From The Progress Report of the American Center for Progress Action Fund
CLIMATE CHANGE
Standing Athwart History
As the threat of global climate crisis grows, the global mechanisms for
averting disaster are being gutted. A new report published by the National
Academy of Sciences found that from 2000 to 2004, global industry emitted
roughly 7.9 billion tons of carbon dioxide, millions more than the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change had projected "under its most
extreme scenario." Meanwhile, the world's only international pact mandating
cuts in carbon emissions, the Kyoto Protocol, is set to expire in 2012. With
this backdrop, Bush administration negotiators met this week in Germany in
advance of next month's G8 summit of the world's richest nations. German
Chancellor Angela Merkel has "been pushing hard to get the Group of 8 to
take significant action on climate change," setting bold new standards to
take the place of Kyoto. Virtually alone in resisting her is President Bush.
"In unusually harsh language," Bush administration negotiators rejected
Germany's proposal, complaining that it "crosses multiple red lines in terms
of what we simply cannot agree to." (For more, read the Center for American
Progress's global warming blog, Climate Progress.)
BUSH BLOCKING PROGRESS ON EVERY FRONT: Bush's drive to hobble the G8 climate
change declaration was first uncovered two weeks ago, when reports showed
that the United States was seeking to eliminate a section in the G8 draft
that included "a pledge to limit the global temperature rise this century to
3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, as well as an agreement to reduce worldwide
greenhouse gas emissions to 50 percent below 1990 levels by 2050."
(Scientists warn that an increase of more than 3.6 degrees this century
"could trigger disastrous consequences such as mass extinction of species
and accelerated melting of polar ice sheets, which would raise sea levels.")
Bush administration officials also tried to eliminate draft language that
said, "We acknowledge that the U.N. climate process is the appropriate forum
for negotiating future global action on climate change." In response, 15
House committee chairmen wrote Bush urging him not to gut the G8
declaration: "The G8 Summit should be an opportunity to galvanize
international support for addressing this looming threat, not an opportunity
to prevent and undermine international action." Bush ignored their message.
Likewise, the Bush administration is blocking local progress on climate
change, refusing to approve efforts by 12 states "to institute tougher
standards for tailpipe emissions than US regulations require." In an op-ed
last week, Govs. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R-CA) and Jodi Rell (R-CT) charged
that Bush's resistance â??borders on malfeasance."
CLIMATE CHANGE EXASPERATING POVERTY CHALLENGE: Noting the focus on
anti-poverty measures at recent G8 summits, the international development
group Oxfam has issued a new report highlighting the "deep injustice in the
impacts of climate change": the poor nations least responsible for the
greenhouse gas emissions that are causing global warming will bear the brunt
of its devastating impacts. For Africa that means dramatic reductions in
agricultural productivity, hundreds of millions newly exposed to water
shortages, 5-10 percent loss in GDP in coastal countries, and an expanded
range of malaria to exhaust already the deficient heath services. Global
warming is already exacerbating poverty, yet methods and levels of
development assistance around the world and in the United States have yet to
take global warming into account. The World Bank estimates that 40 percent
-- approximately $40 billion annually -- of development assistance and
concessional financing is directed at activities that will be affected by
climate change. Oxfam estimates that it will cost developing countries $50
billion a year to adapt to climate change.
A SYMBOL OF THE CLIMATE CRISIS: This weekend, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA)
led a bipartisan delegation to Greenland, where lawmakers saw "firsthand
evidence that climate change is a reality." Greenland is losing ice at an
alarming rate of 100 billion tons ever year, twice as fast as it was five
years ago. The melting is fundamentally altering the salinity of the world's
oceans ("What happens when a saltwater environment becomes more fresh
lake?"), and fueling a potentially catastrophic rise in sea levels. Should
all of Greenland's ice sheet thaw, sea levels could rise by 21 feet and
swamp the world's coastal cities. (CNN's Anderson Cooper reported live from
Greenland last week.) Pelosi then traveled to meet European leaders for
climate talks, praising Germany for "its leadership on the issue" and saying
"she hoped the Bush administration would consider a new path."
NO SOLUTION IN COAL: Meanwhile, even as congressional leaders draft
legislation to reduce greenhouse gases, "a powerful roster of Democrats and
Republicans is pushing to subsidize coal as the king of alternative fuels."
Prodded by "intense lobbying from the coal industry," lawmakers from coal
states are proposing that taxpayers spend billions of dollars to subsidize
the coal industry's production of liquid diesel fuel. This is a dangerously
backwards idea. Coal-to-liquid fuels "produce almost twice the volume of
greenhouse gases as ordinary diesel," and the production process of such
fuels "creates almost a ton of carbon dioxide for every barrel of liquid
fuel." Congressional supporters of coal-to-liquids argue that "coal-based
fuels are more American than gasoline." But the only responsible way to
achieve American energy independence is to create policies that also reduce
global warming. That can be done with low-carbon, alternative transportation
fuels, including American-grown biofuels.
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