In the last 20 years, there's been two dramatic events in energy related r in d m in the us. One is this incredibly positive outcome with respect to a fracin an liquid natural gas. The bad news, surprise, was, you nosylican valley barked on a very big push a to do so called clean tack, green tack. It was a huge push. And it there were a lot of extremely smart andaccomplished people here in the valley who thought that this was the new frontier for american technology,. But i think some policy mistakes can make that situation worse.
In this episode from October 2019, a16z co-founder Marc Andreessen and former a16z podcast showrunner Sonal Choksi bring on MIT economist and bestselling author Andrew McAfee to discuss why the lessons of human growth in times past, from the Industrial Revolution onwards, might not apply to our future. It used to be that the only way for humanity to grow — and progress — was through destroying the environment. But is this interplay between human growth vs. environment really a zero-sum game? Even if it were true in history, is it true today? If capitalism is not responsible for environmental degradation, than who or what is? And where does (and doesn’t) technology come in?
The conversation is based on McAfee’s 2019 book More from Less: The Surprising Story of How We Learned to Prosper Using Fewer Resources -- and What Happens Next, ranging broadly across many areas of growth, from the future of energy and agriculture to the role of capitalism and technology today and tomorrow, from dematerialization to Tesla, Buckminster Fuller, and more.