Progressive
Member
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2008
- Messages
- 47
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2008
Petrol, who deserves the last litre, and what price would it take for you to march in canberra if you where being pumped
You'll have to be more specific there sir.Slidey said:The last barrel of petrol is inconsequential because there are alternatives.
Get back to me when you're worried about the last tonne of phosphate.
World recoverable phosphate reserves hit peak in 30 years. As you can tell by peak oil right now, that means prices start rising exponentially, or something with a similarly horrendous growth rate. Because phosphate has no replacement, unlike oil, this essentially means a Malthusian catastrophe unless we start using our brains fast.Nebuchanezzar said:I would imagine and hope that the last litre of cheap and flexible petrochemicals would go towards medicine.
You'll have to be more specific there sir.
I don't really understand you. Phosphate isn't required - it's just a molecule that carries phosphorus.Nebuchanezzar said:Bler bler bler. Hate biochemistry, but I am familar with this. Similarly to how there are other ways to fixate (perhaps the wrong word) nitrogen to plants other than ammonia, are you absolutely sure there aren't other viable means of fixating phosphorus to plants also?