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Climate Capsule Week of May 11
Monday, May 11, 2009(National Wildlife Federation)
|
Highlight of the
Week
Hunters and Anglers Run Ads In Swing
Districts
Ahead of Historic Global
Warming Vote
Organizations representing thousands of sportsmen and women ran ads in three swing districts in anticipation of a House committee markup of historic clean energy legislation. The ads urge fence-sitting Democrats to vote in favor of the bill. The National
Wildlife Federation Action
Fund joined several other national and
local wildlife groups in placing the
ads urging three key House Energy and Commerce
Committee members to support the
American Clean Energy and Security Act,
comprehensive clean energy and climate
legislation sponsored by Rep. Henry Waxman
(D-CA) and Rep. Edward Markey (D-MA).
Television ads aired in the Little
Rock
district of Rep. Mike Ross (D-AR).
Full-page newspaper ads ran in the home
districts of Rep. Charlie Melancon
(D-LA) and Rep. Jim Matheson (D-UT).
“Hunters and anglers
want fast action to safeguard natural resources
and reduce the effects of
climate change in the places where they fish
and hunt – places they want to
protect for their children and grandchildren,”
said Sue Brown, executive
director of the National Wildlife Federation
Action Fund. “The ads send a clear
message that the nation’s sportsmen and women
want a strong bill from the
committee that will reduce global warming
pollution and invest in our natural
resources.”
Moderate Democrats
on the House Energy and Commerce Committee are
expected to play a pivotal role
in passage of the American Clean Energy and
Security Act. The ads ran on the
heels of a historic sportsmen’s lobbying blitz
in Washington, DC.
Dozens of hunters and
anglers from across the country visited Capitol
Hill, making nearly 100 visits
with members of Congress and their staffers and
meetings with Administration
officials.
The ads are
available at TargetGlobalWarming.org.
Polar Bears
Remain on Thin Ice
The Obama administration has
decided to keep a Bush-era policy on
polar bears -- declining to crack
down on polluters on the grounds
that their emissions are helping shrink the
bears' habitat.
The problem of climate change is so big
and complicated, officials said,
that it would essentially overwhelm the
bureaucracy created to protect
threatened and endangered species.
As a result, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said, the bears will continue to be listed as "threatened." But the government will not use the 1973 Endangered Species Act to attack the main problem that threatens them. "We are disappointed that the Obama administration has chosen to leave the Bush-era polar bear rule in place," said John Kostyack, Executive Director of Wildlife Conservation and Global Warming at the National Wildlife Federation Wildlife Federation. "Polar bears are very much on thin ice, so we need to jettison any rules that limit the Endangered Species Act's ability to do what it does best, protect the critical habitat species need to survive. "Now more than ever we need Congress to get the whole job done and pass comprehensive climate and energy legislation that both reduces emissions and provides dedicated funding to safeguard wildlife and natural resources from climate impacts. "Any project that adds more carbon to the atmosphere will increase the risk of the polar bear's extinction. Arguing otherwise is akin to saying that adding another pack of cigarettes will not increase a person's risk of cancer." Happening This Week Conservation
leaders representing large-scale
aquatic ecosystems restoration efforts from
across the country are coming to
Capitol Hill to attend the National Wildlife
Federation's Great Waters
Restoration Fly-In. Activists from the Great
Lakes, Coastal Louisiana, Puget
Sound, Chesapeake Bay, Everglades, Gulf of
Maine, California Delta, and Long
Island Sound will be urging Members of Congress
to pass global warming
legislation this year that includes significant
funding to protect and restore
America’s Great Waters.
Wednesday:
House - Science and
Technology subcommitee
10:00 AM,
2318 Rayburn
Appropriations
10:00 AM,
2359 Rayburn
Natural
Resources Committee
02:00 PM,
1324 Longworth
Senate
-
Appropriations
10:00 AM, 124
Dirksen
Thursday: House
-
opening
statements on mark-up of American Clean Energy and Security Act
(tentative)
Natural
Resources Committee
10:00 AM,
1324 Longworth
Senate
-
Hearing
on carbon
sequestration liability legislation
2:30 PM, 366 Dirksen
Energy and Natural Resources |
Quote:
"[President Obama] told us, sometimes we do things of real impact. And none of us would want to look back in 20-30 years and think we had punted on something of a historic nature.” —Congressman Jay Inslee (D-WA), after a White House meeting to urge lawmakers to move forward with global warming legislation. Economic Message of the Week Governors: Green Jobs =
Economic
Recovery
“There is no shortage of proponents of re-tooling American factories, and not just in the Rust Belt,” according to the Wall Street Journal. Governors of Oregon, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Iowa have embraced green jobs as the path to economic recovery. With the manufacturing tax
credit provided in the stimulus package,
American factories can compete on price
with India, according to analysis by Oerlikon
Solar, the solar-power part of
Switzerland’s Oerlikon conglomerate.
Oerlikon Solar makes the machines that
mass-produce thin-film solar panels and
is targeting the U.S. market.
Republican Utah Governor Jon Huntsman signed two renewable energy bills to upgrade the electrical grid and provide tax incentives to green projects. Braddock, PA Mayor John Fetterman testified on behalf of green jobs during hearings regarding the American Clean Energy and Security Act. And Republican California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and Democratic Massachusetts Governor Daval Patrick have both endorsed the American Clean Energy and Security Act. New Research by Leading Scientists Confirms Urgency for Carbon Cap Leading scientists presented their latest
research findings and discussed
the implications for climate policy at a recent
Capitol Hill briefing sponsored
by the National Wildlife Federation.
Overwhelming scientific evidence supports reducing carbon pollution that causes global warming as much as possible and as quickly as possible. New science published after the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report has shown how global warming is happening faster than anticipated. Many natural systems—from the rapid loss of Arctic sea ice to widespread stresses on Northern forests—are already being impacted in significant ways. In fact, the planet’s natural ability to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere may be foreshadowing more rapid warming in coming decades if greenhouse gas emissions are not curbed. Dr. Amanda Staudt, Climate Scientist, National Wildlife Federation, discussed recent analysis of new research showing that global warming is transforming the world's ice sheets, forests, permafrost and oceans faster than scientists have predicted. talked about
how the observed impacts of
climate change are happening faster than
expected, how we have a much better
global understanding of the impacts both from
satellite data and from tapping
into the knowledge of indigenous people, and
the projected impacts if we do not
reduce emissions.
And Corinne Le Quéré, University of East Anglia and British Antarctic Survey, talked about how carbon pollution is rising in the atmosphere faster than worst-case scenarios and how the ocean is becoming saturated with carbon pollution. Dr. Le Quéré also gave an overview and commented on the recent issue of Nature, a special collection of recent research and commentaries on the urgency for action and on emissions targets and timetables. |