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Clemency Burton-Hill
Clemency Burton-Hill

Clemency suggests


Environmental Economics

Thursday, 3rd July 2008

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Or rather, environmental non-economics. Arlo Brady today:

And then there is the observation that products that are more environmentally friendly tend to have used (and use) fewer resources than their conventional counterparts, and should therefore be cheaper to buy or run.

If this were in fact true than we'd all be environmentalists. It's just that a quick look around the world tells us that environmentally friendly products (at least those that call themselves such) are more expensive than conventionally produced items.

Solar power, windmills, are still vastly more expensive than fossil fuel generation, even if you include the costs of the CO2 emissions. Organic food does indeed cost more to produce than conventionally farmed. Recycling does cost more than landfill (the time spent sorting to recycle costs more than the rest of the system put together).

Given that all of this is true, that many so called environmentally friendly products do cost more than conventionally produced, if we accept the second part of the logic then we'll have to assume that they also consume more resources.

Which really isn't the point at all, is it?

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pj

July 3rd, 2008 4:49pm

But the time & effort you or I spend sorting out the recycling isn't regarded as a using a resource. It comes from the same place as the presents Santa's left at the foot of the tree on Christmas morning.

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