Energy is
usually defined as the ability to do work. That’s it. It isn’t coal, or coal
seam gas, or uranium, or oil. It is the ability to do work.
The debate as
it stands currently seems to be that we should be using renewable and
alternative sources of energy rather than fossil fuels. This isn’t helpful to
the debate at all.
The sun is not
a renewable resource, any more than coal is. It is just far more prolific. To
use the term ‘alternative’ just scares the ultra-conservative types, as they
associate it with radical greenies preaching a total alternative lifestyle of
neo-socialism and kum bah yah sing-alongs, dread locks and anti-development.
Like the term
‘clean coal technology’ has conveniently dropped the final word ‘technology’,
and morphed into the idea of simply ‘clean coal’ (in an obvious and little
called out attempt to convince punters that burning coal can somehow be clean
or that there is a different type of clean coal being mined out there
somewhere), the term alternative energy seems to have dropped the concept of
simply being an alternative source of energy other than fossil fuels. It
is not ‘alternative’ in the radical green movement sense of the word. It is
just an alternative. It is not truly renewable in any sense of the word,
it will eventually run out (albeit in billions of years in the case of solar
energy), but is a viable alternative to what we are relying on at the moment.
So, there is
nothing to fear from developing new models of energy production. It makes
sense. Fossil fuels are polluting the planet in ways that are having dire
consequences, and there are other ways to produce the same power using
alternative sources of energy, if there is a will and the funding to do so.
Not to do so
smacks of a conscious decision to keep polluting and polluting, putting the
world as we know it currently at risk of irreversible change. It smacks of a
deliberate decision to run the risk of a future world that will be very
different in a challenging and unpleasant way to the one we inhabit at the
moment, and seems unbelievably arrogant and stupid. To consciously and
deliberately refuse to invest on a global scale into less damaging ways to
produce energy, and to frantically fund and prop up old polluting systems that
are clearly known to be harmful to the way we currently live is almost criminal
in its stupidity.
So let’s change
the narrative here. When you are talking about renewables, refer to them as
what they are – alternative sources of energy to run the systems that keep us
all in beer and skittles. Not alternative in the sense of turning off the
lights and living in a commune. Change the narrative, and maybe some of the
conservative types out there might just start to understand the concept.
There are no
alternatives. Just sources that are bad for us all in the medium and long term,
and sources that might just make the world a better place to live than it is
going to be in the very near future.
Energy is just
energy.
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