Everywhere I go. Everything I am reading. Everyone is talking; and the frantic buzzword on their lips is, "Carbon."
What they mean is, "Carbon Dioxide." CO2. And specifically, the outpouring of it into our air. Carbon Dioxide is a subset of a much larger group called, Green House Gases (GHGs). Right now, everyone wants these to go away. Every industry is now going to look at Carbon Dioxide in a whole new light. If not, impending financial punishment await those who ignore this growing pariah.
Here is the problem now: As designers and architects, we are following mandates and standards for building new projects that conform to at least a small subset of rules that are sure to be growing in the near future. As of now, the science of this technology is overpowered by the political jousting over terms like, carbon offsetting, emissions trading, carbon diet, and even, cap and trade. Say any of those terms in a group of people then stand back and watch the Left-Right polarization tsunami sweep across the room as proponents for and against the political arguments surrounding these terms take sides. When will we finally be able to discuss the science and engineering of this issue without all the hackles rising?
So, in thinking about Carbon, as a final thought before I go to bed, I am thinking about what Carbon Dioxide really is. And, I am thinking about teaching myself some hard science and chemistry. Beyond that, I will look for opportunities as a designer (and a responsible one) to create both a revenue model as well as a design model that addresses not the eradication of CO2, because that is impossible, but a meaningful coexistence with this compound without all the partisan squinching associated with it right now.
For me, the engineering knowledge behind the political rhetoric will be infinitely more powerful than a loud mouth.
Footnote: How much CO2 is produced by a loud mouth? Multiply that by the amount of mouths that are really loud right now and the actual parts per million (PPM) figure may surprise us.