and the
consumption of energy from fossil fuels.
To make a proper assessment of our individual energy
footprint it is necessary to allow and factor in not only the gasoline burned on
the trip to the store but the number of “BTU”s (British Thermal Units, a
measurement of heat ) used to make the new metal pan you purchased. Add to this a share of the energy used to package the pan, get the item to the store, and operate the store till you bought the pan. Only
when we begin to include in our footprint, part of the energy in all the
different variables thrust upon us by society, and used on our behalf, can we get a proper and
true picture of our energy footprint.
People often forget small actions do add up. I have heard people say
they can't turn down the heat in their home when they go on vacation
because of the dog or they have a fish tank. I have seen an employee
turn on all the lights and bring a large building up to full temperature
when they stop by their closed office for two hours on a Sunday or
even worse to put the thermostat on "hold" so the office will be warm when they arrive the next morning. A
family that takes two cars on a trip for a little more room or so they
don't have to be inconvenienced is another example of how
people often feel they are entitled and deserve to dip into the vast
stores of the world's unlimited bounty. This is all is completely on
them, a little waste here, and poor planning there adds up rather fast and can
cause the size of their footprint to explode.
Looking at our impact
in this way may seem unfair to some people but creates a more realistic and somewhat uglier picture of our
true energy use. Only when prorating our share of the energy used to
light the street in front of our home while we sleep and assuming
responsibility for our share of the energy used to light the bridge not
far from our home as well as the energy used to create junk mail,
deliver it to your home each day then haul it off to a recycling plant
or landfill are the last touches that must be placed on the portrait named “My True
Impact” Under this premise, if we personalize the question and ask, what's in my energy footprint? I fear the answer is far more than what most of us would like to admit.
Footnote; Two other posts dealing with our attitudes about waste are listed below. The first delves into the fact that those running for public office appear almost afraid to utter the word "conserve" and the other about how the massive support system required by the automobile is massively overpowering.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2012/01/candidates-shy-away-from-c-word.html
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2015/02/automobiles-and-future-of-man.html
Individual ecological footprint is meaningless in the context of human POPULATION footprint.
ReplyDeleteIts orders of magnitude more effective AND easier to say NO to breeding and multiplying and playing house like some brainless little girl watching too much pop-tv.
"having kids" "lets have a kid for fun" "i'm bored, lets have a few kids", "i want to have 2 kids..."