πŸ’‘ Tips from Warp News: Musk on Mars & why degrowth won't save our planet

πŸ’‘ Tips from Warp News: Musk on Mars & why degrowth won't save our planet

Daniel Yergin's latest book, Wright's Law, first videos of Tesla's Full-Self Driving beta, Musk's latest Mars update, Andrew McAfee on growth and the environment plus you campaign slogan for 2020.

Mathias Sundin
Mathias Sundin

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πŸ“š Book

If you want to understand the world that fossil fuels have created there is no better source than Daniel Yergin. His The Prize gives you a deep understanding of the world that ran on oil with a history of the global petroleum industry from 1850 to 1990. He won a Pulitzer Prize for the book.

In The Quest he covered the entire energy system.

Now, in The New Map, he dives into the changes brought on by the strong growth by renewables, but also the shale oil and gas revolution in America.

The energy sector is facing a major disruption, that I wrote about recently in Oil & gas - The largest and best disruption ever.

πŸ“° Article

Andrew McAfee, MIT, makes the case that degrowth won't help our planet.

The logic seems ironclad that our gains have to be the environment’s losses.
In some important areas, however, a very different pattern emerged after 1970: Growth continued, but environmental harm decreased.
This decoupling occurred first with pollution, and first in the rich world. In the US, for example, aggregate levels of six common air pollutants have declined by 77 percent, even as gross domestic product increased by 285 percent and population by 60 percent.
In the UK, annual tonnage of particulate emissions dropped by more than 75 percent between 1970 and 2016, and of the main polluting chemicals by about 85 percent. Similar gains are common across the highest-income countries.

πŸ‘‰ Why Degrowth Is The Worst Idea on the Planet

πŸ“Ί Video

Elon Musk joined The Mars Society's virtual convention last week. His guesstimate of the first trip with Starship (right now under development in Boca Chica, Texas) to Mars is 2024.

The founder of the Mars Society, Robert Zubrin, has a long history with Musk. In 2001 the Mars Society held a fundraiser:

The fundraiser entry fee was $500 per plate, but for some reason, one fellow sent in a check for $5,000. This got my attention. The check was signed by someone named Elon Musk. I had never heard of him.

From Zubrin's excellent book The Case for Space.

And speaking of Elon Musk, here are some of the first videos of Tesla's re-write and upgrade of their autopilot software.

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Fellow Warp Premium Supporter Johan Norberg shared this on October 20, World Statistics Day (there is a day for everything...😁)

πŸ—„οΈ From the archive

Earlier this year I wrote about the best way to predict the future: Wright's Law. This "law" is crucial to understand the future of electric cars and battery costs.

Moore's Law focuses on time whereas Wright's Law focuses instead on the number of units produced. For each doubling of production, the associated cost drops by a certain percentage. In this rule of thumb, it is 20 percent.

Read: πŸ”­ Wright's Law is the best way to predict the future

πŸ€ͺ And now for something completly different

Sundin 2020: Stop drolling!