this post was submitted on 17 Aug 2023
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[–] NightOwl@lemmy.one 2 points 1 year ago

Yeah, because of the revenue and investment source focus of the study what I found interesting is that two people who work at the same place and earns the same salary could lead to the one who invests the money becoming the higher polluter according to the study. Even though the other person is the stereotypical polluter eating meat, mortgage on a huge house, and driving huge cars in contrast to the more minimalistic lifestyle of the other person being the stereotypical green individual who doesn't eat meat and opts for public transport and a modest home.

Like this study is formulated in a way where the numbers are more appropriate for industry analysis than individual household analysis. Data is set in a way that it could be said it's better in the long run to drive suvs than it is to invest, or high polluting companies pay more livable wages. Or if you have million dollars it's less damaging to the environment in the long run to spend that money buying Suvs for your neighbors over investing it with the risk of the assets increasing in valuation leading to bigger polluter stats.