Pay-as-you-throw has become a noteworthy issue in the
forthcoming Toronto mayoral election. The Toronto Sun
reports that Jane Pitfield, one of two candidates
challenging incumbent David Miller, has vowed to install a
pay-as-you-throw garbage system in Toronto if she is elected.
Pitfield´s approach sounds pretty reasonable, once you get
past the article´s lead sentence, which reads almost like
something that might have been spun by a press agent from
Miller´s camp.
Changing Climes: The Washington Post predicted in an
editorial yesterday that the coming election will
produce a Congress that is much more apt than the current one to
take strong action on global warming.
This could result in a tough battle with the Bush
administration, which in its first three quarters has been
reluctant to make any big moves in regard to climate change.
But the election, if it goes the way most experts are
forecasting, would also offer an opportunity for the Bush
administration to take a leadership role in effecting big
changes in U.S. climate change policy -- and global climate
change policy, for that matter.
Along similar lines, the New York Times published a
long
report yesterday lamenting the declining amount
of spending in both the public and private sectors for research
into new energy technologies.
In the U.S., annual federal spending for energy research and
development is currently about $3 billion a year, down from an
inflation-adjusted peak of $7.7 billion in 1979. The Times
reports that President Bush is seeking to increase that to $4.2
billion for 2007, "but that would still be a small fraction of
what most climate and energy experts say would be needed."
Unfortunately, the article concludes, history suggests that
it may take a catastrophe before we address the problem with the
seriousness it requires:
"Ultimately, a big increase in government spending on basic
energy research will happen only if scientists can persuade the
public and politicians that it is an essential hedge against
potential calamity. That may be the biggest hurdle of all, given
the unfamiliar nature of the slowly building problem -- the
antithesis of epochal events like Pearl Harbor, Sputnik and 9/11
that triggered sweeping enterprises.
" ´We´re good at rushing in with white hats,´ said Bobi
Garrett, associate director of planning and technology
management at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. ´This is
not a problem where you can do that.´ "
Pete
Fehrenbach is assistant managing editor of Waste
News. Past installments of this column are collected in
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