Having to trust Google translate on this one, but it seems like people were specifically asked if they support it as a "medium-term" solution for climate change - not lifetime.
And also, small sample size online survey conducted by under-grads. Grain of salt and all that.
Asking 18-24 year olds to make lifetime statements is not the same as asking a 40-50 year old person. One group has no concept yet and the other is starting to regret wasting it.
I similarly get frustrated with such studies, and wonder if it's more lazy reporting or 'ragebait' reporting.
I just read a 'study' last week (that I can't find now) about what percentage of young adults are forced to live at home longer. The survey way 200 or so people in one specific area, so...useless.
But around 2.5% of emissions come from aviation (or maybe 3% of actual warming emissions). I think that puts it in the range of 10% of transportation emissions. Apparently personal vehicles are responsible for ~58% of transportation emissions.
You're likely much more effective giving up your car than giving up flights.
> Apparently personal vehicles are responsible for ~58% of transportation emissions.
That's because most people in the world don't fly. If you're flying coast to coast and back once (approx 1t CO2eq), that's already a significant percentage of a typical car's yearly emissions, like 20%. Add an international flight and you're getting close to an even split.
> You're likely much more effective giving up your car than giving up flights.
I mean, obviously ideally you'd do both. Probably easier to significantly curtail both instead of giving it up entirely. But telling most people to give up their car is like telling them to give up a kidney or both.
Suffice to say I think this would only work in places like Europe where everything is relatively densely connected by rail. For me personally I live in North American and I visit my family in Europe once a year. Cutting me off from them would suck and effectively force me back to Europe :) this seems like it's coming from a place of "privilege" per se of everything being nearby.
Don’t you feel it’s a privilege to be able to live all across the world? Most people in Europe can’t easily move out of Europe if they want to maintain a standard of living.
if you can contemplate how many flights you consider sufficient in a life, you have likely already solved (or had solved for you) far more significant problems.
This is to me like when people argue about banning airbnb.
"The other day I had arrived in a city and there were no hostels, all the hotels were $300/night or full. If there were no airbnb, what would I have done?"
And the answer is you would have changed your behaviour. Booking something further in advance, changing your travel plans, finding a different city to stay in.
The whole point of this idea is reducing the number of flights. That probably also means it's harder for people like you (and me) to live anywhere we want. But that is a privilege we have, not a given. If the cost is too great, we change our behaviour.
If airbnb has destroyed the rental market in a city, it's better for them to ban it and lose some travellers.
Similar argument to the "any-benefit" approach to technology, which Cal Newport writes about with relation to digital minimalism. We think we're justified in using a tool if we can identify any possible benefit to its use.
This is an example of what is called a 'push poll' which is a poll designed to be used to popularize a point of view to the public. There are so many ways to bias a poll like this.
It's especially notable that it's from France -- a country with sizeable investment and expertise in high-speed rail, who stand to benefit from less flying and broader rail investment.
Don't get me wrong, I'm in favour of high-speed rail investment and rail journeys replacing flights. I had a long weekend in Amsterdam last month, and chose to take the train from London instead of flying, partly for sustainability reasons, partly for comfort. I wish my home country (the USA) invested more in high-speed rail, too.
But what about all that CO2 compensation stuff, that's really not expensive, in fact it seems like it can't work. What would be real cost to undo all damage I do to the world with a flight? I don't mind paying more. But how much more are we talking about? That is the real question imho.
From: Amsterdam (NL), AMS to: Pogdorica (CS), TGD via: VIE, Vienna International, Austria, AT, Roundtrip, Economy Class, ca. 3,300 km, 1 traveller
CO2 amount: 0.746 t
Take responsibility for your CO2-emissions by supporting climate protection projects in developing and emerging countries.
EUR 21.00
To compensate it asks me to pay 21 eur. That's nothing. Just add it to all flights. Actually, it doesn't say that this will undo my emitted CO2. So what does this do? Stimulated eco friendly projects. Of course it would be better to stimulate them AND avoid the flight... I wonder what it would cost to really really just remove that CO2 from the atmosphere.
So the price goes from 60%+40%=100% to 60%+(6+4)/4*40%=160%. To simplify, just assume you will have to pay a 50% more per trip.
[This assume there is another project that can capture carbon for half of the cost of the linked project. For the full price you get 60%+(12+4)/4*40%=160%, i.e. a +120% increase. And this is very optimistic, because preliminary calculation are usually too optimistic.]
And there’s probably an argument that taking flights increases general demand for them and that most of that demand comes from people who don’t offset their CO2
I understand the poll is misrepresented but I find the proposition to be extremely anti-human in the first place — climate change is a real threat, but any directives need to take in to consideration the death and misery caused by restricting the opportunity to travel freely.
The focus should be on reducing the average emissions for each mile travelled — reducing private flights, improving electrified road and rail networks and improving the economy of commercial flights.
I would also wager that the political and high business class would also not face this restriction should something like it ever come to exist.
France is a wonderful holiday destination. It has mountains, snow in winter (for now...), hiking in the summer, hot seaside, cool seaside, Arcadian countryside, lakes, rivers. Museums, castles, palaces, Roman ruins, Eiffel Tower...
If you live in France, there are so many holidays you can take by driving for 3-4 hrs. But so many places (many of them lovely) where you can never do most of these. If you live in Iceland, for example, I don't think hot beat holidays are for you without a flight.
Not a terrible idea. Four seems low, and I have no idea how they arrived at that exact number, but in principle plane travel is one of the most inexpensive and time-efficient ways an average person can release tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. I mean, we ban drinking straws and fret about the environmental cost of electric cars, but really the biggest impact on the environment an average person could have would be to fly less.
It’s just a preview of some of the tough choices we may have to make as climate change gets worse.
Maybe we get a certain amount of carbon credits and we get to decide how to use them. Sure, if a parent is sick, take a flight to be with them but it may mean you take public transportation for a couple of weeks when you get back instead of driving to work. Or work from home for a while if that’s an option.
If only we could stick a numeric value on limited resources and allow people to optimize their life according to their own priorities...
Money. We have money. Tax environmental damage at every step and make the costs of things reflect their actual costs. If wealth inequality is a problem, balance it out with redistribution. Some will say this is extreme, but this thread is about forbiding travel, so extreme is where we're at in this context. Id rather see soft behavior shaping through tax policies than by straight up banning things.
There is decidedly a difference in political strategy between those who try to control others behavior and those who try to balance the incentives of a system so that the behavior of its participants considers all of the relevant information.
While the CO2 emissions caused by personal air travel aren’t that significant compared to many other things, hopefully we will have renewable jet fuel soon and people can fly as much as they like without being guilt tripped
I wonder what the proportion of Parisians who would support this policy would be.
It would not surprise me if 41% of the French population has taken fewer than 5 flights in their life, and that the proportion of Americans would be similar.
The problem with these types of policies (restrictions or even just taxes on meat consumption, light bulb usage, or overall carbon output) is not just that they become unpopular when actually implemented, it leads to "solution aversion". The solitons to a problem become so detrimental that some people then convince themselves that the problem does not even exist.
Well, I've done two in the last 48, together totaling about 12hour airborne (government biz). I guess I'm the devil. How many tanks of glass should we be limited to? How many internet searches? How many of those undergrads own Bitcoin?
[+] [-] legitster|2 years ago|reply
And also, small sample size online survey conducted by under-grads. Grain of salt and all that.
[+] [-] bridanp|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] silisili|2 years ago|reply
I just read a 'study' last week (that I can't find now) about what percentage of young adults are forced to live at home longer. The survey way 200 or so people in one specific area, so...useless.
[+] [-] desi_ninja|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] glandium|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] saltysalt|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] abeppu|2 years ago|reply
You're likely much more effective giving up your car than giving up flights.
https://ourworldindata.org/co2-emissions-from-aviation
https://www.epa.gov/ghgemissions/sources-greenhouse-gas-emis...
https://www.cbo.gov/publication/58861
[+] [-] morsch|2 years ago|reply
That's because most people in the world don't fly. If you're flying coast to coast and back once (approx 1t CO2eq), that's already a significant percentage of a typical car's yearly emissions, like 20%. Add an international flight and you're getting close to an even split.
> You're likely much more effective giving up your car than giving up flights.
I mean, obviously ideally you'd do both. Probably easier to significantly curtail both instead of giving it up entirely. But telling most people to give up their car is like telling them to give up a kidney or both.
[+] [-] tarnith|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] amilios|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] brianwawok|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] eptcyka|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dagurp|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] balfirevic|2 years ago|reply
It's not even true. I don't think I can hop on a train for a quick trip to Paris from Romania, Bulgaria or Croatia.
[+] [-] timeon|2 years ago|reply
Talking about privilege.
[+] [-] catchnear4321|2 years ago|reply
the privilege is more than proximity.
[+] [-] 14|2 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] xwdv|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] willsmith72|2 years ago|reply
"The other day I had arrived in a city and there were no hostels, all the hotels were $300/night or full. If there were no airbnb, what would I have done?"
And the answer is you would have changed your behaviour. Booking something further in advance, changing your travel plans, finding a different city to stay in.
The whole point of this idea is reducing the number of flights. That probably also means it's harder for people like you (and me) to live anywhere we want. But that is a privilege we have, not a given. If the cost is too great, we change our behaviour.
If airbnb has destroyed the rental market in a city, it's better for them to ban it and lose some travellers.
Similar argument to the "any-benefit" approach to technology, which Cal Newport writes about with relation to digital minimalism. We think we're justified in using a tool if we can identify any possible benefit to its use.
[+] [-] shrubble|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jwestbury|2 years ago|reply
Don't get me wrong, I'm in favour of high-speed rail investment and rail journeys replacing flights. I had a long weekend in Amsterdam last month, and chose to take the train from London instead of flying, partly for sustainability reasons, partly for comfort. I wish my home country (the USA) invested more in high-speed rail, too.
[+] [-] klipklop|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] teekert|2 years ago|reply
Edit, a recent example, as calculated using https://co2.myclimate.org/
Your flight:
From: Amsterdam (NL), AMS to: Pogdorica (CS), TGD via: VIE, Vienna International, Austria, AT, Roundtrip, Economy Class, ca. 3,300 km, 1 traveller CO2 amount: 0.746 t
Take responsibility for your CO2-emissions by supporting climate protection projects in developing and emerging countries. EUR 21.00
To compensate it asks me to pay 21 eur. That's nothing. Just add it to all flights. Actually, it doesn't say that this will undo my emitted CO2. So what does this do? Stimulated eco friendly projects. Of course it would be better to stimulate them AND avoid the flight... I wonder what it would cost to really really just remove that CO2 from the atmosphere.
[+] [-] tomp|2 years ago|reply
https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/carbon-...
Carbon offsetting schemes are ‘fraud’, says major airline CEO
[+] [-] gus_massa|2 years ago|reply
> For comparison, 1 gallon of gasoline release 9kg of CO2, so it's $12.15 USD more per gallon to be carbon neutral.
Let's be optimistic and assume that other projects are better and the cost is a half, i.e. $6 USD
A gallon of gasoline cost $4 USD (Planes don't use gasoline, but whatever.)
From a random link I got from Google, the 40% of the cost of a plane trip is fuel https://www.quora.com/What-percentage-does-fuel-cost-take-ou...
So the price goes from 60%+40%=100% to 60%+(6+4)/4*40%=160%. To simplify, just assume you will have to pay a 50% more per trip.
[This assume there is another project that can capture carbon for half of the cost of the linked project. For the full price you get 60%+(12+4)/4*40%=160%, i.e. a +120% increase. And this is very optimistic, because preliminary calculation are usually too optimistic.]
[+] [-] IshKebab|2 years ago|reply
https://www.cell.com/joule/fulltext/S2542-4351(18)30225-3
[+] [-] pxeger1|2 years ago|reply
And there’s probably an argument that taking flights increases general demand for them and that most of that demand comes from people who don’t offset their CO2
[+] [-] benzoate|2 years ago|reply
The focus should be on reducing the average emissions for each mile travelled — reducing private flights, improving electrified road and rail networks and improving the economy of commercial flights.
I would also wager that the political and high business class would also not face this restriction should something like it ever come to exist.
[+] [-] rich_sasha|2 years ago|reply
If you live in France, there are so many holidays you can take by driving for 3-4 hrs. But so many places (many of them lovely) where you can never do most of these. If you live in Iceland, for example, I don't think hot beat holidays are for you without a flight.
[+] [-] karaterobot|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] baggy_trough|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] alwillis|2 years ago|reply
Maybe we get a certain amount of carbon credits and we get to decide how to use them. Sure, if a parent is sick, take a flight to be with them but it may mean you take public transportation for a couple of weeks when you get back instead of driving to work. Or work from home for a while if that’s an option.
[+] [-] Buttons840|2 years ago|reply
Money. We have money. Tax environmental damage at every step and make the costs of things reflect their actual costs. If wealth inequality is a problem, balance it out with redistribution. Some will say this is extreme, but this thread is about forbiding travel, so extreme is where we're at in this context. Id rather see soft behavior shaping through tax policies than by straight up banning things.
[+] [-] bagels|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] krapp|2 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] CSMastermind|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dharma1|2 years ago|reply
[+] [-] baron816|2 years ago|reply
It would not surprise me if 41% of the French population has taken fewer than 5 flights in their life, and that the proportion of Americans would be similar.
The problem with these types of policies (restrictions or even just taxes on meat consumption, light bulb usage, or overall carbon output) is not just that they become unpopular when actually implemented, it leads to "solution aversion". The solitons to a problem become so detrimental that some people then convince themselves that the problem does not even exist.
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