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Nations pledge to fight global warming - but without specifics

17 07 09 - 19:11 Nations pledge to fight global warming - but without specifics





By Peter N. Spotts






When former President Bill Clinton dropped in on the UN's global-warming talks in Montreal in 2005, his message was simple: Whether you get a little or a lot accomplished here, when you get home, do something to reduce your country's greenhouse-gas emissions.

At this year's summit of the world's eight largest economies - and particularly at a parallel meeting involving the world’s 17 largest greenhouse-gas emitters - it appears that leaders aim to heed Mr. Clinton's advice. On Thursday, at the end of the US-sponsored Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate, participants from developed and developing countries pledged to take prompt action to tackle their greenhouse-gas emissions. The aim: to hold global warming to 3.6 degrees or less compared with pre-industrial levels.

To be sure, the major-economies communique is devoid of specific reduction targets - either long-term or medium-term for either bloc of countries. Many activists had hoped that leaders would agree to broad global targets at the meetings in L'Aquila, Italy.

This, they said, would help smooth the way for more-detailed negotiations during the remaining months before December's UN-sponsored global climate summit in Copenhagen. There, negotiators hope to present world leaders with at least the broad-brush outlines of a new climate treaty for their approval.

With yet another opportunity to agree on global targets having come and gone without them, many are frustrated. "Public policy is not keeping up with what the science is telling us we must do," said Reid Detchon, vice president for energy and climate at the United Nations Foundation in Washington, in a statement.

Developed countries have insisted that developing nations agree to a global emissions-reduction target of 50 percent below 1990 levels by 2050, implying an 80 percent cut for developed countries.

The G-8 included the percent cuts in its communique. But the G-8 also left unresolved the issue of what year to use as the basis for comparing before-and-after emissions: "...1990 or more recent years."

And the 2050 date is so far off that developing countries say they won't take such an agreement seriously unless developed countries also commit to aggressive mid-term targets for 2020 to ensure they would reach the 2050 goal. So far, developed countries haven't been ready to do that.

"Here was an opportunity for more progress, but that would have required industrialized countries putting more on the table," says Alden Meyer, director of strategy and policy for the Union of Concerned Scientists in Washington. "I think many of them feel it's too early to do that." Mid-term targets, along with the contentious issue of climate-related aid to developing countries, "are bargaining chips and they don't want to play those too early," he says.

But some analysts say that by agreeing on the 3.6-degree F. climate goal, the G-8 and other major emitting economies implicitly recognized that they must act quickly to put themselves on emissions paths that will stand a decent chance of capping global warming at that level.

In the major-economies' declaration, developed countries pledged to "take the lead" in "promptly undertaking robust...reductions in the mid-term consistent with our long-term objectives." Developing countries agreed to “promptly undertake actions whose projected effects on emissions represent a meaningful deviation from business as usual."

Given the past gap between the two groups, which combine to account for 80 percent of the globe's greenhouse-gas emissions, "this is pretty significant," says Sarah Ladislaw, a fellow in the energy and security program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. Used tags: , , , , , , , , ,
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EPA moves to cut power plant emissions to fight air pollution

Saturday 10 July 2010 at 10:40 pm By Mark Clayton,


The Environmental Protection Agency moved Tuesday to dramatically curb power plant emissions across the central US and East Coast, a step the federal agency says will significantly reduce health and pollution impacts across that 31-state region.

Responding to a 2008 court ruling, the EPA proposed sharp cuts in emissions from some 900 coal-, natural gas-, and oil-burning power plants - a 52 percent reduction in nitrous oxide (NOX) and 71 percent cut in sulfur dioxide (SOX) by 2014. more

Bridging the gap between the Smart Grid green energy program and home appliances

Thursday 24 June 2010 at 11:51 am By Dave Porter



Reno - Axial Vector Energy Corp. (OTC: AXVC) may be one of the first green energy companies to have bridged the gap between the $3.4 billion smart grid energy program announced by the U.S. Department of Energy and home appliances when the Company unveiled its product which controls individual home appliances more efficiently using Bluetooth technology. more

BP oil spill: with escrow plan, Obama races to claim BP's money

Monday 14 June 2010 at 12:57 pm By Mark Sappenfield


The Obama administration's management of the BP oil spill cleanup now appears to be a race for money.

Reports Sunday indicate that President Obama will direct BP to set up an escrow account from which damage claims by individuals and businesses along the Gulf Coast will be paid. If BP refuses, Mr. Obama is prepared to argue that he has the legal authority to force BP's hand, the reports suggest.

The move comes as BP considers whether to pay dividends to its shareholders. Members of Congress including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi have demanded that BP refrain from paying dividends to shareholders at a time when BP has enormous and open-ended financial obligations in the Gulf. more

Low-income women learn skills for green jobs

Saturday 29 May 2010 at 11:45 am Low-income women learn skills for green jobs


By Desmond L. Marshall



Washington - Renee Owens, 36, an unemployed single mother with two kids, ages 6 and 12, was searching for work. But in a bad economy, few companies were hiring.

She has worked as an unskilled laborer at constructions sites, and her last job was at the International House of Pancakes, where she made $3.20 an hour, plus tips. Then she lost her job and was unemployed for a year and half. more

New bill would create communities for electric vehicles

Saturday 29 May 2010 at 11:39 am New bill would create communities for electric vehicles


By Desmond L. Marshall



Washington - With the Gulf oil spill in the news, three senators introduced a bill Thursday they say would reduce the use of oil.

Sens. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., introduced the "Electric Vehicle Deployment Act of 2010."

Alexander said the BP oil rig disaster should create more opportunities to reduce oil consumption. more

Gulf Spill Puts US Energy Bill on Slippery Slope

Saturday 29 May 2010 at 11:30 am Gulf Spill Puts US Energy Bill on Slippery Slope


By Llewellyn King



Washington - With energy, Senate Democrats find themselves between a rock and two hard places. Nonetheless, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., and Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., have introduced their climate and energy bill.

Its timing is awful. Its fate is uncertain. Yet its sponsors felt it had to be done now. more

Can electric cars break out of niche status in US, China market?

Thursday 20 May 2010 at 2:59 pm Can electric cars break out of niche status in US, China market?


By Jaeah Lee,


Beijing and New york - Interest in electric cars is surging:

- Nearly 52,000 people were wait-listed as of mid-April for General Motors' electric model, the Volt, due in November. As of March, almost 56,000 people had signed up to reserve Nissan's all-electric Leaf, due in dealerships by December.

- In China, leading automakers BYD and Chery have announced plans to roll out their own electric models within the next two years.

- Investors, too, are excited. Electric-car ventures made up nearly 40 percent of $1.9 billion invested in 180 green-technology companies worldwide in the first quarter of 2010, according to a study by the Cleantech Group and Deloitte. more

Building a Continental Renewable Super Grid

Tuesday 04 May 2010 at 10:03 pm Building a Continental Renewable Super Grid



By Roy Morrison



As the planet warms and the economy cools, renewable resources are emerging as a realistic means to solve both problems in a timely fashion. Advocates of renewable energy want trillions of dollars spent in the coming decades on a continental-scale smart grid that will slash global greenhouse gas emissions and turn society toward a prosperous and ecological future.

How can we build such a grid? What are the next steps? Are we trapped in a future of false promises on clean coal, more nuclear proliferation, resource wars for oil, rising pollution, and business as usual? more

Last chance for climate change legislation?

Thursday 29 April 2010 at 8:41 pm Last chance for climate change legislation?


By Brad Knickerbocker,


It's crunch time for climate change legislation on Capitol Hill, and the bill to be introduced Monday could be the last chance for passage before lawmakers face voters this fall.

The bill coauthored by Sens. John Kerry (D) of Massachusetts, Lindsey Graham (R) of South Carolina, and Joseph Lieberman (I) of Connecticut has as its main goal a 17 percent reduction in US greenhouse gas emissions (mainly carbon dioxide) from 2005 levels in 10 years and 80 percent by 2050.

It has easier requirements on emissions caps for power plants and other major contributors of greenhouse gases - easier than previous legislative proposals. It also has incentives to build new nuclear power plants. There are also provisions for offshore oil drilling.

The measure pleases no one entirely. more

Obama's gambit to marry US policies on environment and energy

Monday 19 April 2010 at 11:18 am By Mark Clayton


True, America is still guzzling fossil fuels. But since taking office just over a year ago, President Obama has quietly set the nation's energy policy on a new course.

Even as health care dominated the news, Obama energy czar Carol Browner - working with the departments of Interior, Energy, and Transportation - has established a new, unified energy-and-environment policy. But whether this focus on renewable power and energy security can succeed depends largely on whether Congress approves climate-energy legislation that puts a price on carbon emissions, energy experts say. more
 

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