Tuttle
Madmaxista
Que solo el socialismo puede salvar el mundo, del cambio climático.
Bill Gates Explains Why Only Socialism Can Save the Climate
Este es un reptiliano fijo. ::
Googliano abajo
Bill Gates: Only Socialism Can Save the Climate, ‘The Private Sector is Inept’
In a recent interview with The Atlantic, billionaire tech magnate Bill Gates announced his game plan to spend $2 billion of his own wealth on green energy investments, and called on his fellow private sector billionaires to help make the U.S. fossil-free by 2050. But in doing so, Gates admitted that the private sector is too selfish and inefficient to do the work on its own, and that mitigating climate change would be impossible without the help of government research and development.
“There’s no fortune to be made. Even if you have a new energy source that costs the same as today’s and emits no CO2, it will be uncertain compared with what’s tried-and-true and already operating at unbelievable scale and has gotten through all the regulatory problems,” Gates said. “Without a substantial carbon tax, there’s no incentive for innovators or plant buyers to switch.”
Gates even tacked to the left and uttered words that few other billionaire investors would dare to say: government R&D is far more effective and efficient than anything the private sector could do.
“Since World War II, U.S.-government R&D has defined the state of the art in almost every area,” Gates said. “The private sector is in general inept.”
“When I first got into this I thought, ‘How well does the Department of Energy spend its R&D budget?’ And I was worried: ‘Gosh, if I’m going to be saying it should double its budget, if it turns out it’s not very well spent, how am I going to feel about that?'” Gates told The Atlantic. “But as I’ve really dug into it, the DARPA money is very well spent, and the basic-science money is very well spent. The government has these ‘Centers of Excellence.’ They should have twice as many of those things, and those things should get about four times as much money as they do.”
In making his case for public sector excellence, the Microsoft founder mentioned the success of the internet:
“In the case of the digital technologies, the path back to government R&D is a bit more complex, because nowadays most of the R&D has moved to the private sector. But the original Internet comes from the government, the original chip-foundry stuff comes from the government—and even today there’s some government money taking on some of the more advanced things and making sure the universities have the knowledge base that maintains that lead. So I’d say the overall record for the United States on government R&D is very, very good.”
The ‘Centers for Excellence’ program Bill Gates mentioned is the Center for Excellence in Renewable Energy (CERE), which is funded in part by the National Science Foundation (NSF). The NSF, which operated with roughly $7.1 billion in 2014, is the source of one-fourth of federal funding for research projects at over 2,000 colleges, universities, K-12 schools, nonprofits, and businesses. The NSF has even funded research by over 200 Nobel laureates, including 26 in just the last 5 years alone. The NSF receives more than 40,000 proposals each year, but only gets to fund about 11,000 of them. Bill Gates wants this funding to be dramatically increased.
“I would love to see a tripling, to $18 billion a year from the U.S. government to fund basic research alone,” Gates said. “Now, as a percentage of the government budget, that’s not gigantic… This is not an unachievable amount of money.”
As evidence around the world shows, the U.S. doesn’t have to reinvent the wheel to be a green energy juggernaut — it can simply look to currently-existing examples in countries with socialist policies — like Germany and China, for instance — on how to become a leader in green energy. And according to Bill Gates, the rest of the world will ***ow the lead if the biggest countries set the bar.
“The climate problem has to be solved in the rich countries,” Gates said. “China and the U.S. and Europe have to solve CO2 emissions, and when they do, hopefully they’ll make it cheap enough for everyone else.”
This past July, Germany set a new record by generating 78 percent of its electricity from renewable sources, beating its previous record of 74 percent in May of 2014. Germany generated 40.65 gigawatts from wind and solar energy, 4.85 gigawatts from biomass, and 2.4 gigawatts from hydropower, for a total of 47.9 gigawatts of green energy when total electricity demand was at 61.1 gigawatts. Over the past year, Germany decreased its CO2 output by 4.3 percent. This means greenhouse gas emissions in Germany are at their lowest point since 1990.
But in terms of raw investment, China’s $80 billion green energy investment is more than both the U.S. ($34 billion) and Europe ($46 billion), combined. And those investments are already paying dividends. While coal is still China’s biggest source of electricity, the world’s biggest polluter aims to have its use of fossil fuels peak in 2030, and trend downward after that. Additionally, China’s solar production outpaces all other countries combined.
Between 2000 and 2012, China’s solar energy output increased dramatically from 3 megawatts to 21,000 megawatts. And its solar output increased by 67 percent between 2013 and 2014 alone. In 2014, China actually managed to decrease its CO2 emissions by 1 percent, with further reductions expected in the coming years.
China also powers more homes with wind energy than every nuclear power plant in the U.S. put together. China’s wind output provided electricity to 110 million homes in 2014, as its wind farms generated 16 percent more power than in 2013, and 77 gigawatts of additional wind power are currently under construction. China’s energy grid is currently powered by 100 gigawatts of green energy, and aims to double green energy output to 200 gigawatts by 2020.
Bill Gates wants the U.S. to be an additional green energy leader, and expresses hope that there may still be enough time for the U.S. to take green energy investment seriously, and that the public sector can be instrumental in preventing a 2-degree increase in global temperatures.
“I don’t think it’s hopeless, because it’s about American innovation, American jobs, American leadership, and there are examples where this has gone very, very well,” Gates said.
Googliano:
Bill Gates Explains Why Only Socialism Can Save the Climate
Este es un reptiliano fijo. ::
Googliano abajo
Bill Gates: Only Socialism Can Save the Climate, ‘The Private Sector is Inept’
In a recent interview with The Atlantic, billionaire tech magnate Bill Gates announced his game plan to spend $2 billion of his own wealth on green energy investments, and called on his fellow private sector billionaires to help make the U.S. fossil-free by 2050. But in doing so, Gates admitted that the private sector is too selfish and inefficient to do the work on its own, and that mitigating climate change would be impossible without the help of government research and development.
“There’s no fortune to be made. Even if you have a new energy source that costs the same as today’s and emits no CO2, it will be uncertain compared with what’s tried-and-true and already operating at unbelievable scale and has gotten through all the regulatory problems,” Gates said. “Without a substantial carbon tax, there’s no incentive for innovators or plant buyers to switch.”
Gates even tacked to the left and uttered words that few other billionaire investors would dare to say: government R&D is far more effective and efficient than anything the private sector could do.
“Since World War II, U.S.-government R&D has defined the state of the art in almost every area,” Gates said. “The private sector is in general inept.”
“When I first got into this I thought, ‘How well does the Department of Energy spend its R&D budget?’ And I was worried: ‘Gosh, if I’m going to be saying it should double its budget, if it turns out it’s not very well spent, how am I going to feel about that?'” Gates told The Atlantic. “But as I’ve really dug into it, the DARPA money is very well spent, and the basic-science money is very well spent. The government has these ‘Centers of Excellence.’ They should have twice as many of those things, and those things should get about four times as much money as they do.”
In making his case for public sector excellence, the Microsoft founder mentioned the success of the internet:
“In the case of the digital technologies, the path back to government R&D is a bit more complex, because nowadays most of the R&D has moved to the private sector. But the original Internet comes from the government, the original chip-foundry stuff comes from the government—and even today there’s some government money taking on some of the more advanced things and making sure the universities have the knowledge base that maintains that lead. So I’d say the overall record for the United States on government R&D is very, very good.”
The ‘Centers for Excellence’ program Bill Gates mentioned is the Center for Excellence in Renewable Energy (CERE), which is funded in part by the National Science Foundation (NSF). The NSF, which operated with roughly $7.1 billion in 2014, is the source of one-fourth of federal funding for research projects at over 2,000 colleges, universities, K-12 schools, nonprofits, and businesses. The NSF has even funded research by over 200 Nobel laureates, including 26 in just the last 5 years alone. The NSF receives more than 40,000 proposals each year, but only gets to fund about 11,000 of them. Bill Gates wants this funding to be dramatically increased.
“I would love to see a tripling, to $18 billion a year from the U.S. government to fund basic research alone,” Gates said. “Now, as a percentage of the government budget, that’s not gigantic… This is not an unachievable amount of money.”
As evidence around the world shows, the U.S. doesn’t have to reinvent the wheel to be a green energy juggernaut — it can simply look to currently-existing examples in countries with socialist policies — like Germany and China, for instance — on how to become a leader in green energy. And according to Bill Gates, the rest of the world will ***ow the lead if the biggest countries set the bar.
“The climate problem has to be solved in the rich countries,” Gates said. “China and the U.S. and Europe have to solve CO2 emissions, and when they do, hopefully they’ll make it cheap enough for everyone else.”
This past July, Germany set a new record by generating 78 percent of its electricity from renewable sources, beating its previous record of 74 percent in May of 2014. Germany generated 40.65 gigawatts from wind and solar energy, 4.85 gigawatts from biomass, and 2.4 gigawatts from hydropower, for a total of 47.9 gigawatts of green energy when total electricity demand was at 61.1 gigawatts. Over the past year, Germany decreased its CO2 output by 4.3 percent. This means greenhouse gas emissions in Germany are at their lowest point since 1990.
But in terms of raw investment, China’s $80 billion green energy investment is more than both the U.S. ($34 billion) and Europe ($46 billion), combined. And those investments are already paying dividends. While coal is still China’s biggest source of electricity, the world’s biggest polluter aims to have its use of fossil fuels peak in 2030, and trend downward after that. Additionally, China’s solar production outpaces all other countries combined.
Between 2000 and 2012, China’s solar energy output increased dramatically from 3 megawatts to 21,000 megawatts. And its solar output increased by 67 percent between 2013 and 2014 alone. In 2014, China actually managed to decrease its CO2 emissions by 1 percent, with further reductions expected in the coming years.
China also powers more homes with wind energy than every nuclear power plant in the U.S. put together. China’s wind output provided electricity to 110 million homes in 2014, as its wind farms generated 16 percent more power than in 2013, and 77 gigawatts of additional wind power are currently under construction. China’s energy grid is currently powered by 100 gigawatts of green energy, and aims to double green energy output to 200 gigawatts by 2020.
Bill Gates wants the U.S. to be an additional green energy leader, and expresses hope that there may still be enough time for the U.S. to take green energy investment seriously, and that the public sector can be instrumental in preventing a 2-degree increase in global temperatures.
“I don’t think it’s hopeless, because it’s about American innovation, American jobs, American leadership, and there are examples where this has gone very, very well,” Gates said.
Googliano:
En una reciente entrevista con The Atlantic, el multimillonario tecnología magnate Bill Gates anunció su plan de juego para gastar $ 2000 millones de su propia riqueza en inversiones en energía verde, y pidió a sus compañeros de los multimillonarios del sector privado para ayudar a que el fósil libre US en 2050. Pero al hacerlo, Puertas admitió que el sector privado es demasiado egoísta e ineficaz para hacer el trabajo por sí mismo, y que la mitigación del cambio climático no sería posible sin la ayuda de investigación y desarrollo del gobierno.
"No hay una fortuna que se hizo. Incluso si usted tiene una nueva fuente de energía que cuesta lo mismo que hoy y no emite CO2, será incierto en comparación con lo que está probado y verdadero y que ya operan a escala increíble y ha llegado a través de todos los problemas de regulación ", dijo Gates. "Sin un impuesto sustancial de carbono, no hay incentivo para que los innovadores o compradores de plantas para cambiar."
Gates, incluso con tachuelas a las palabras pronunciadas izquierda y que pocos inversores multimillonarios se atrevería a decir: R gobierno + D es mucho más eficaz y eficiente que cualquier cosa que el sector privado podría hacer.
"Desde la Segunda Guerra Mundial, los Estados Unidos por el gobierno de I + D ha definido el estado del arte en casi todas las áreas", dijo Gates. "El sector privado está en inepto general."
"Cuando llegué por primera vez a este pensé, '¿Qué tan bien el Departamento de Energía de gastar su presupuesto de I + D?' Y yo estaba preocupado: 'Dios mío, si yo voy a estar diciendo que debería duplicar su presupuesto, si resulta que no está muy bien gastado, ¿cómo voy a sentir al respecto? '", dijo Gates a The Atlantic. "Pero a medida que realmente he cavado en él, el dinero DARPA está muy bien gastado, y el dinero en la ciencia básica está muy bien gastado. El gobierno tiene estos "Centros de Excelencia". Ellos deben tener el doble de muchas de esas cosas, y esas cosas deben recibir cerca de cuatro veces mayor cantidad de dinero que hacen ".
Al hacer su caso por la excelencia del sector público, el fundador de Microsoft, mencionó el éxito de la internet:
"En el caso de las tecnologías digitales, el camino de regreso a la I + D del gobierno es un poco más complejo, porque hoy en día la mayor parte de la I + D se ha trasladado al sector privado. Sin embargo, Internet original, proviene del gobierno, las cosas-chip de fundición originales proviene del gobierno, y aún hoy en día hay un poco de dinero del gobierno asumiendo algunas de las cosas más avanzadas y asegurándose de que las universidades tienen la base de conocimientos que sostiene que el plomo. Así que yo diría que el registro general de los Estados Unidos el gobierno de la I + D es muy, muy bueno ".
El programa "Centros de Excelencia" Bill Gates mencionó es el Centro de Excelencia en Energía Renovable (CERE), que es financiado en parte por la National Science Foundation (NSF). La NSF, que operaba con aproximadamente $ 7.1 mil millones en 2014, es la fuente de una cuarta parte de los fondos federales para proyectos de investigación en más de 2.000 colegios, universidades, escuelas K-12, organizaciones no lucrativas y empresas. La NSF incluso ha financiado la investigación de más de 200 premios Nobel, entre ellos 26 en tan sólo los últimos 5 años solamente. La NSF recibe más de 40.000 propuestas cada año, pero sólo llega a financiar alrededor de 11.000 de ellos. Bill Gates quiere este financiamiento se incrementó dramáticamente.
"Me encantaría ver una triplicación, a $ 18 mil millones al año por parte del gobierno de Estados Unidos para financiar la investigación básica en paz", dijo Gates. "Ahora, como un porcentaje del presupuesto del gobierno, que no es gigantesco ... Esto no es una cantidad inalcanzable de dinero."
Como prueba de todo el mundo muestra, los EE.UU. no tiene que reinventar la rueda para ser un gigante de la energía verde - puede simplemente mirar a ejemplos actualmente existentes en los países con políticas socialistas - como Alemania y China, por ejemplo - sobre cómo convertido en un líder en energía verde. Y de acuerdo con Bill Gates, el resto del mundo va a seguir el ejemplo, si los países más grandes puesto el listón.
"El problema del clima tiene que ser resuelto en los países ricos", dijo Gates. "China y los EE.UU. y Europa tienen que resolver las emisiones de CO2, y cuando lo hacen, es de esperar que va a hacer es lo suficientemente barato para todos los demás."
El pasado julio, Alemania estableció un nuevo récord al generar el 78 por ciento de su electricidad de fuentes renovables, batiendo su récord anterior de 74 por ciento en mayo de 2014. Alemania generó 40,65 gigavatios de energía eólica y solar, de 4,85 gigavatios a partir de biomasa, y 2,4 gigavatios de la energía hidroeléctrica, por un total de 47,9 gigavatios de energía verde cuando la demanda total de electricidad estaba en 61,1 gigavatios. Durante el año pasado, Alemania disminuyó su producción de CO2 en un 4,3 por ciento. Esto significa emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero en Alemania están en su punto más bajo desde 1990.
Pero en términos de inversión en bruto, $ 80 mil millones de inversión en energía verde de China es más que tanto los EE.UU. ($ 34 mil millones) y Europa (46 $ millones de dólares), en combinación. Y esas inversiones ya están pagando dividendos. Mientras que el carbón sigue siendo la mayor fuente de electricidad de China, el mayor contaminante del mundo aspira a tener su uso del pico de los combustibles fósiles en 2030, y la tendencia a la baja después de eso. Además, la producción de energía solar de China supera a todos los demás países juntos.
Entre 2000 y 2012, la producción de energía solar de China aumentó dramáticamente de 3 megavatios a 21.000 megavatios. Y su producción solar aumentó en un 67 por ciento entre 2013 y 2014 solo. En 2014, China se las arregló para reducir sus emisiones de CO2 en un 1 por ciento, con más reducciones esperadas en los próximos años.
China también poderes más hogares con energía eólica que cada planta de energía nuclear en los EE.UU. en su conjunto. Producción eólica de China proporciona electricidad a 110 millones de hogares en 2014, ya que sus parques eólicos generan el 16 por ciento más energía que en 2013, y 77 gigavatios de energía eólica adicional se encuentran actualmente en construcción. Red de energía de China está alimentado por 100 gigavatios de energía verde, y tiene como objetivo duplicar la producción de energía verde a 200 gigavatios en 2020.
Bill Gates quiere que los EE.UU. para ser un líder de la energía verde adicional, y expresa la esperanza de que todavía puede haber tiempo suficiente para que los EE.UU. a tomar la inversión en energía verde en serio, y que el sector público puede ser fundamental en la prevención de un aumento de 2 grados en el mundial temperaturas.
"No creo que no hay esperanza, porque se trata de la innovación estadounidense, empleos en Estados Unidos, el liderazgo estadounidense, y hay ejemplos en los que esto ha ido muy, muy bien", dijo Gates.
Última edición: