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Md Nadim Ahmed's avatar

I think people underestimate how much recent technological shifts will benefit rural development in developing countries.

1) Solar + batteries makes rural electrification much easier.

2) Cheap smartphones enable rural people access to financial services such as money transfer, loans and insurance. They can also get easy access to weather forecasts.

3) E-bikes wouldn't just benefit young urbanites. Most rural people get around using bicycles. Cheap e-bikes will increase their e effective travel distance.

4) Computer vision (which is a product of machine learning) will enable precision agriculture. These new agricultural devices will reduce fertiliser, herbicide and pesticide needs by 40-80%.

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Harry Forsythe's avatar

Neither wind, nor sunshine has enough energy density to provide cost-effective replacement for what’s currently being provided by hydrocarbons & nuclear energy.

There isn’t enough land to devote, cost-effectively, to solar & windfarms and neither is there sufficient volume of minerals to manufacture, cost-effectively, the vast quantity of the inanimate animals that would be required to populate the farms if governments are fucked in the head enough to pursue such ruinous course of action.

Absent government subsidies, none, repeat, none, of these fantasies (EVs, PV, wind turbines & storage batteries) is commercially viable, as evidenced by the investor-exits and concomitant share-price collapses of practically every company involved in the fairy tales.

I’m not interested in debating this.

I just want to nail my colours to the mast so that I can be seen, convincingly, to be on the right side of history after the climate change hypnotic spell is broken, or, at least, when the shrill screaming subsides in the face of reducing temperatures.

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