Climate Capsule Week of October 6
Wednesday, October 8, 2008(National Wildlife Federation)
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Week of October 6,
2008
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Highlight of the
Week The rise in
global warming pollution—in the form of carbon
dioxide emissions—is happening faster than
expected. Tonight is the perfect time for our
next president to address the need to cut
emissions by two percent per year and move to a
clean energy and green job economy.
People
produced so many carbon-based pollutants in
2007 that our atmosphere could soon fit under
the “worst case scenario” category once
outlined by the U.N.’s Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change.
The current concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) is the highest during the last 650,000 years, and probably during the last 20 million years, according to the Global Carbon Project. Carbon
dioxide emissions increased by 3 percent from
2006 to 2007, new numbers considered surprising to
many who thought an economic downturn would
slow energy consumption.
With this newly released
information detailing our unsustainable fossil
fuel use, will Barack Obama or John McCain
address the imperative to get serious about
reducing greenhouse gas emissions?
Watch
the town
hall style debate tonight at 9 PM Eastern
on any major broadcast network and see if our
next president addresses global
warming. Nations Donate Billions To New Climate
Investment
Funds The world’s industrial nations recently pledged more than $6.1 billion to the Climate Investment Funds, to aid developing nations in the fight against climate change. The funds, approved this summer by the World Bank, aim to provide interim funding to help developing nations ease increases in global warming pollution, develop green technologies, and adapt to the catastrophic impacts of global warming. “Today, we are uniting to fight global
climate change,” said World Bank
Group President Robert B.
Zoellick. “These
funds are a concrete step forward toward
reconciling the challenge of global climate
change with the challenge of development and
overcoming poverty.” Representatives of 10
developed nations— The Happening This
Week Congress
is on recess this
week. Tuesday, October 7: Winter Fuels Outlook Conference, 8:30 AM - 3:30 PM, Rotunda Room, Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20004 Friday, October 10: Ecosystem
Health in a Rapidly Changing Climate
Seminar, 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM, 253
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Quote:
—Vice
President Dick Cheney’s remarks at a recent
White House conference on wildlife policy.
National Wildlife
Federation’s new
poll shows that 80 percent of
Economic Message of
the Week Over the next 22 years, Google
says, we can save billions for our economy
and create millions of green economy jobs by
reducing our dependence on fossil fuels.
To start
on this path immediately, the
Firstly, the proposal says we can reduce our energy demand by increasing energy efficiency of buildings, computers, lighting, waste management – to name just a few. Secondly, the plan strives to make renewable energy cheaper than coal through the RE<C Initiative. This stage involves investments in startup companies with breakthrough wind, solar and geothermal technologies. The third phase of the
proposal that must be implemented immediately
is the modernization of our power grid. Google
has partnered with GE to accelerate the
development of a “smart grid”, aimed to help
harness our nation's vast renewable energy
resources. When
effectively partnered together, our economy and
environment provide a huge opportunity for us
to confront today’s pressing financial and
energy challenges. A Clean
Edge and Climate
Solutions report called Carbon-Free
Prosperity 2025 details specific
potential for 63,000 new jobs in the According to the report,
the following five emerging clean technology
industry sectors offer
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