emordnilap wrote:So we choose to live in such inefficient dwellings, heating-wise, that flying to a place where air-conditioning may be needed becomes, perversely, 'viable.'
No AC needed in winter.
Sorry, I thought you were flying to summer.
No North Africa, Canaries get to about 22c during the day and drops to 18c at night.
So, it is still a viable PO solution to fly away for the winter.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
It's better to not burn the fuel at home or fly somewhere sunnier and warmer.
You save.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
stumuzz wrote:Why? we know the outcome of PO. Fuel will get expensive, all fuels.
So if you use less fuel flying away than burning at home. You save.
You could look on it as a selfish option for a small minority. If 60+ million people did it, the logistics of moving them all, and the land and materials used to provide the living spaces, would probably use far more energy than properly insulating their homes in Britain, and wearing more clothes.
stumuzz wrote:Why? we know the outcome of PO. Fuel will get expensive, all fuels.
So if you use less fuel flying away than burning at home. You save.
You could look on it as a selfish option for a small minority. If 60+ million people did it, the logistics of moving them all, and the land and materials used to provide the living spaces, would probably use far more energy than properly insulating their homes in Britain, and wearing more clothes.
but it is my right, I am entitled to wear tee-shirt and shorts at home in the middle of Winter
I thought the modern lifestyle was all about having more, not less . Despite my efforts to downsize, I will probably add a fleece or slanket to the many layers I'm wearing.
stumuzz wrote:Why? we know the outcome of PO. Fuel will get expensive, all fuels.
So if you use less fuel flying away than burning at home. You save.
You could look on it as a selfish option for a small minority. If 60+ million people did it, the logistics of moving them all, and the land and materials used to provide the living spaces, would probably use far more energy than properly insulating their homes in Britain, and wearing more clothes.
How can using less fuel be selfish?
A few people doing it may use less fuel, but scale it up as a solution for more people, and we would need a massive increase in airport capacity to shift all the people, encouraging more flying at other times (like how bigger roads soon fill up with more traffic).
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
JohnB wrote:
You could look on it as a selfish option for a small minority. If 60+ million people did it, the logistics of moving them all, and the land and materials used to provide the living spaces, would probably use far more energy than properly insulating their homes in Britain, and wearing more clothes.
How can using less fuel be selfish?
A few people doing it may use less fuel, but scale it up as a solution for more people, and we would need a massive increase in airport capacity to shift all the people, encouraging more flying at other times (like how bigger roads soon fill up with more traffic).
I'm not saying scaling up. The flash of light that was mooted last night i.e. it saves fuel to fly to the sun rather that burn fuel at home still stands?
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker