Efficiency is the removal of redundancy. Redundancy is a necessary element of resilient systems. The unbounded search for efficiency has one result: brittleness.
During the COVID lockdowns, and to a lesser degree when the Evergiven got stuck, we saw to how much the Just In Time invisible chains of production and distribution around us affect our lives. As climate change significantly disrupt farming throughout the world, we'll continue to see similar effects.
I'm all for global chains of distribution: specialization is real and you won't ever grow bananas in Alaska (even if Iceland showed it is technically possible last century), manufacture a computer chip in Paris or produce wine in Greenland, but we as consumers have to accept and understand that having pineapple out of season anywhere in the planet is not reasonable at the prices we're used to paying. In some French super markets I've seen signs on the produce next to the price with the country of origin and helpful information of when the growing season is. I found that as an excellent nudge for the almost entirely fictional homo economicus. I'd like us to surface that information to everyone for everything. Maybe that way people would understand just how connected we are.
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Inven
@the5thColumnist I said Paris, as in the 20 arrondissements, not France in general

@ekuber

What is it about Paris that makes that unlikely.

@the5thColumnist chip manufacturing is done in specialized factories, supplied by an entire chain of production for industrial machinery, expertise and needs space. Paris lacks all three. It's the same reason you're not going to have a farm in London, nor a dry-dock in Milan. The conditions aren't there to support it, and even if you changed that your have to significantly destroy what's already there to allow for it.
Are you being purposely obtuse?

@ekuber

No. I just was not aware of the geography of Paris, other than it being the national capital.