DJ VAZIVA STOCKS LISTING, FRENCH FINTECH PIONEER IN THE DEMATERIALIZATION OF SOCIAL BENEFITS VAZIVA SAS VAZIVA STOCKS LISTING, FRENCH FINTECH PIONEER IN THE DEMATERIALIZATION OF SOCIAL BENEFITS
lunch. that s why i said if we were really lucky, we would be talking about bus ands bikes. but there are critical minerals and things that we have to cobalt, lithium for these vehicles that we have to figure out how to mun them responsibly and get them in ways that are good for both miners and the environment. but the total burden of, you know, stuff that we re moving around and buying is going to go way down. here s the number for you. 40% of all the ship traffic on the high seas is just human beings moving fossil fuels from one place to another. that gives you some sense of the dematerialization that will come when instead we built enough solar panels in winter mines and all we have to do is wait for the sun to come up in the morning and provide us the energy we need to run our cars. amen. this is really interesting,
staring into cathrode. they have smart phones. can poor countries do it? in other words do we have time for everyone to get as rich as america and then start this decoupling, this dematerialization you call it? the only reason i m not confident we have time is because of global warming which is real and bad and we re not taking action on it. greenhouse gases are just a form of air pollution. i don t mean just because they re not easy but they re not mysterious. we ve had amazing success at reducing air pollution levels. the the point i make in the book is we know the playbook for dealing with tough problems like pollution, which is a bad side of the capitalistic economy we ve built. don t think that the solution lies in some kind of personal virtue of restaint and, you know, use less stuff, less energy. think instead of big
i think america will use less energy in ten years than it does today, no matter how big the economy gets. what is the consequence? if you re right, whatdize that mean? we don t have to contemplate not growing anymore or voluntarily reducing consumption. we can continue to grow while taking better care of the planet. i think low-income countries are going to get to that point of peak stuff and start decreasing much sooner than we did because they have access to much more powerful technologies. there s no way that bangladeshi are going to be staring but we can afford to do this kind of highly efficient manufacturing with lots of software and things. can poor countries do it? in other words, do we have time for everyone together as rich as america and then start decoupling of this dematerialization, as you call it? the only reason i m not