Forwarded by Jane Clark
From: Sierra Club Action Daily
Volume II, #277
November 28, 2000
GLOBAL WARMING: U.S. INACTION LED TO FAILURE AT CLIMATE CHANGE
NEGOTIATIONS
TAKE ACTION: Write letters-to-the-editor bemoaning U.S. apathy
towards reducing global warming pollution
Rather than requiring verifiable action, the loopholes pushed by the
U.S. would have allowed unenforceable pollution trading deals.
Instead of producing cleaner cars, these loopholes would have allowed
polluters to plant forests of saplings abroad. Instead of cuts in
power plant emissions, they would have allowed credit for past
pollution reductions.
Instead of heading to The Hague Summit armed with emissions
reductions, the U.S. position was brimming with loopholes and risky
pollution trading schemes that would have caused the Kyoto Protocol to
lose any and all environmental integrity. The recent climate change
negotiations broke down because the U.S. - the world's largest global
warming polluter - failed to be a leader in reducing it's global
warming pollution. Instead of working with other nations to reduce
the pollution that causes global warming, the United States
continually pushed bogus "emissions trading" schemes which would
substitute delay for action.
The trading loopholes in the Kyoto Protocol would have allowed the
biggest polluters to do little to reduce global warming pollution.
These loopholes ran the risk of undermining real progress: instead of
picking low-hanging fruit, like promoting efficient cars and
buildings, the U.S. promoted scavenging the rotten fruit on the
ground.
In a recent Washington Post article, Sierra Club Executive Director,
Carl Pope said, "As the world's biggest global-warming polluter, we
should be taking the lead in cutting our production of greenhouse
gases. Unfortunately, America is shirking its responsibilities by
promoting a risky system to trade pollution instead of reducing it.
This leadership by inaction approach is indefensible." Full text of
the article can be seen at:
www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A52927-2000Nov22.html
The U.S. committed to reducing its global warming pollution and we
must meet this obligation by cutting our domestic emissions, not with
smoke and mirrors. The United States bears the greatest
responsibility for solving the global warming problem because it is
the world's top polluter.
Sanjay Ranchod, Chair of the Sierra Club's Global Warming Committee
attended The Hague Summit and pointed to the Club's latest global
warming map as evidence that, "the U.S. emits almost a quarter of
global warming pollution despite having only four percent of the
world's population. While other countries are not blameless, the U.S.
deserves special recognition as the world's only superpower and
biggest polluter."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT
to [log in to unmask]