There has been much discussion about reducing CO2 emissions. Trees and other plants do an excellent job of using CO2 as a resource. Our problem is that we are drawing a lot of oil from the ground and then burning it. This adds CO2 to the atmosphere faster than trees or plants can recycle it. However, we may be able to supplement the recycling that trees and plants are doing. We could recycle atmospheric CO2 to make fuel and carbon based building materials, using desert sunlight as an energy source for powering the recycling process.
Instead of burdening industries with costly regulations, would it not make sense to fund programmes that develop ways to make massive recycling of atmospheric CO2 economically attractive? Funding programmes that make energy efficiency economical in the most energy consuming applications should also be a superior alternative to strangling industry with costly regulations. Many technological advances resulted from the space programme. It was not government regulations that made computers become more powerful whilst consuming less energy. Should not government tackle the problems of pollution and resource depletion by funding programmes that make the right thing economically attractive to industry, rather than by strangling industry with costly regulations?