The essay is about the actuarial cost of climate disasters. I've never heard insurance adjusters called zealots or insane before. Maybe, if the oceans are rising (and they are), people should stop building houses on the beach. That sounds pretty sane to me.
Thanks, good article. Imagine if coal mining companies had to pay the true cost of their processes, even just in terms of workers' health and local environmental damage. Some states have made coal companies set aside some funds for cleanup, and then somehow the executives raid that fund, declare bankruptcy, pay themselves huge bonuses, and leave the mess for others. Some power utility companies give you the option to purchase green energy only. Why isn't that working? The utility companies must be cheating somehow.
Disappointing item. The Paris Accords was not a treaty under US law. This was widely discussed and debated at the time. It was an executive action that could be rescinded or re-entered. Such is the problem with Executive actions that are not treaties.
These global warming zealots are absolutely insane.
The essay is about the actuarial cost of climate disasters. I've never heard insurance adjusters called zealots or insane before. Maybe, if the oceans are rising (and they are), people should stop building houses on the beach. That sounds pretty sane to me.
Thanks, good article. Imagine if coal mining companies had to pay the true cost of their processes, even just in terms of workers' health and local environmental damage. Some states have made coal companies set aside some funds for cleanup, and then somehow the executives raid that fund, declare bankruptcy, pay themselves huge bonuses, and leave the mess for others. Some power utility companies give you the option to purchase green energy only. Why isn't that working? The utility companies must be cheating somehow.
Disappointing item. The Paris Accords was not a treaty under US law. This was widely discussed and debated at the time. It was an executive action that could be rescinded or re-entered. Such is the problem with Executive actions that are not treaties.
This is very well done. The insurance markets are an under appreciated bellwether of economic (and not just economic) reality.