Not exact matches
However, there are many ways in which we can
use fuels more responsibly and efficiently to curb emissions, and work toward a better, cleaner
tomorrow.
I'm now en route to Boston to to attend and speak at the «Healthy Food
Fuels Hungry Minds» school food conference taking place at Harvard
tomorrow, and I wanted to let you know that I and some of my fellow conference participants will be live - tweeting portions of the event throughout the day
using the hashtag #hungryminds15.
Starting with the premise that we'll eventually stop
using fossil
fuels, Robert Laughlin imagines the energy sources of
tomorrow
They eschew expensive platinum catalysts by operating at high temperature, and because they can
use a variety of small - chain hydrocarbon
fuels, they can
use today's
fuel, not
tomorrow's.
For starters, our country's system for mandating and subsidizing the production of ethanol has meant that farmers who could be
using their land to grow today's food feel economically compelled to grow
tomorrow's
fuel instead.
We can't burn fossil
fuels they are too dirty, can't
use renewable sources as they might effect
tomorrow's spotted owl and anything left is owned by some whacked out dictator in the 3rd world.
Who knows, someone might invent a fusion reactor
tomorrow and all this worry will begin to subside as we stop
using fossil
fuels.
Sometimes paired with the fallacious argument that only people who
use no fossil
fuels can legitimately oppose fossil
fuel development is the statement: «We won't stop
using fossil
fuels tomorrow».