Trudeau may have said at the Calgary Petroleum Club that he believed in the idea of a carbon tax but he sure as shit did not RUN on the HUSTINGS with a carbon tax as a platform plank of election policy.That pussy wimp Dion tried that with his "Green Shift" and lost ground to the NDP under Layton.
I have never said "climate change" is a conspiracy I have said it is a Socialist Sham that is being pushed by the UN and that is exactly what it is.GHG's are the evil that is driving "climate change" and more specifically the GHG's are Carbon Dioxide.Every creature on the planet with lungs exudes Carbon Dioxide as it breathes.They breath in Oxygen and the waste is Carbon DioxideAt the same time ALL plant life on the planet CONSUME Carbon Dioxide as a life source and then exude Oxygen as a waste product.They feed uss and we feed them.It is a pretty simple symbiotic relationship that is based on scientific fact.
The whole idea behind "Climate Change" is nothing but a Socialist wealth transfer from the developed societies to the undeveloped societies orchestrated by the UN and it has been brainwashed into the public eye by fear mongering.
SR
My god, dude. Please do read up on GHG & Climate Change from reputable sources.
But let's start with the "oil is going away" thing, because that's easy: it isn't going away. Not unless a new, different power source (better, safer, more power dense than oil and WAY more power dense than batteries) comes along. I did the math a few years ago - a few minutes at the gas station "recharges" your fuel-tank with 5-6 MWh of energy. Tesla's biggest energy pack is ...100KwH? 5-6 MWh sounds like a lot (it is) but internal combustion engines are only 20% efficient, while electric motors are 90-95% efficient, so that's how the Tesla approach a small car or inefficient truck's range.
When you pull up a graph from EIA or similar, the breakdown of energy use is roughly 30/30/40 for transportation, electricity, and industry/residential. As for the sources of this energy, this is a year old but it probably hasn't changed much:
https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=30652.
To avoid risk of carpal tunnel syndrome from cut-and-paste the above, I'll summarize - ~80% of the US energy consumption comes from carbon-based fuels. (incl coal). Nuclear is ~10%, Renewable is ~10%. I expect nuclear to drop as US companies can't seem to re-learn how to make new nuclear power plants and old ones are falling apart. I expect renewables to continue to grow, but their inherent flux makes it difficult to provide baseload. STILL, renewables can provide a LOT of the electricity load because electricity fluctuates, sometimes by as much as 100% from night to day.
Transportation - cars & trucks are a big chunk, but theoretically MOST of those COULD be replaced by battery (battery swapouts instead of gas stations, looking into the future). Don't think it could happen? The US got populated by gas stations in a matter of decades as the horse & buggy got replaced (I don't hear too many people pining for those days....maybe Sybian? lol!). Airplanes will be a big challenge. Shipping will be the BIGGEST challenge - 80-90% of world trade goes by ship (have you seen Delta terminal empty...ever?) and its either oil-burning or NG (if they're an LNG carrier). I'm not saying it CAN'T happen (humans are pretty clever...sometimes too clever for their own good) but it'll take some kind of new power source to completely take oil out of the picture. As long as demand is there, quite a few clever humans will remain focused on getting it out of the ground and into fuel tanks.
Now to GHG/climate change. GHG is a no-brainer - its physics and chemistry that CO2 (and others like methane) reflect IR radiation back to the earth. Why are we so concerned over CO2 now and not in the pre-industrial age? Because earth is a system that seeks to be in balance, that 80% of energy usage emits CO2 that knocks the system WAY out of balance. You're right: we exhale CO2, plants "inhale"CO2 and everyone's happy. But the amount of CO2 additionally created by burning petroleum products goes HUGELY beyond what existing plant life requires and we're seeing effects on ocean life as well (absorbing CO2 results in acidification which can destroy coral life and affect sea life...). Ice core samples from eons back and solar activity research support that CO2 concentrations + solar activity today is greater than at any time in history. Some skeptics (and to be honest, we should all be 'skeptical' of science - don't believe what advertisers tell you, don't believe what politicians tell you, and don't believe what scientists tell you: make them all prove it to you) believe that higher CO2 concentrations and temps in the past mean that the future is OK. But are you willing to risk jumping into the unknown?
Climate change has been discussed and researched since the 70's, its nothing new. But it has gained greater and greater visibility thanks to people who, in my opinion, ACTUALLY GIVE A SHIT ABOUT THE FUTURE OF OUR PLANET. Those who yell and rant about this are NOT oil executives or get-rich schemers. SOME billionaires shout about it too, just as some billionaires are very generous donors to various causes. Is Climate change GUARANTEED to ruin the planet and our lives? Well, its fair to say...nobody REALLY knows. But if given the choice between maintaining earth in status quo and allowing it to careen into an unknown future of weather, drought, floods, etc, it sorta makes sense to fight to keep "status quo", doesn't it? Any actions by the UN has only come about from sustained research by concerned people. I can assure you that the researchers at universities are NOT getting rich with this. I've done graduate work and while some researchers end up in start-ups, the vast majority I've seen plug along with grants (that pay for grad students, equipment & research) and their university income. You don't see a whole lot of luxury vehicles in university parking lots (outside of the president & top folks)!
Effect on wealth - for every challenge to society, there are winners and losers. As mentioned above, the horse-and-buggy industry never recovered once autos took over. Too bad, so sad. So it shall be when combating climate change - some current industries will suffer, but new industries will rise up to profit from it and innovation with proper guidance can overcome tremendous challenges. I don't see how wealth will be transferred to undeveloped societies except that I DO believe developed nations (which contributed horrendously to CO2 and pollution during their modernization) should speed-along under-developed nations more quickly into cleaner futures. Places like Indonesia and Brazil that burn 1000's of acres of forest every year need some help to get away from that else the planet isn't going to improve.