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National Wildlife Federation’s Twestoration

Twestoration_treeplanting Come join me and many other like-minded conservationists in Pittsburgh on Saturday May 2. As part of National Wildlife Federation’s Annual meeting, we’ll be heading outside to restore wildlife habitat by planting more than 1,000 trees.

I’m also hoping we’ll turn our online friends into volunteers through Twitter and other social media sites. If you can’t join us in Pittsburgh, I hope you’ll join our "Twestoration" by doing something to restore wildlife habitat in your area and reporting back in the coming weeks.

Larry Schweiger


Turn Up the Heat on Congress to Keep It Cool for Wildlife

FeatureEagleCam Today, 17 United States Congressional Representatives are in a unique position to help keep it cool for our wildlife’s future.

If your representative is a member of the U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce and is still undecided on their support of legislation that includes a cap on carbon pollution, you can take action today to help safeguard wildlife from the worst impacts of global warming.

More than a century of wildlife conservation is now at risk from the unprecedented threat of global warming. To ensure that wildlife not only survives, but thrives into the future, please visit National Wildlife Federation’s Climate Action Center today to contact your representative and learn what else you can do.

Larry Schweiger


Testimony of Al Gore

See Al Gore’s testimony for the House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce’s Subcommittee on Energy and the Environment on the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009. The Vice President highlights how we can Repower America with a transition to a clean energy economy and end our dangerous reliance on carbon based fuels. Larry Schweiger

Bernie Madoff and Global Warming?

04-24-09 Capitol In his testimony today before the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Energy and the Environment, former Vice President Al Gore compared people who take their science advice from global warming deniers to people who took their financial advice from Bernie Madoff. Isn’t that an apt analogy?

Larry Schweiger

Energy Reform: It’s Time to Work Together

04-13-09 Lynx Kitten Energy Reform Let’s start with the air that we breathe. Carbon dioxide, an invisible heat-trapping gas, has increased by 36 percent from pre-industrial levels in the atmosphere, and its buildup will trigger record warming in the decades ahead. Burning more fossil fuels will only make things much worse. We have two options: We can either continue to depend on dirty coal and expensive imported oil and overheat the planet while increasing our indebtedness to unstable nations; or we can build a new economy that uses renewable energy from the sun and wind while creating millions of new green jobs. It is that simple.

Congress must rewrite our national energy laws to curb pollution and build a clean, domestically supplied energy economy. To do that, lawmakers must put aside strongly held ideological barriers. Blind ideology is the greatest challenge to a new energy future.

Throughout the history of the nation’s environmental movement, from President Theodore Roosevelt to Senator John Heinz (a Republican senator from Pennsylvania who worked with Senator Tim Wirth of Colorado to lead efforts to curb acid rain), Republicans have been conservation leaders who understood their moral duty to work in a bipartisan way to protect nature and stop pollution. But the spirit of bipartisanship has been compromised in recent decades as too many Republican members of Congress have become unwilling to acknowledge the large body of climate science and address the threats of global warming.

Despite the stalling tactics of many Republican leaders, their interest in insisting that global warming is not a danger and the vitriolic misinformation on cable channels that fuels a partisan divide, the public’s support for a new energy policy continues to rise—without the political divide some leaders continue to ferment. The public’s understanding of the importance of clean energy investments in creating millions of new jobs and safeguarding natural resources from global warming impacts continues to increase—again, without the political divisiveness some leaders seem to crave.

This presents Republican leaders with a choice: demonstrate their confidence in America’s ingenuity and ability to lead the clean energy revolution, or continue to focus on a partisan divide that doesn’t achieve anything but missed opportunities and mounting danger for future generations.

In his book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, author Thomas Samuel Kuhn examines why obvious scientific evidence is sometimes obscure. He coined a phrase "paradigm blindness" to explain that it is not possible to understand or even see a new paradigm through a flawed conceptual framework and terminology of rivaling paradigms. Perhaps the growing partisan division and paradigm blindness over environmental protection reflects a tendency to put misplaced faith in party leaders, ideological pundits and news shows that reflect polarizing ideology rather than science. If some members of Congress believe global warming is a liberal hoax, they cannot see the scientific evidence—no matter how extensive it may be. When the Arctic ice shrinks by 40 percent or when forest fires increase by a factor of four, paradigm blindness sets in.

This must change now. Congress needs to develop an energy plan, and the administration must carry it to Copenhagen in December to help pass a treaty to stop global warming. We need to work across political lines to solve the climate crisis.

I suffer no illusions about the magnitude of the difficulties ahead. "Fight no little battles," my childhood mentor Ralph Abele often challenged. As a company commander in the U.S. Army, he served in five World War II campaigns, including the Normandy invasion where he was the sole survivor from his landing craft.. Ralph knew the cost of stubborn courage. His gravelly voice, long silenced by death, still speaks clearly to me as I write this.

We must find the stubborn courage to pressure our elected leaders from both sides to not act from political division but from the place of urgency and possibility. Unborn children do not have a say in the matter if you and I do not provide a voice for them.

Looking ahead, I cling to the hope that all Americans will cut through the cynical obfuscation that has caused paradigm blindness and discover the truth about what lies ahead for all humanity. Voter pressure is the only thing that can overcome such blindness. Contact your lawmakers today and tell them to pass a climate-protecting energy policy. For the sake of all children, please join with me in this effort to avoid a climate crisis. It is the one message you will never regret sending. To find out whom to call, go to National Wildlife Federation’s Climate Action Center and take action now.

Larry Schweiger


Time: Vanishing Act

04-15-09 polar bear Here is a link to a thoughtful Time magazine cover story on species extinction and climate change. This is a strong, big picture piece that provides excellent context for the importance of climate and conservation work. I met with Bryan Walsh, the reporter, a few months back and he included a quote from our discussion. http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1888728_1888736_1888858-1,00.html  

Also see the photos of ten species near extinction at http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1888702,00.html.

Aren't these magnificent creatures?

Larry Schweiger


Troubling Signs of Warming from the Poles

NSIDC Ice Bridge Wilkins Ice shelf The National Snow and Ice Data Center reported yesterday that in the Antarctic, an ice bridge connecting the Wilkins Ice Shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula to Charcot Island has collapsed. Researchers are now monitoring the remaining parts of Wilkins Ice Shelf to see if the loss of the ice bridge will cause the ice shelf to collapse further.

The loss of an ice shelf can cause the glaciers that feed into it to start flowing ice into the ocean at an accelerated rate, contributing to global sea level rise.

In the Arctic, National Aeronautics and Space Administration satellite measurements of Arctic sea ice have found a 40 percent drop in multiyear sea ice between 2005 and 2007. This winter, the predominant type of sea ice covering the Arctic Ocean is thin, first-year ice which melts and refreezes every year. Thicker ice, which lasts two or more years, now comprises just 10 percent of winter ice cover.

Global warming is the single biggest threat to wildlife. To learn more about what you can do this spring to help wildlife go to National Wildlife Federation’s Global Warming Policy Solutions Center.

Larry Schweiger



Congress Passes Historic Plan to Protect America’s Public Lands

04-03-09featurePronghornRedDesert Congress has passed the Omnibus Public Lands Bill that will designate more than 2 million acres of wilderness in nine states and establish three new national park units, a new national monument, three new national conservation areas, more than 1,000 miles of national wild and scenic rivers, and four national trails.

America’s hunters and anglers pushed hard for this legislation, which will conserve critical public lands and waters and provide resources and recreation opportunities that drive local economies.

Public lands are a fundamental part of America’s outdoor recreation industry, which contributes $730 billion to our economy and supports 1 in 20 American jobs.

Larry Schweiger





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