forsyth: (Default)
Forsyth ([personal profile] forsyth) wrote2006-12-20 01:11 am

The Thing Is...

See, pollution is waste, right? Waste costs money, it's stuff you bought that doesn't go into the finished product. So by producing less waste, production becomes more efficient, which, which in turn makes costs go down which means more profit.

So why don't industry execs think this way? Besides the ridiculous short-term incentives built into the stock market to ignore the long term.

[identity profile] dirkdada.livejournal.com 2006-12-20 07:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Waste, by it's very definition, is useless. Waste costs money because you have to store it, dispose of it, or invest in more expensive technologies to reduce it.

Burning it and spewing it into the air is the cheapest from an individual company's point of view because it spreads the cost out to the general population. We pay for it with acid rain and undrinkable water, by breathing it in and contracting cancer and black lung.

In other words, the companies are storing their pollution in our bodies and our environment free of charge.

You can't beat that price point.

[identity profile] the-s-guy.livejournal.com 2006-12-22 12:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Currently the production and disposal of waste is cheaper than not producing it in the first place.

Alter this fact and the pendulum swings the other way.

[identity profile] meridethfate.livejournal.com 2006-12-28 09:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Why dont they think this way? Because, so long as they hit the highest point of their salary in the five years before they retire, the long term effects and profitablity of the company is of null value to the executive. And why is American economy failing why Japan is slowing kicking our economic behinds? Because Japan builds a ten-year plan and factors out the "waste product" and Americans like immediate gratification. But hey, this land is our land...right?