I didn't have time earlier, so let me be more specific:
Europe is taking active steps toward fossil fuel independence.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wind_power_in_the_European_Union
Europe's steps on that front are mixed. Yes, wind has been doing well, but other acts, such as Germany's phase-out of nuclear have shifted them back towards coal:
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/blog/2012/may/28/truth-germany-nuclear-phase-out
That's just a nothing stunt that will never amount to anything. I've seen articles like that about once a month for 30 years. They don't mean anything.
I'm not sure what conclusion you are drawing from that, but the reality is that in terms of global warming, fracking has been nothing short of an environmental miracle, displacing coal and being the most significant cause of US carbon emissions dropping to levels not seen since the 1990s.
IMO, that is counterproductive rhetoric.[on Germany's nuclear phase-out]
Try this:
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/blog/2012/may/28/truth-germany-nuclear-phase-out
And this:
http://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.cfm?id=18071#tabs_SpotPriceSlider-1
The reality is that over the past decade+, Germany is among the worst performers in Europe in carbon emission because while they've invested heavily in wind, they've also shut off nuclear plants, which works to increase their reliance on coal.
Fine, if you want to be strict about it, I'll have to use another term or just describe what I mean, because it is pretty much logically impossible to truly solve a problem before it manifests, because you can't even detect it until it starts to happen! But humans are far and away the species most able to:
1. Detect problems in the environment.
2. Determine the cause.
3. Act to implement a solution.
And with CFCs, we did, with spectacular success.
I agree, do we need to be the only species on earth that are unable to live in harmony with nature, without destroying it?
Again: that's backwards. Humans are in fact the only species that is
able to take steps to live in harmony with nature without destroying it. Any "harmony" achieved by other species is purely accidental and happens despite them fighting as hard as they can to destory their environments.
This is, of course, even setting aside the implied naturalism fallacy that humans and human actions are, by definition, not natural. If a colony of yeast destroys its environment by choking itself to death on its own excrement, I suppose that's natural (and delicious!), but if we do it, it isn't?