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Climate Capsule Week of September 15

Monday, September 15, 2008

(National Wildlife Federation)

 

Week of September 15, 2008

Highlight of the Week
House To Consider Energy Package
Congress must take the urgent and necessary steps that will give consumers better energy choices, cut oil dependency and cut global warming pollution. While National Wildlife Federation favors many provisions in the Comprehensive American Energy Security and Taxpayer Protection Act (H.R. 6899), especially when compared to the expected motion to recommit, we oppose the bill because of its provision allowing commercial oil shale leasing. 

As a result of this provision, the bill fails to address the fundamental challenge of avoiding significant new increases in global warming pollution and protecting important wildlife habitat on our public lands.

The Comprehensive American Energy Security and Taxpayer Protection Act does include several important provisions that would advance clean energy solutions and reduce global warming pollution, including the Renewable Electricity Standard (RES), tax incentives for conservation and renewable energy, cuts in subsidies and giveaways for big oil, and building codes that would increase efficiency in our home and offices.

Unfortunately, HR 6899 also affirmatively lifts and does not extend a longstanding moratorium on commercial oil shale leasing putting at risk millions of acres of wildlife

habitat throughout the Rocky Mountain West important to hunters, anglers and other wildlife enthusiasts.

With only three percent of the world’s oil, the United States could drill every national park, wildlife refuge and coastline, and still be importing most of its oil. As long as we are dependent on oil, we are susceptible to global supply and demand factors and the OPEC cartel, which can easily increase or decrease production to affect prices, easily adjusting to any new U.S. oil production.

Any final energy legislation, acted on by Congress this fall, should meet the test of giving consumers real energy choices, reducing global warming pollution and protecting our treasured landscapes for future generations. With the inclusion of commercial oil shale leasing, legislation being considered by the House today fails to meet this test -- National Wildlife Federation urges opposition to it, and the motion to recommit.

Fossil Fuel-Free Army Base
By 2017, many of the 25,000 soldiers and civilian employees who live and work at Fort Lewis in Washington state could live on a sprawling campus transformed into environmentally sustainable communities complete with public transportation and light rail systems, bike paths and parks, and LEED-certified homes and businesses.

In the next 10 years, domestic Army posts will work to increase renewable energy consumption, eliminate fossil fuel use, and expand ‘green’ building standards.

Environmental chief Paul Steucke says the ultimate goal is a community where all energy comes from renewable sources and residents have no need to drive on post. "We think we can do this, but I’m not Pollyanna about it. I realize there’s a lot of challenges in getting there," Steucke told the Federal Times.

Since 2000, Fort Lewis and 12 other Army posts have set 25-year sustainability goals to reduce or eliminate consumption of fossil fuels, build facilities that exceed national standards for energy conservation and environmental design, and preserve open lands and natural habitats. Leaders say building sustainable installations ultimately saves money and natural resources.

"Soldiers must have the land, water, air and energy resources they need to train, a healthy environment in which to live, and the support of local communities and the American people," Tad Davis, deputy assistant secretary of the Army for environment, safety and occupational health, said earlier this year.

Quote:

Can we all agree that humans contribute to global warming?

Christiane Amanpour poses the question to five former Secretaries of State. See their responses Saturday, September 20 at 9pm ET on CNN’s The Next President: A World of Challenges.

Economic Message of the Week
Making News: Thousands Of New Jobs From Clean Energy 
A new report shows that by investing in a clean energy economy, the United States could create two million jobs nationwide.

The report found that investing in clean energy would create four times as many jobs as spending the same amount of money within the oil industry.

The media are paying attention: the release of Green Recovery – A Program to Create Good Jobs and Start Building a Low-Carbon Economy was covered by nearly 100 local and national media outlets, including Reuters, The New York Times, Scripps News, CNet.com, and Grist.

The green jobs investment report analyzes the potential for a two year, $100 billion green investment program to be an engine for job creation nationwide. This type of investment is a component of a broader clean energy strategy to create a low-carbon economy and reduce global warming pollution, including an economy-wide cap-and-trade program.

For the complete report findings please visit
www.peri.umass.edu/green_recovery.

China Government Adviser Urges Climate Action Now

China should bind itself to international climate goals to reduce greenhouse gas pollution, one of the country’s most prominent policy advisers recently announced, in a break from Beijing’s official stance, Reuters reports.

Hu Angang, a public policy professor at Tsinghua University, warned that his country needs to act or global climate change talks could be doomed. Hu recently argued that if China vows to cut industry emissions, the nation could emerge an economic and diplomatic winner in the race to solve global warming.

"It's in China's own interest to accept greenhouse gas emissions goals, not just in the international interest," Hu told Reuters in an interview. "China is a developing country, but it's a very special one, with the biggest population, high energy use and sooner or later, if not now, the biggest total greenhouse gas emissions. So this is a common battlefront we must join."

Hu offers climate solutions in the Chinese-language Journal of Contemporary Asia-Pacific Studies, stating China's greenhouse gas pollution would continue rising until about 2020 while the country continues to develop. The nation would then cut emissions by 2030 to 1990 levels, then again reducing them to half that by 2050.

"Unless we become one of the biggest green contributors, we will be one of the biggest victims of global warming," Hu said.

Happening This Week

Tuesday, September 16: The American Physical Society to unveil major energy efficiency plan addressing U.S. energy security and global warming, 1:00 - 2:00 PM, John Zenger Room, 13th Floor, National Press Club, 529 14th St. NW

Thursday, September 18:House Ways and Means Committee, Hearing on climate change legislation, 10:30 AM, 1100 Longworth

House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, Hearing on transportation planning, 10:00 AM, 1324 Longworth

Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, Hearing on the role of speculative investments in energy markets, 10:00 AM, 406 Dirksen