|
Go to Original
By Adrianne Appel
Inter Press Service
Sunday 20 April 2008
New
Haven - U.S. state governors say they are fed up with the George W.
Bush administration's foot-dragging on climate change and will go ahead
- and around - the White House to reduce greenhouse gases.
On
Friday, 18 states signed a declaration committing themselves to "the
effort to stop global warming" during a series of discussions and a
ceremony at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut.
"In
the absence of federal leadership the states have stepped up," said
Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, who spoke at the ceremony with
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine.
The
U.S. is the world's number one greenhouse gas polluter, and the 18
states emit as much greenhouse gas as the biggest nations in Europe
combined. Any reduction would be significant for the health of the
planet, said Daniel Esty, director of the Yale Centre for Environmental
Law and Policy.
Many
of the states, like New Jersey and Massachusetts, have acted on their
own, without federal encouragement or support, and put in place plans
to significantly reduce greenhouse gases by 2020, through tougher
controls on power plants, financial incentives to encourage more green
power, grants and discounts for businesses and consumers who use
alternative energy and changes in land use.
The
18 states made their declaration while Pres. Bush was attending climate
change talks in Paris, where his proposal that the U.S. would decrease
greenhouse gases slightly by 2025 was roundly criticised as too little,
and much too late.
The states feel the same way.
"We're going forward because we've been waiting for seven years for federal leadership," Sebelius said.
Kansas gets 76 percent of its power from coal-burning power plants, Sebelius said.
"We
have the 10th largest carbon footprint in the nation," Sebelius said.
The state is also the windiest in the U.S. and so her plan is for the
state to shift from coal to wind, she said.
States
also have formed regional partnerships to track air pollutants and
reduce them. The Western Climate Initiative calls for a 15-percent
reduction in greenhouse gas emissions below 2005 levels by 2020.
In
the northeast, 10 states will begin a "cap and trade" programme this
August, under which they will enforce tough new limits on air pollution
from energy companies.
Thirty-six states have or are drafting plans to reduce greenhouse gases.
For
decades, California has led the nation in requiring stricter pollution
controls on cars. Today, California has a plan to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions from all sources by 80 percent by 2050.
The
Bush White House has barely invested any funds to reduce climate
change, Sebelius said. In seven years, it has spent 1.5 billion dollars
on climate change. "To put this in perspective, the American public
spent five billion dollars on Halloween," a children's holiday, she
said.
The
U.S. has also refused to ratify the Kyoto protocol, an environmental
pact that calls for reductions in greenhouse emissions worldwide.
Greenhouse
gasses are byproducts of car exhaust and power plant pollutants, like
carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide, and they have accumulated in Earth's
atmosphere at extremely high levels. They are believed to be causing
massive climate shifts worldwide that threaten people, animals and
plants.
Many
states, like California, are already seeing negative consequences of
climate change, like lower levels of fresh water, flooding, extreme
forest fires and very high tides along some coasts, as has happened in
New Jersey.
"To
really implement climate change actions, you have to go local where
people use transportation and turn on electric appliances," Corzine
said.
Petr Kolor, the Czech ambassador to the U.S., was present at the declaration as an observer.
"It's
surprising that you need local governments to push the federal
government to do something," he told IPS. "Progress on climate change
in the European Union is much more advanced."
The
states' declaration came just days after the federal Environmental
Protection Agency told California and 17 other states that they would
not be allowed to require car makers to sell cars that emit less
pollution.
Mary Nichols, chair of the California Air Resources Board, told IPS that the state will not give up.
"We will sue EPA and we are working with the presidential candidates," Nichols told IPS.
"After January 2009, we will get our waiver," she added.
The 18 states said in their declaration that they are also pinning their hopes on the new U.S. president.
All
three of the presidential candidates, Hillary Clinton, John McCain and
Barack Obama, all have expressed strong support for vigorous federal
action on climate change, Sebelius said.
"We can present our plans to the new president and say, 'this is what works'," Sebelius said.
But
Michael Northrop, programme director of Sustainable Development for the
Rockefeller Brothers Fund, said that lobbyists of private energy
companies will pose formidable foes to any aggressive national plan to
reduce greenhouse gases.
"They will want to maintain the status quo. This will be a gigantic battle," Northrop told IPS.
The
governors rebuffed questions about the financial costs associated with
reducing greenhouse emissions, like higher electric bills for
consumers.
"The
reality is if we don't correct climate change, the challenges to our
economy that come with global warming will cost us greatly," Corzine
said. "It's an economic opportunity, not a burden," he said.
The
states that signed the declaration are: Arizona, California, Colorado,
Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts,
Michigan, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Virginia and
Washington.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
|