SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 02, 2005 /PRNewswire

 

Top environmental officials for the state of California and the Brazilian state of Sao Paulo have found significant empirical evidence that greenhouse gas pollution can be substantially reduced at a profit rather than a cost. The findings, to be presented next week to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Montreal, are documented in the first large-scale case studies on the economic impact of reducing greenhouse-gas pollution.

"There appears to be a large opportunity for emission reductions that provide short-term economic and health benefits, and every attempt should be made to promote national policies and international cooperation that can help states, nations, and the world achieve these benefits," the Secretaries write in the foreword to the study report, No Reason to Wait: the Benefits of Greenhouse Gas Reduction in Sao Paulo and California.

Conducted by Stanford University scholar Walter Reid and professional staff from the Sao Paulo Department of the Environment and commissioned by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the case studies detail the economic impact of policies in California and Sao Paulo that dramatically reduced the per-capita emissions of greenhouse-gas pollution over the last two decades.

The study found that each Californian produces less than half the greenhouse-gas emissions as his or her fellow American. This is due in large part to state policies encouraging the use of natural gas and renewable resources over coal, as well as the aggressive promotion of energy efficiency. The state's per capita emissions have dropped nearly one-third since 1975, while the nation's per capita emissions have stayed flat.

The study notes that each Californian typically saved about $1,000 per year between 1975 and 1995 just through efficiency standards for buildings and appliances. Energy efficiency has helped the economy grow an extra 3 percent -- a $31 billion gain -- compared to business as usual. The job growth created by the energy-efficiency industry will generate an $8 billion payroll over the next twelve years.

Similarly, the study found that the state of Sao Paulo since 1999 has steadily reduced greenhouse-gas emissions per capita and per unit of economic activity. Examples of state programs driving the reduction are ethanol blending, which is saving consumers $7.5 billion a year, and a national electricity conservation program saving $5 billion that otherwise would have been spent on new power plants.

Copies of the study are available from the Hewlett Foundation at www.hewlett.org/publications/noreasontowait.htm  as well as from the State of California at www.climatechange.ca.gov .

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California/ Sao Paulo Joint Report: Billions Saved by Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions