Top 846 Fossil Fuels Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Fossil Fuels quotes.
Last updated on November 22, 2024.
You see, the Greenhouse Effect is a direct result of burning fossil or old carbon fuels.
This year - today - I am repenting of my dependence on fossil fuels.
If we want energy security, then we have to reduce our appetite for fossil fuels. There's no other way. Other issues may crowd the headlines, but this is our fundamental challenge. Big challenges require bold action and leadership. To get the United States off fossil fuels in this uneasy national climate of terrorism and conflict in the Persian Gulf, we must treat the issue with the urgence and persistance it deserves. The measure of our success will be the condition on which we leave the world for the next generation.
As investments and as an energy source, fossil fuels have nowhere to go but down. — © London Breed
As investments and as an energy source, fossil fuels have nowhere to go but down.
Just as fossil fuels from conventional sources are finite and are becoming depleted, those from difficult sources will also run out. If we put all our energy and resources into continued fossil fuel extraction, we will have lost an opportunity to have invested in renewable energy.
The U.K. government faces three choices to deal with carbon-heavy fossil fuels: force people to stop using them immediately; facilitate a rapid transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy; or hope business-as-usual market forces solve our problem for us.
We are totally schizophrenic. We are trying to reduce emissions, and we subsidize the consumption of fossil fuels.
We should not only look at the short-term economic benefits of fossil fuels but also at the bad news for climate change. We should therefore not greet the fossil fuel age unconditionally.
Anyone who would tackle our current addiction to fossil fuels is going to have to maneuver around denial.
Nothing could do more to help the world's poor than to make fossil fuels cheap and plentiful.
Every candidate running for president has got to answer the following very simple question: At a time when we need to address the planetary crisis of climate change, and transform our energy system away from fossil fuels and into energy efficiency and sustainability, should we continue to give $135 billion in tax breaks and subsidies over the next decade to fossil fuel companies?
I like the analogy that the way that we live in Western Society, the energy that we consume in the form of fossil fuels, is the energy equivalent in pre-fossil fuel terms of having 500 slaves.
Practically every environmental problem we have can be traced to our addiction to fossil fuels, primarily oil.
We must get rid of fossil fuels by developing injection systems for automobiles, which can run on bio-fuel. — © A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
We must get rid of fossil fuels by developing injection systems for automobiles, which can run on bio-fuel.
There is more He-3 energy on the Moon than we have ever had in the form of fossil fuels on Earth. All we have to do is to go there and get it.
Today, our incentives aren't set up well - you can make a lot of money burning fossil fuels, digging up wetlands, pumping fossil water out of aquifers that will take 10,000 years to recharge, overfishing species in international waters that are close to collapse, and so on.
It's as certain that as long as fossil fuels are the cheapest energy, we will just keep burning them.
What has become clear from the science is that we cannot burn all of the fossil fuels without creating a very different planet.
Civilization as we know it will come to an end sometime in this century unless we can find a way to live without fossil fuels.
Rome wasn't built in a day, and we won't replace fossil fuels with clean energy based on the events of a single week, either. But the important thing to remember is that, once they happen, clean energy victories are irreversible. No one will tear down wind farms because they are nostalgic for fracking in our watersheds. And nobody will pull down their solar panels because they miss having mercury in their tuna or asthma inhalers for their kids. Because once we leave fossil fuels behind, we are never going back.
Either you abandon fossil fuels, or you find a way to get that carbon back.
The truth is, natural organisms have managed to do everything we want to do without guzzling fossil fuels, polluting the planet or mortgaging the future.
The issue of climate change is one that we ignore at our own peril. There may still be disputes about exactly how much we're contributing to the warming of the earth's atmosphere and how much is naturally occurring, but what we can be scientifically certain of is that our continued use of fossil fuels is pushing us to a point of no return. And unless we free ourselves from a dependence on these fossil fuels and chart a new course on energy in this country, we are condemning future generations to global catastrophe.
Most progressive in the Democratic Party doesn't cut it, you know. If we still can't have a health care system that provides health care as a human right, if we still cannot, you know, ban fracking and fossil fuels and move like our lives depend on it - you know, we say in the next 15 years we need to phase out fossil fuels.
We have already used more than half of that budget. This means that three quarters of the fossil fuel reserves need to stay in the ground, and the fossil fuels we do use must be utilized sparingly and responsibly.
All scientists who've looked at it know we have to phase away from burning fossil fuels. That means we've got to put a lot of effort into alternate energy technologies, but we're still subsidizing fossil fuels and not subsidizing most of the alternatives. It's not going to be an easy transition.
We must rapidly wean ourselves off our dependence on coal and fossil fuels.
And in the process, we have come up with fuels - algae-based fuels, isobutanol-based fuels and other fuels - that we think will power the planes in the future so that, you know, by 2020 I hope that our planes will be powered on fuels that are clean fuels and are not polluting the environment so that we'll have a green airline and an airline that actually has fuels that will be hopefully cheaper than the dirty fuels of the past. So [we're] doing good and also turning a profit at the same time.
We need an energy revolution by breaking our dependence on fossil fuels, polluting fuels... I am very, very confident our small state will lead this. We will be noticed by the country and the world.
If aliens did visit us, I'd be embarrassed to tell them we still dig fossil fuels from the ground as a source of energy.
Most climate debates have focused on cutting the use of fossil fuels. But besides a few high-profile scuffles over fuel extraction in vulnerable wild places like the offshore Arctic, political leaders have ignored fossil fuel production as a necessary piece of climate strategy.
One of my top priorities in Congress is to reduce U.S. dependence on fossil fuels.
Unless we free ourselves from a dependence on these fossil fuels... we are condemning future generations to global catastrophe
Society's dependence on fossil fuels is jeopardising social and economic progress.
Here's what we should be doing. We've got to get off fossil fuels.
Because fossil fuels are not only a finite resource but hazardous to the environment, it is imperative that we diversify the resources used in generating electricity.
As we burn fossil fuels, we release carbon dioxide, much of which is absorbed by the oceans.
Nuclear power and fossil fuels are the choices of the past. Renewable energy is the choice of the future that is here today.
Fracking locks the U.K. into an industry that is based on fossil fuels long after our country needs to have moved to renewables. — © Barry Gardiner
Fracking locks the U.K. into an industry that is based on fossil fuels long after our country needs to have moved to renewables.
Behind every morsel of bread, fruits, or meat is a large amount of transformed fossil fuels.
We clearly have to reduce harmful energy emissions. Everyone acknowledges we simply can't switch off fossil fuels overnight.
The probability that we face global warming caused by fossil fuels is now so overwhelming that it is legitimate to doubt the motives of those who deny it
Climate change is due to the use of energy for industrial growth, which has been and is overwhelmingly based on fossil fuels.
The true cost of the pollution that is being dumped into the atmosphere and manifests itself in our sick children dealing with asthma or older folks dealing with heart and lung disease from the pollutions created by the burning of these fossil fuels, may not be reflected in the prices of fossil fuels, but that does not mean we aren't paying a high price for them.
Solar and wind are now cheaper in many places than some fossil fuels and within the next two years, three, four, five years at the most. What the exponential curve does isn't going to go away. It is totally over for fossil fuels and nuclear. Nuclear's actually gone out.
We could replace people with fossil fuels, have higher and higher levels of industrialization, of agriculture, of production, without thinking of the green-house gases we were admitting, and climate change is really the pollution of the engineering paradigm, when fossil fuels drove industrialism. To now offer that same mindset as a solution is to not take seriously what Einstein said: that you can't solve the problems by using the same mindset that caused them.
Ending our reliance on fossil fuels was never going to be easy.
Here's what I think the truth is: We are all addicts of fossil fuels in a state of denial, about to face cold turkey.
For people who currently have to burn fossil fuels to produce meager, polluting light, LED lighting is a game changer. — © Shuji Nakamura
For people who currently have to burn fossil fuels to produce meager, polluting light, LED lighting is a game changer.
To maintain our economic and national security, we must maximize all of our nation's energy resources, including renewable sources, alternative fuels, and fossil fuels, all in a way that balances economic development and protecting our environment.
The only countries that have successfully moved from fossil fuels to low-carbon power have done so with the help of nuclear energy.
What we can be scientifically certain of is that our continued use of fossil fuels is pushing us to a point of no return
I believe in natural gas as a clean, cheap alternative to fossil fuels.
We shouldn't penalize those that depend on fossil fuels for energy and the jobs they provide.
Our wisest long-term investment is not in the dirty polluting fossil fuels from the past, but in the clean energy of the future.
We're going to get off fossil fuels, no question. We may not do it quickly enough to avoid some pain, and I'm quite worried about that. But by the 22nd century, there's no way we'll be on fossil fuels.
We should certainly not be perpetuating further harm to others or to the environment. Suppose that workers at ExxonMobil are trying to unionize. We have two choices: to help them improve their lives, or to keep away so that their lives will be worse. Neither choice has any effect on use of fossil fuels. So radical organizers can both help them unionize and improve their lives, and convince them to find a different way to survive and work for ending the use of fossil fuels.
Rising carbon price is essential to 'decarbonize' the economy - to remove the nation towards the era beyond fossil fuels.
Science tells us we need to keep the majority of fossil fuels in the ground, and that we must urgently invest in renewable energy, and other alternative industries. Doing so would create millions of jobs, ensure a fair transition for fossil fuel workers into new industries, and avert the most catastrophic climate breakdown.
For decades, NRDC has created and supported policies that will ultimately end our reliance on fossil fuels.
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