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Highlight of the
Week
In 2007, CO2 Output Jumps To Record
Level
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.
The world increased CO2 output
by 3 percent from 2006 to 2007, new numbers
considered “scary” by some and surprising to
many who thought economic downturns would slow
energy consumption.
This amount of pollution
exceeds the highest growth for fossil fuel
emissions as projected two years ago by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, Associated Press reports.
Forests and oceans, which help extract
carbon dioxide, are doing so at lower rates
than in last century, scientists said. This may
result in faster-than-anticipated sea level and
temperature rises.
China is the world’s greatest
emitter, followed by the United
States. Though
some nations slightly decreased CO2 output, the
U.S.
pumped out more in 2007.
Others are proving that emissions
reduction is a manageable process for developed
nations. Denmark's emissions dropped 8 percent;
the U.K. and Germany reduced CO2
pollution by 3 percent, and France and
Australia reduced fossil fuel emissions by 2
percent, the
AP reports.
Climate Action:
Great Lakes
Compact National
Wildlife Federation and the Alliance for the Great
Lakes applaud the U.S. Congress for sealing
historic protections for the Great Lakes that have
been a decade in the making.
The House
of Representatives last week ratified the Great
Lakes Compact, a bill aimed to prevent the
diversion of water from the Great Lakes region.
Eight Great
Lakes states negotiated the compact
after more than four years of talks involving
business, scientific and environmental
interests. The Compact was approved on a vote
of 390-25 and now moves to President Bush, who
has said he will sign it by October 7. The
Senate approved the Compact in
August.
“This is a historic day
for all of us who depend on the Great Lakes –
and that’s millions of people, businesses,
farmers and communities,” said Andy Buchsbaum,
regional executive director of the National
Wildlife Federation’s Great Lakes office. “For
the first time ever, the Great Lakes will be truly
protected from water depletion. The Great Lakes
Compact will keep the Great Lakes great for the
next millennium.”
The Great Lakes contain more than 90
percent of the fresh surface water in the
United
States. Though
seemingly abundant, less than 1 percent of the
Great Lakes
water is renewed each year, leaving the lakes
vulnerable to depletion.
That vulnerability is even more
precarious in the face of global warming, which
threatens to shrink lake levels.
Together with companion laws in the
Canadian provinces of Ontario and Quebec, the compact
stresses conservation and establishes
first-of-its-kind decision-making standards for
Great Lakes
water use.
National Wildlife Federation, as
co-chair of the Healing Our Waters® - Great Lakes
Coalition, is
leading a national campaign to urge enactment
of a comprehensive restoration plan to
modernize sewage treatment, clean-up polluted
harbors, restore wetlands, and prevent
unwanted, new species from invading the lakes.
We must act now to restore the lakes and
safeguard our Great
Lakes way of life.
For more
information, please contact Jeff Skelding at
202-797-6893. |
Quote:
“...The
smooth completion of the initial
[cap-and-trade] auction is proof that the RGGI
is leading the nation in the battle against
climate change. RGGI's example shows that an
open and competitive carbon market can be
implemented.”
—Pete
Grannis, Commissioner of the New York State
Department of Environmental Conservation and
Chair of the Regional Greenhouse Gas
Initiative.
Economic
Message of the
Week
States Kick Off First
U.S.
Cap-And-Trade
Auction
As part of a
rising effort to limit greenhouse gas emissions
and reduce America’s
dependence on fossil fuels, a coalition of
states last week kicked off America’s
first cap-and-trade
agreement and raised
almost $39 million in proceeds.
The Regional Greenhouse Gas
Initiative (RGGI) is
the country’s first mandatory, market-based
effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Ten
Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic states
will cap and reduce
carbon dioxide emissions 10 percent by
2018.
Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and
Vermont
signed on and will cap carbon emissions from
the power sector with a phased
approach.
States will sell carbon
emission allowances via auctions and invest the
proceeds in consumer benefits. Funds will
benefit energy efficiency, renewable energy,
and other clean energy technologies. RGGI will
help jumpstart our clean energy economy and
create green collar jobs in each signatory
state.
Other
regional regional global warming
initiatives, such as
the Western Climate
Initiative and the
Midwestern Greenhouse Gas Reduction
Accord, are also moving
. forward.
Financial Solution:
America Needs Green Jobs
On September 27, nearly 700 American communities
in the grips of a financial meltdown sent a
clear message to our government’s
leaders: America
can help jumpstart our economy with green jobs
now.
America's number one resource is
people, not oil, says the Green Jobs
Now project. The United
States cannot
drill or burn our way out of the current
crisis; instead, we must work together, invest,
and invent our way out.
More than 100,000 people rallied at
events across the country on September 27 to
urge leaders to jump start the clean energy
economy. The nationwide movement, called “Green Jobs Now: A Day to Build
the New Economy”, urged policy makers caught in
political deadlock to think beyond drilling and
bailouts.
“America is ready
for the green jobs that a commitment to 100
percent clean electricity within 10 years will
bring -- jobs that can't be outsourced, jobs
that reassert America's
commitment to opportunity, innovation, and
environmental protection for all,” said
Alliance for Climate
Protection CEO Cathy
Zoi. “This is what it means to Repower
America.” Together, we can solve the climate
and financial
crises.
Happening This Week
Wednesday, October
1:
The
6th Annual Hans Landsberg Lecture with Paul
Joskow entitled Electricity Restructuring: What Has
Gone Right And What Has Gone Wrong? 12:20
PM - 2 PM, Resources for the Future conference
center, 1616 P St.
NW, RSVP at: http://www.rff.org/Events/Pages/EventRegistration.aspx
Local Solar 101: How To Harness The Sun
In The DC Metro Area. Workshop hosted by CarbonfreeDC,
6:30 PM, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial
Library, 901 G St.
NW, RSVP
soon—only a few slots left!
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