The reliability and affordability, isn't that changing on renewables? So it is just as the cleanliness is changing on fossil fuels. Everybody has a lot of work to do. Most can't afford batteries because the technology is still too expensive. And I think our paradigms very likely will change over the next decade or two based upon new innovations about how we store things.
It’s easy to write off people outside our own ideological bubbles, even when we may have many goals in common. But as the effects of the climate crisis become more apparent, we need leaders from all political and industrial perspectives to work together. In the U.S., climate is a polarizing issue where it’s too easy to assume that one side is working to reduce emissions and the other side is defending the status quo. But that’s only a caricature of reality. There are people from many ideological backgrounds trying to address the climate crisis. So how can common ground be found between environmentalists on the left and Republicans on the right? And what does an EV-driving member of the ConocoPhillips board have to say about reducing emissions?
Guests:
John Curtis, U.S. Representative (R-UT)
Arjun Murti, Partner, Veriten; Director, ConocoPhillips board
For show notes and related links, visit ClimateOne.org.
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