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发展的烦恼-过渡到一个可持续的能源经济

Growing Pains - Transitioning to a Sustainable Energy Economy
课程网址: http://videolectures.net/mitworld_heywood_ansolabehere_gpt/  
主讲教师: Stephen Ansolabehere; Heywood John B
开课单位: 麻省理工学院
开课时间: 2013-04-19
课程语种: 英语
中文简介:
如果我们希望解决全球变暖问题并实现可持续的能源未来,小型、私人和大型公共行动都是必不可少的。约翰·海伍德(JohnHeywood)提出了三个立即取得进展的选择:节约,他说这已经成为一个“坏词”,改善主流技术,并找到生产和使用能源的新方法。首先,公众必须摒弃“新技术将拯救我们”的幻想。“从实用性角度来说,氢燃料电池和插电式混合动力车不存在。”因此,海伍德说,我们必须走上更广泛的道路,即说,我和你在个人中使用的能源,小规模意义上的每项任务必须少得多。”当我的占地面积是2平方英尺时,为什么还要加热2000平方英尺的房子?海伍德很好奇。提高当前内燃机的燃油消耗,并向汽车制造商施压,要求他们生产每加仑能行驶200英里的小型汽车。记录下你家的能源成本,鼓励海伍德,告诉你的邻居关掉他们的灯。我们是“有胃口的人”,我们需要市场激励来改变。我们需要来自监管和财政政策的帮助,以形成良好的局面。海伍德说:“是我和你,我们做什么,我们买什么,我们如何使用它。所有这些都会让我们走上正轨。”Stephen Ansolabehere说,我们进行自我改革的一个巨大障碍是“能源丰富且价格低廉”。美国和中国、印度一样,坐在一堆巨大的煤炭上,如果全球变暖不首先摧毁世界经济的话,在未来300到3000年里,这些煤炭很可能为我们的生活提供动力。我们已经被安抚到自满,因此美国人均碳排放量继续上升,中国和印度也处于同样的轨道上。现在,太阳能电池板和混合动力汽车等替代能源的菜单对美国人没有吸引力,因为它们的价格比平时高。安索拉贝赫尔说,关键是“使煤炭与其他技术的价格处于同一水平”,“使其他技术具有竞争力”。因此,安索拉贝赫尔问:“我们如何控制美国,然后与中国和印度接触?”他简单的回答是:“税收改变行为”。欧洲和日本成功地证明了这一方法。他们承认煤炭通过对污染征税而给社会带来的成本,而且人均排放率比美国低得多。他说,一个小的、有希望的迹象是,美国消费者今天比三年前更容易接受碳税(由公司支付的费用,然后转嫁给消费者)。总量管制和交易制度为企业降低碳排放提供了更温和的推动,但公民必须强制游说其政治代表支持这一替代方案。没有这些更大的努力,当我们坚持舒适的生活方式时,减少我们的集体碳排放将是非常困难的。
课程简介: Both small, private and large, public actions are essential if we’re to have any hope of addressing global warming and achieving a sustainable energy future. John Heywood lays out three options for making some immediate inroads: conservation, which he says has somehow become a “bad word;” improving mainstream technology; and finding new ways to produce and use energy. First, the public must put aside delusions that new technologies “will save us.” Hydrogen fuel cells and plug-in hybrids “are not there in terms of practicality.” So, says Heywood, we “must get on the broader path that says the energy you and I use in the individual, small-scale sense must be far less per task.” Why heat a 2000- square-foot home when “the square footage I occupy is two?” wonders Heywood. Improve the fuel consumption of the current internal combustion engine, and press auto manufacturers for small cars that can get 200 miles per gallon. Run the numbers on your home’s energy costs, encourages Heywood, and tell your neighbors to switch off their lights. We’re “humans with appetites,” and we need market-based incentives to change. We need help from regulatory and fiscal policies as well to shape up. “It’s me and you, what we do, what we buy, how we use it – all these things – that will start us down the path,” says Heywood. One giant obstacle to our self-reform, says Stephen Ansolabehere, is the fact that “energy is abundant and cheap.” The U.S., like China and India, sits on a huge pile of coal that could very well power our lives for the next 300 to 3,000 years – if global warming doesn’t first destroy the world’s economies. We’ve been lulled into complacency, and so carbon emissions per person in the U.S. continue to rise, with China and India on the same trajectory. Right now, the menu of alternative energy sources like solar panels and hybrid cars don’t appeal to Americans because they cost more than the usual fare. The key is to “make coal on the same scale of price with other technologies,” says Ansolabehere, “to make other technologies competitive.” So, asks Ansolabehere, “How do we get the U.S. under control, and then engage China and India?” His simple answer: “Taxes change behavior.” Europe and Japan successfully demonstrate this approach. They acknowledge the costs coal imposes on society by taxing pollution, and have a much lower rate of emissions per capita than the U.S. One small, promising sign, he says, is that American consumers seem slightly more open to a carbon tax (a fee paid by companies, and then passed on to consumers) today than they were three years ago. The cap and trade system offers a gentler push on companies to lower carbon emissions, but citizens must forcefully lobby their political representatives to support this alternative. Without these larger efforts, it will be extremely difficult to reduce our collective carbon emissions as we cling to comfortable lifestyles.
关 键 词: 可持续能源; 财政政策; 替代能源; 税收改变行为
课程来源: 视频讲座网
最后编审: 2020-05-26:毛岱琦(课程编辑志愿者)
阅读次数: 40