Technology rarely removes a problem. It changes where the problem shows up.
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This is easy to miss because the change often looks like progress.
Cleaner air in cities. Faster systems. Lower visible waste. But the full system tells a different story. Extraction increases. Energy demand shifts. Waste moves out of sight.
The result is not elimination. It is relocation.
Every Technology Has a Full Lifecycle
Nothing begins at the point of use.
Every device, system, or tool starts with material extraction, moves through manufacturing, enters a use phase, and ends in disposal or recycling.
Frameworks like lifecycle assessment used by organizations such as the International Energy Agency and UN Environment Programme measure this full chain.
Local Gains Can Hide Global Pressure
A system can improve one metric while worsening another.
This creates the illusion of progress without reducing total impact.
The Rebound Effect Expands Use
When something becomes cheaper or easier, people use more of it.
This can offset efficiency gains.
Electric Vehicles Show Both Sides Clearly
Electric vehicles reduce emissions at use, but increase pressure in extraction and production.
This demonstrates system tradeoffs.
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Scale Multiplies Small Decisions
Small inefficiencies become large impacts at global scale.
Real Solutions Reduce Total System Pressure
Shifting impact is not the same as reducing it.
Bottom Line
Technology often moves problems instead of solving them. Real progress reduces total impact.
Questions People Usually Ask
Is technology still useful? Yes, when it reduces total impact.
What is the biggest mistake? Ignoring lifecycle.
What matters most? Total system pressure.
Are EVs good? Yes, but with tradeoffs.
What is lifecycle thinking? Full system evaluation.
Future Topics
Lifecycle analysis
Rebound effect
Material sourcing
Supply chains
Circular systems