Does Divorce Impact the Environment?

A new study suggests that divorce negatively impacts the environment.  Apparently, water and electricity use increases when couples split up and house fewer people.  This makes complete sense and most people would not have needed a study to prove such a hypothesis.  Economics, anthropology and plain common sense explain that marriage was created as a means to better allocate resources and aid procreation.  It should come as no surprise when divorce is linked to inefficient resource use.   

I will surmise, while playing amateur sociologist, that in a modern society marriage is not as important a means to such success.  Thus, we seem to have higher divorce rates today because it is not as necessary for survival.  But that's just an Alabama divorce lawyer's two cents on the matter. 

 

 

Alabama Divorce & Family Law Attorney Website

Please check out my firm's website.  My Alabama Divorce Law firm focuses our practice on divorce, child custody, child visitation, alimony and support, property division, asset protection, family law and more.  We cross the state of Alabama and regularly handle divorce and family law cases in Birmingham, Mountain Brook, Vestavia Hills, Hoover, Pelham, Leeds, Moody, Pell City, Trussville, Huntsville, Montgomery, Mobile, Tuscaloosa, Fultondale, Irondale, Homewood; and in counties like Jefferson County, St. Clair County, Madison County, Tuscaloosa County, Shelby County, Mobile County, Walker County, Jackson County, Marshall County, Limestone County, Chilton County, Bibb County, Talladega County, Montgomery County, Etowah County, Mobile County, Cullman County, Baldwin County, Winston County, Dekalb County and Cherokee County, etc.