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Climate Capsule: Week of June 9
Tuesday, June 10, 2008(National Wildlife Federation)
Global Warming Fight Shifts To 2009 After Senate Bid Stalls
Despite an unsuccessful effort in the U.S. Senate to overcome the stalling and filibuster tactics of those opposed to global warming legislation, last week’s results are vital to plans for passing strong global warming legislation next year.
This historic vote on the strongest global warming bill ever acted on by Congress creates momentum needed to continue the fight. In all, 54 senators spoke up for the need to debate solutions to global warming, far surpassing the 38 votes in 2005 and 43 votes in 2003 for legislation that was significantly weaker than this year's Climate Security Act. Supporters included ten Senate converts who had not supported cap-and-trade legislation in prior votes in 2003 and 2005.
"How could any senator vote against advancing debate on global warming legislation? What were they thinking?” Schweiger said. “If we don't tackle climate change soon, it will tackle us. It's that simple. Climate change is threatening our national security, our economy and the natural resources all Americans depend on.”
Every senator who voted against a continued
debate on the Climate Security Act voted
against investing in a clean energy future that
will energize our struggling economy, voted
against safeguarding our families and voted
against protecting and restoring
The results are vital to our plans for passing strong global warming legislation next year. We now know which senators are paying attention to science and listening to the public, and which ones are instead listening to oil companies.
"Today's vote was just round one,” Schweiger added. “Round two will be when voters have their say in November. Round three will happen in 2009 when we have a new president and a new Congress who will listen to the vast majority of Americans who want real action.”
The House Natural Resources Committee is
scheduled to vote this week on a Fisheries,
Wildlife and Oceans Subcommittee bill that
would address climate change, energy use, and
The vote will be to reauthorize the Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972, often considered one of the top priorities for ocean advocates. The session will also address bills on shark conservation and non-human primate protection. The Coastal Zone Management Act has been amended eight times since its first passage in 1972.
The subcommittee passed the coastal zone bill, H.R. 5451, last week, although subcommittee members said they would like to strengthen the bill with more amendments.
The amended bill on the floor this week
includes language that would revive parts of
the energy and climate legislation the House
passed last year, but not included in President
Bush’s energy bill signed in
December.
Quote: "It may be a small step for mankind, but it's a giant step for the United States Senate."
-- Senator Joe Lieberman (I-CT), optimistic about the future of climate action, after last week’s historic progress on national global warming legislation.
Millions Of
Workers at every skill level will be in high demand and enjoy greater job security in these industries, according to a report by a coalition of conservation and labor groups.
"Achieving a clean energy economy through green industries like wind and solar are just part of the story. This report is also about job security. Making homes and offices more energy efficient not only saves money and energy, but also represents growth opportunities for workers who build our communities and keep them running," said Dan Lashof, director of Natural Resource Defense Council’s Climate Center. "We’re talking about jobs at every skill level from construction to research, already available here at home."
Monk Seal
Declared Extinct Due To Human Causes
The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration announced Friday
that the
"Humans left the Caribbean monk
seal population unsustainable after overhunting
them," Kyle Baker, a biologist for the National
Marine Fisheries Service, said in a
statement. The seals were the only
subtropical seal native to the Caribbean and
The Caribbean monk seal was listed as
endangered in 1967, though the last confirmed
sighting was in 1952 at Seranilla Bank, between
"The fate of the
The Ocean Conservancy said some of the threats, especially erosion and debris, are tied to the El Nino weather pattern and rising sea levels, which in turn is tied to global warming.
"El Nino events, which cause storms similar to those expected to occur with increasing frequency as a result of climate change, drive marine debris closer to monk seal beaches and nearshore waters," the Ocean Conservancy added. "Seal pups play with trash, which can lead to entanglement and eventual death. Increased numbers of Hawaiian monk seals have been found entangled in marine debris after El Nino events."
$45 Trillion
Needed To Combat
Warming
The report by the Paris-based International Energy Agency envisions a "energy revolution" that would greatly reduce the world's dependence on fossil fuels while maintaining steady economic growth.
"Meeting this target of 50 percent cut in emissions represents a formidable challenge, and we would require immediate policy action and technological transition on an unprecedented scale," IEA Executive Director Nobuo Tanaka said. A United Nations-network of scientists concluded last year that emissions have to be cut by at least half by 2050 to avoid an increase in world temperatures of between 3.6 and 4.2 degrees above pre-18th century levels.