Carbon neutral F1
Discussion
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/50382898
Can somebody explain the reality behind this as I’m confused.
Surely if you are building/consuming a product it is impossible to be ‘carbon neutral’ unless you are replacing the same product into the ecosystem?
Ultra efficient travel, recycling, banning single use plastics, using bio fuel have all been mentioned but all these are still based on consuming natural materials.
Unless you actually stop producing/driving racing cars you can never be ‘carbon neutral?
Can somebody explain the reality behind this as I’m confused.
Surely if you are building/consuming a product it is impossible to be ‘carbon neutral’ unless you are replacing the same product into the ecosystem?
Ultra efficient travel, recycling, banning single use plastics, using bio fuel have all been mentioned but all these are still based on consuming natural materials.
Unless you actually stop producing/driving racing cars you can never be ‘carbon neutral?
Drawweight said:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/50382898
.
Surely if you are building/consuming a product it is impossible to be ‘carbon neutral’ unless you are replacing the same product into the ecosystem?
Ultra efficient travel, recycling, banning single use plastics, using bio fuel have all been mentioned but all these are still based on consuming natural materials.
It's only carbon neutral - i.e CO2 emissions caused - not resource neutral..
Surely if you are building/consuming a product it is impossible to be ‘carbon neutral’ unless you are replacing the same product into the ecosystem?
Ultra efficient travel, recycling, banning single use plastics, using bio fuel have all been mentioned but all these are still based on consuming natural materials.
kambites said:
Carbon offsetting for the use of fossil fuels is complete rubbish.
No it's not. It's tightly regulated and - if done correctly - an efficient means to reduce net carbon emissions.There are plenty of rubbish carbon offsetting schemes but is wrong to cast the same to all.
Trees are only part of it.
I have colleagues working on projects that are reducing marine pollution, for example. Seawater absorbs CO2 but not as efficiently if it's polluted. The money that's funding those projects is drawn from various carbon offsetting pots. Plus the local people who are most directly affected are seeing their health and livelihoods improve.
As mentioned, BioFuel is another means and something research into that's being funded in a similar manner.
Don't get sucked into the knee-jerk reaction that anything evenly vaguely 'green' is a sap to the sandal wearing lentilists. There's a whole heap of really interesting and cool stuff out there that's creating sustainability - proper 'tech' and innovative thinking and it's right that F1 should be part of this.
CO2 capture has never worked commercially. CO2 is plant food. Your ships need oodles of energy dense products to make steel Your wind turbines with their steel and concrete bases (never to be removed as all contracts to remove at end of life do not include bases)
Could go on forever but have a life to live
Could go on forever but have a life to live
Sandpit Steve said:
It’s just a bigger version of the ‘carbon offset’ your airline tries to guilt-trip you into adding to your ticket. Usually the result is a hugely bureaucratic scheme to plant some trees somewhere.
It’s virtue signalling top trumps.
Didn't F1 already target carbon neutrality in the 90's? I remember them starting a trust fund for carbon offset or similar, but noone mentions it today.It’s virtue signalling top trumps.
- edit. Found it- they buy (or bought) tokens in a trust fund called Fonfo BioClimatico used for carbon offsetting:
Here's Jenson Button talking about it already being carbon neutral in 2007. Seems a little historical revisionism going on?
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/56953/f1-already...
Edited by glazbagun on Tuesday 22 September 19:02
DOCG said:
REALIST123 said:
No, of course not.
Then I think the whole thing is a bit misleading StevieBee said:
kambites said:
Carbon offsetting for the use of fossil fuels is complete rubbish.
No it's not. It's tightly regulated and - if done correctly - an efficient means to reduce net carbon emissions.Even if you believe the figures, you quite often find that company A plants some trees to "offset" their emissions, then company B cuts them down for "carbon neutral fuel". Both companies will of course claim their activities are carbon neutral but it's clearly not actually true.
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