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We Can Solve It

The Alliance for Climate Protection launched its We campaign today.

This campaign is designed to engage the American public in demanding real and lasting solutions to the climate crisis. It is an unparalleled effort that comes in the nick of time. Global warming is an unprecedented threat to wildlife and people. An unprecedented threat requires extraordinary action.

Our elected officials simply cannot sit by and do nothing while polar ice caps melt, sea levels rise and the overall stability of the earth’s climate is at risk. It’s critical for the American public to understand what can be done to confront global warming, and what’s at stake if the United States does nothing.

Former Vice President Al Gore is right when he says ‘it’s important to change the light bulbs, but it’s much more important to change the laws.’ We all can be part of the solution, but it’s up to the U.S. Congress to take bold steps today to put us on a path to progress.

By cutting global warming by at least 2-percent per year with cap-and-trade legislation, we can avert the worst consequences of global warming.

In every generation a time comes to take action that protects future generations. Now is our time. We have a moral responsibility to confront global warming and protect our children’s future.

So Close

Algore

The world's scientists are calling for immediate and urgent action on global warming. The good news is that we have the science, technologies and policies necessary to stop it. What's needed is action by concerned people like you and me.

That's why I've joined with Al Gore and others across the country and around the world who want to halt global warming.

We're on the verge of being over one million strong and I'm asking you to join us. Please click here today to become part of the solutions to global warming: http://wecansolveit.org/alliance

We need to come together and demand our leaders take the steps necessary to ensure our children and their children have a positive future. That's why I'm asking you to get involved today: http://wecansolveit.org/alliance

Together, we can stop global warming.

Large Climate Changes Predicted Worldwide

Scientists are predicting large changes to climates worldwide due to global warming. Particularly hard hit will be tropical highlands and arctic regions, as outlined in a recent Science Daily article. These climates may disappear as soon as 2100.

Polarbearcredited_2

This is consistent with recent findings that summer sea ice in the Arctic is melting faster than expected. In 2007, the summer sea ice melt exceeded normal ice melt by a million square miles - an area equal to the size of Alaska and Texas combined.

With the record melting of Arctic summer sea ice in 2007, concerns exist that summer sea ice might be virtually gone by 2012. And this has serious implications for polar bears and other species. The key for polar bears is summer sea ice. The more the summer sea ice melts annually, the longer the bears must fast before they can get back out on the winter ice and hunt for seals. The United States Geological Survey conservatively projects that two-thirds of the global polar bear population could disappear by 2050, including all of Alaska’s polar bears.

It’s not just polar bears at risk from climate change. Global warming is the single biggest threat to wildlife today. Up to 20-30% of all plant and animal species worldwide are likely to be at increased risk of extinction if increases in average global temperatures exceed 2.2-4 degrees Fahrenheit above current levels. If temperatures increase by more than 7.2 degrees F, 40-70% of species would have significant extinctions.

This could happen if we do not stabilize global temperatures by reducing global warming pollution now.

For the sake of polar bears and all the other creatures we share the planet with, as well as our own species, I hope we muster the political and individual will to successfully tackle the climate crisis.

Courageous Kansas Governor Takes a Stand

Kudos to the leadership of Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius for her courageous stand on Friday to veto the state’s forced approval of two coal fired power plants.

The Governor’s Secretary of Health and the Environment withheld approval for the plants because of the health impacts of the large amount of greenhouse gases that the plants would have produced.

The Governor also acknowledged that greenhouse gases impact future generations and that reducing these gases will benefit generations of Kansans to come.

CRA Climate Analysis: "Extreme Again"

The national Chamber of Commerce and the American Council for Capital Formation are holding events in select states using biased, polluter-funded "analysis" of climate legislation to discourage Congress from moving aggressively to tackle the threat of global warming. They specifically take aim at one of the proposals being considered in Congress: the bipartisan Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act (S. 2191).

The analysis, conducted by Charles River Associates (CRA), was first funded by the oil industry (American Petroleum Institute), which would be regulated by the bill. Further research by CRA on the bill has been funded by electric power companies (Edison Electric Institute), which would also be regulated under the bill. The model CRA uses is a secretive "black box" and (surprise!) produces extreme, lopsided results that are at odds with the results found by all credible academic institutions. Other analysis consistently finds that America's economy will grow strongly under the Lieberman-Warner bill or any of the cap-and-trade proposals under consideration in Congress.

Below is an excellent review done by Environmental Defense Fund on CRA's analysis. News accounts including the Miami Herald have also detailed how CRA's biased modeling recently came under attack from an unlikely source - some of the utilities that are members of Edison Electric Institute. CRA is now working on revising its analysis.

Importantly, in addition to providing inflated estimates of economic costs, CRA's analysis ignores the Lieberman-Warner bill's innovative consumer rebates and incentives. The Climate Security Act provides rebates and energy efficiency assistance to low-income and middle-income consumers. The exact amount of funding will depend on how much energy prices are actually affected, but some analysis indicates that the bill could return $500 to a family of four annually to help offset any increased energy costs through rebates and energy efficiency incentives.

According to an analysis by Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), America’s economy will more than triple by 2050 under the Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act. Also according to MIT's analysis, by 2015 the United States will be spending $20 billion less on foreign oil every year as a result of enacting the Climate Security Act. That translates to spending about $1,400 less on foreign oil payments for every person in the nation over the next 20 years. In other words, we can drastically cut emissions while our economy grows by 214%, creates the technologies and jobs of the future, and reduces its dependence on foreign oil. As we strengthen this bill in Congress, the benefits to the economy in bolstering clean energy jobs and curbing oil dependency will also increase.

The CRA Climate Analysis: Extreme Again Environmental Defense Fund

America's Climate Security Act of 2007 [S. 2191) is a bipartisan bill that would create a cap and trade program to cut greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. The Edison Electric Institute, a trade organization representing electric utilities, recently paid consulting firm Charles River Associates International (CRA) to assess the possible economic impacts of the legislation. An assessment of CRA's analysis using accepted academic modeling reaches the following conclusions:

  • CRA has a history of presenting extreme views for its industry clients. For example, CRA’s analysis in 2003 of the McCain-Lieberman Climate Stewardship Act projected household costs that were three to four times higher than the upper range of results in an MIT study, and 10 to 14 times higher than MIT’s lower range.
  • CRA’s results are dramatically different than economic assessments by researchers in academia and government. For example, CRA’s estimates for the impact of the bill in 2015 on greenhouse gas emission allowance prices, economic output (GDP), and electricity prices are 75%-300% higher than those found by a study performed by researchers at Duke University and Research Triangle Institute.
  • Determining exactly why CRA’s numbers are so high is difficult, both because of how CRA reports their results and because the CRA model remains a "black box" to outsiders. Although CRA released some information in a response to a request from Senator Lieberman, they have never fully opened up their model to outside peer review, so key assumptions remain hidden. Moreover, CRA lumps together results from various scenarios without specifying which scenarios lead to which results. One reason for the divergence from other models, however, appears to be that CRA ignores the role of international credits, which under the Lieberman Warner bill could meet up to 15% of compliance obligations. In addition, their analysis assumes high costs for new coal-fired power plants with carbon capture and sequestration technology, and imposes artificial constraints on how widely that technology is used.
  • Like most economic forecasting models, CRA’s analysis considers only one side of the ledger:  it considers the costs of reducing emissions, but fails to examine the costs of inaction.
  • No single model should be relied upon for policy making. Instead, policy makers should look to the full range of economic models for guidance on the possible impacts of climate policy. And when confronted with a range of numbers, a common rule of thumb is to throw out the lowest and highest numbers, and concentrate on the middle of the range.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker summarized the economic situation best: "If you don't take action on climate change, you can be sure that our economies will go down the drain in the next 30 years. What may happen to the dollar, and what may happen to growth in China or whatever, will pale into insignificance compared with the question of what happens to this planet over the next 30 or 40 years if no action is taken."

Our analysis is based on testimony by CRA, documentation supporting that testimony, CRA’s recent update to their analysis, and economic models by researchers at MIT, Research Triangle Institute, and the Department of Energy.

Earth: The Sequel

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If you want to be inspired by the search to create a clean energy economy and stop global warming, check out Earth: The Sequel - The Race to Reinvent Energy and Stop Global Warming.

Written by Environmental Defense Fund President Fred Krupp and journalist Miriam Horn, Earth: The Sequel takes a tour of emerging clean energy ventures. It tells the story of the scientists, businessmen, innovators, and risk-takers who are pushing technology to the limit in a quest to find new ways to create energy.

These include inventions such as flying windmills and artificial carbon-eating trees. The book examines breakthroughs in solar, wind, and biomass technologies, and explores how we will reinvent everything from cars to concrete and replace the old, dumb, centralized electrical grid with a smart, multidirectional energy network.

This hopeful vision challenges the familiar, grim model of business as usual. With smart national cap-and-trade policy, these new technologies can come online and help us avoid the worst of the unintended consequences of America’s energy appetite.

No Stopping Leilani Munter

National Wildlife Federation staff were joined Wednesday by race car driver Leilani Munter on Capitol Hill to promote global warming legislation that substantially reduces global warming pollution and provides dedicated funding for conserving America’s rivers, streams, forests, fish, and wildlife threatened by global warming.

In addition to being one of the top-ranked female race car drivers in the country, Leilani has a passion for environmental activism. She credits this passion to her science background.

Leilani’s passion and outreach show that confronting global warming is an issue important to all Americans, including NASCAR fans.

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