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posted by Fnord666 on Friday December 02 2016, @07:09PM   Printer-friendly
from the I-think-you're-doing-it-wrong dept.

What a surprise: If you subsidize something, you get more of it. In the EU, there are financial incentives for generating energy from renewable sources. Trees are a renewable resource, true enough, but I doubt that the Eurocrats intended to subsidize the massive destruction of forests.

Protected forests are being indiscriminately felled across Europe to meet the EU's renewable energy targets, according to an investigation by the conservation group Birdlife.

Up to 65% of Europe's renewable output currently comes from bioenergy, involving fuels such as wood pellets and chips, rather than wind and solar power.

Bioenergy fuel is supposed to be harvested from residue such as forest waste but, under current legislation, European bioenergy plants do not have to produce evidence that their wood products have been sustainably sourced.

Birdlife found logging taking place in conservation zones such as Poloniny national park in eastern Slovakia and in Italian riverside forests around Emilia-Romagna, where it said it had been falsely presented as flood-risk mitigation.

[...] Jori Sihvonen, the biofuels officer at Transport and Environment, which co-authored the report, said: "It is easy to fall into thinking that all bioenergy is sustainable, but time and again we see some forms of it can be worse for society, the natural environment and, in the case of burning land-based biofuels or whole trees, even the climate.


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Zz9zZ on Friday December 02 2016, @08:16PM

    by Zz9zZ (1348) on Friday December 02 2016, @08:16PM (#436178)

    You do realize this is in a different continent right?? The free market has proven over and over that businessman will prioritize profits over environmental protections. Since environmental protection has no short term inherent market values we can not let the free market take care of it. For those of us who want the planet to remain hospitable in the long term this overrides profits and economic success by a wide margin.

    it's pretty obvious that if you don't check that someone is playing by the rules, and it's very profitable to not play by the rules, then you'll get a lot of rule breaking.

    Huh, would never in a million years thought you would advocate for increased government oversight.

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    ~Tilting at windmills~
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  • (Score: 2, Insightful) by khallow on Friday December 02 2016, @10:20PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Friday December 02 2016, @10:20PM (#436265) Journal

    Huh, would never in a million years thought you would advocate for increased government oversight.

    My belief is that there are things such as pollution and other negative externalities that do need enforced regulation. Where I disagree is normally on two fronts.

    First, the size of the externalities. Too many people have this view that any pollution (or equivalent externality) is just as bad as a lot of pollution. For example, we have groups claiming that there is "no safe" level of radiation. That ignores that even if you completely accept the linear no-threshold model [wikipedia.org], it's not hard to get radiation exposures so low that you accumulate more lifetime risk driving to the local grocery store. From here [abc.net.au]:

    "As the crisis in Japan goes on, there are an increasing number of sources reporting that 100 mSv (millisieverts) is the lowest dose at which a person is at risk for cancer," says a statement from the organisation.

    "Established research disproves this claim," the statement continues. "According to the National Academy of Sciences, there are no safe doses of radiation. Decades of research show clearly that any dose of radiation increases an individual's risk for the development of cancer."

    To put that into context, about 30 workers at the plant site are thought to have received radiation exposure of that much and no one in the general public is thought to have received more than a quarter of that (at least according [wikipedia.org] to the Japanese government).

    What was worse, was this blurb was quoted by a slashdotter who was arguing about radiation exposure orders of magnitude lower (global increase in background radiation due to Fukushima).

    Second, there's the propensity to demand more regulation when regulation isn't enforced. For example, during the huge oil well spill in the Gulf of Mexico (Deepwater Horizon), it was determined after the fact that there had been 200+ safety violations on the well platform. Calls for more regulation, of course, were issued. But what is the point of adding more unenforced regulations?

    It's also worth noting that if necessary industries can only operate by violating regulation (and oil wells probably have reached that point incidentally), then the state will be forced to ignore regulation violations and that will make it easier to fail to prevent harmful conditions that those regulations are attempting to prevent.

    My view on this particular point is enforce existing regulations first. If there really is a problem of regulatory coverage, then we can add the appropriate regulation to deal with that situation. Most US industry, commerce, and other trades are already heavily regulated. If that regulation isn't working, then someone is doing something wrong.

    So here's how I'd summarize my stance on US and developed world regulation in general. Most human activities are already overregulated. If we chose to enforce regulation properly, we would already have prevented most of the externalities we want to prevent (except of course, for externalities and perverse behavior created or incentivized by the regulation itself). So enforce existing regulation and work on making regulation both saner and easier to comply with.

    In particular, we need to stop the deluge of regulation creation that goes on in any government. For example, in the US federal government both regulation and legislative law increase faster than one can read it. US environmental regulation continues to be a large portion of that accumulation of new regulation.

    • (Score: 2) by Zz9zZ on Friday December 02 2016, @10:47PM

      by Zz9zZ (1348) on Friday December 02 2016, @10:47PM (#436289)

      Someone hijacked your account Khallow! Sorry, but I'm just shocked at this even keeled approach you're suddenly taking ;)

      Couldn't agree more, but more regulatory oversight means funding lots of new employees which is rarely a popular stance. That is probably why most things fail "we need this!" followed immediately by "we're not paying them to do that!"

      I have a great plan! Transfer all DEA agents to regulatory oversight! Since we can replace their fancy toys with clipboards we can then allocate their "toy funds" into treatment programs for addicts. Problems at least partway solved.

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      ~Tilting at windmills~
      • (Score: 1) by khallow on Friday December 02 2016, @11:09PM

        by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Friday December 02 2016, @11:09PM (#436299) Journal

        shocked at this even keeled approach

        Don't worry. I'll lull some fat ship into range of my cannon and hoist the Jolly Roger! The internet will once again fear my rants! No port is safe!

        I respond in kind. If someone is polite, I tend to be. If someone comes in yowling "you're a stupid, evil doodiehead", then I tend to turn up the heat a lot. And sometimes I'm just cranky.