The New York Times, June 3, 2002


Climate Changing, U.S. Says in Report


By ANDREW C. REVKIN

In a stark shift for the Bush administration, the United States has sent a
climate report to the United Nations detailing specific and far-reaching
effects that it says global warming will inflict on the American
environment.

In the report, the administration for the first time mostly blames human
actions for recent global warming. It says the main culprit is the burning
of fossil fuels that send heat-trapping greenhouse gases into the
atmosphere.

But while the report says the United States will be substantially changed in
the next few decades -- "very likely" seeing the disruption of snow-fed
water supplies, more stifling heat waves and the permanent disappearance of
Rocky Mountain meadows and coastal marshes, for example -- it does not
propose any major shift in the administration's policy on greenhouse gases.

It recommends adapting to inevitable changes. It does not recommend making
rapid reductions in greenhouse gases to limit warming, the approach favored
by many environmental groups and countries that have accepted the Kyoto
Protocol, a climate treaty written in the Clinton administration that was
rejected by Mr. Bush.

The new document, "U.S. Climate Action Report 2002," strongly concludes that
no matter what is done to cut emissions in the future, nothing can be done
about the environmental consequences of several decades' worth of carbon
dioxide and other heat-trapping gases already in the atmosphere.

Its emphasis on adapting to the inevitable fits in neatly with the climate
plan Mr. Bush announced in February. He called for voluntary measures that
would allow gas emissions to continue to rise, with the goal of slowing the
rate of growth.

Yet the new report's predictions present a sharp contrast to previous
statements on climate change by the administration, which has always spoken
in generalities and emphasized the need for much more research to resolve
scientific questions.

The report, in fact, puts a substantial distance between the administration
and companies that produce or, like automakers, depend on fossil fuels. Many
companies and trade groups have continued to run publicity and lobbying
campaigns questioning the validity of the science pointing to damaging
results of global warming.

The distancing could be an effort to rebuild Mr. Bush's environmental
credentials after a bruising stretch of defeats on stances that favor energy
production over conservation, notably the failure to win a Senate vote
opening the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to exploratory oil drilling.

But the report has alienated environmentalists, too. Late last week, after
it was posted on the Web site of the Environmental Protection Agency,
private environmental groups pounced on it, saying it pointed to a jarring
disconnect between the administration's findings on the climate problem and
its proposed solutions.

"The Bush administration now admits that global warming will change
America's most unique wild places and wildlife forever," said Mark Van
Putten, the president of the National Wildlife Federation, a private
environmental group. "How can it acknowledge global warming is a disaster in
the making and then refuse to help solve the problem, especially when
solutions are so clear?"

Scott McClellan, a White House spokesman, said, "It is important to move
forward on the president's strategies for addressing the challenge of
climate change, and that's what we're continuing to do."

Many companies and trade groups had sought last year to tone down parts of
the report, the third prepared by the United States under the requirements
of a 1992 climate treaty but the first under President Bush.

For the most part, the document does not reflect industry's wishes, which
were conveyed in letters during a period of public comment on a draft last
year.

The report emphasizes that global warming carries potential benefits for the
nation, including increased agricultural and forest growth from longer
growing seasons, and from more rainfall and carbon dioxide for
photosynthesis.

But it says environmental havoc is coming as well. "Some of the goods and
services lost through the disappearance or fragmentation of natural
ecosystems are likely to be costly or impossible to replace," the report
says.

The report also warns of the substantial disruption of snow-fed water
supplies, the loss of coastal and mountain ecosystems and more frequent heat
waves. "A few ecosystems, such as alpine meadows in the Rocky Mountains and
some barrier islands, are likely to disappear entirely in some areas," it
says. "Other ecosystems, such as Southeastern forests, are likely to
experience major species shifts or break up into a mosaic of grasslands,
woodlands and forests."

Despite arguments by oil industry groups that the evidence is not yet clear,
the report unambiguously states that humans are the likely cause of most of
the recent warming. Phrases were adopted wholesale from a National Academy
of Sciences climate study, which was requested last spring by the White
House and concluded that the warming was a serious problem.

A government official familiar with the new report said that it had been
under review at the White House from January until mid-April, but that few
substantive changes were made.

Without a news release or announcement, the new report was shipped last week
to the United Nations offices that administer the treaty and posted on the
Web (www.epa.gov/globalwarming/publications/car/
<http://www.epa.gov/globalwarming/publications/car/> ).

A senior administration official involved in climate policy played down the
significance of the report, explaining that policies on emissions or
international treaties would not change as a result.

Global warming has become a significant, if second-tier, political issue
recently, particularly since James M. Jeffords, the Vermont independent,
became chairman of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee last
year. Mr. Jeffords has criticized the president's policy.

The new report is the latest in a series on greenhouse gases, climate
research, energy policies and related matters that are required of
signatories to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change,
which was signed by Mr. Bush's father and ratified by the Senate.

The convention lacks binding obligations to reduce gas emissions like those
in the Kyoto Protocol.

Mr. Bush and administration officials had previously been careful to avoid
specifics and couch their views on coming climate shifts with substantial
caveats. The president and his aides often described climate change as a
"serious issue," but rarely as a serious problem.

The report contains some caveats of its own, but states that the warming
trend has been under way for several decades and is likely to continue.

"Because of the momentum in the climate system and natural climate
variability, adapting to a changing climate is inevitable," the report says.
"The question is whether we adapt poorly or well."

Several industry groups said the qualifications in parts of the report were
welcome, but added that the overall message was still more dire than the
facts justified and would confuse policy makers.

Dr. Russell O. Jones, a senior economist for the American Petroleum
Institute who wrote a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency a year
ago seeking to purge projections of specific environmental impacts from the
report, said it was "frustrating" to see that they remained.

"Adding the caveats is useful, but the results are still as meaningless,"
Dr. Jones said.