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From: Reuters
Published October 9, 2008 04:36 PM
U.S. focus on climate could ease financial crisis
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - If the United States focused on curbing climate
change as soon as a new president took office -- or sooner -- it could help
pull the world from the financial brink, environmental policy experts told
Reuters.
"Skyrocketing energy prices and the financial crisis have been a wake-up
call that something's got to change," said Cathy Zoi, chief executive
officer of the Alliance for Climate Protection, which is chaired by former
Vice President Al Gore.
"My very strong belief is that we need to reorient our investments toward
this transition to a clean energy economy, and it will be the engine of
growth for getting us out of the doldrums that we've gotten in right now,"
Zoi told the Reuters Global Environment Summit this week.
The reorientation must include U.S. limits on emissions of climate-warming
carbon in the United States, she said: "Unless we take action at home, we're
not going to be able to have much influence in the international arena about
what gets done."
The Bush administration accepts that human-spurred climate change is a
reality but rejects mandatory across-the-board caps on carbon as a
disadvantage when competing with fast-growing, big-emitting countries like
China and India.
The United States is alone among the major developed countries in staying
out of the carbon-capping Kyoto Protocol, but is part of international
discussions on new targets to fight climate change by the end of 2009 at a
meeting in Copenhagen.
Both major U.S. presidential candidates -- Democrat Barack Obama and
Republican John McCain -- favor requiring reductions in greenhouse
emissions, and environmental activists have said whoever won the White House
in the November 4 elections would be an improvement over President George W.
Bush.
"EARLY SIGNAL" NEEDED FROM NEXT U.S. PRESIDENT
"There is an urgent need for whichever party wins the U.S. election to give
an early signal (of an intent to do more to combat global warming) or there
cannot be a credible reason for 190 nations to come together in Copenhagen,"
said Achim Steiner, head of the U.N. Development Program.
Rajendra Pachauri, who shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Price with Gore and who
chairs the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said an Obama
presidency would probably be more favorable to the fight against climate
change.
But he added: "Even if McCain wins, he has been very committed."
There is little chance of passing a U.S. law to mandate a program to cap and
trade carbon emissions before Bush leaves office in January.
However, the first draft of a cap-and-trade bill was released this week by
U.S. Democratic Representatives John Dingell of Michigan -- home of the Big
Three automakers -- and Rick Boucher of Virginia -- coal-mining country --
that is likely to frame debate next year.
The draft legislation drew measured applause from environmental activists,
who noted it contains options that could substantially weaken controls on
greenhouse emissions from some sectors.
But the fact that these two lawmakers are crafting legislation aimed at
curbing climate change indicates a possible change in tone in Washington.
Despite comments from Sarah Palin, the Alaska governor who is McCain's
running-mate, questioning the human causes of global warming, most officials
in U.S. government -- including Bush -- acknowledge that people contribute
to the problem.
The anthropogenic roots of global warming are clear to Prince Albert of
Monaco, who told the Reuters summit he didn't "adhere" to Palin's skeptical
view.
"There are obviously cycles, but how can you not consider the graphs that
have been shown to us?," Prince Albert said. "Those who can't see the
correlation between man-made activities and greenhouse gas emissions, it's
going to be hard to convince them; but somehow we will have to do so."
(For summit blog:
summitnotebook.reuters.com/)

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