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Kathleen McCroskey's avatar

Great post, thanks! There's two intractable problems here- Cooking requires energy input, only options are fire or solar energy. There are solar ovens available, weather permitting. Any fire indoors impairs air quality. Carbon credits being used as offsets is a "net-zero" trick, meaning one spot supposedly trapping carbon could offset another's emission. That would only be meaningful in a world with a steady CO2 level. No amount of carbon credits can ever result in actually lowering atmospheric carbon levels; even if they were truly effective, that level would remain the same.

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