YOU'RE GETTING
WARMER Ten years after Kyoto,
the U.S. has done nothing
KYOTO ACCORDINGLY Environmentalists weigh in on the Kyoto
Protocol
MORE FREEWAYS Our local response to global warming
KYOTO
ACCORDINGLY
Environmentalists
weigh in on the Kyoto Protocol
By
Sena Christian, SN&R
Ross Gelbspan
Author, The Heat is On and
Boiling Point, www.heatisonline.org
What is needed is a new Kyoto Protocol that reflects
the urgency and magnitude of the challenge: a rapid global transition
to non-carbon energy sources in the next 30 years. One approach
might involve three elements: In industrial countries, withdraw
the roughly $250 billion a year in subsidies for coal and oil and
put those same subsidies behind clean-energy sources. Create a fund,
estimated at about $300 billion a year, to transfer clean energy
to developing countries. All developing countries would love to
go solar, but most can't afford it. The fund could be financed by
a tax on international air travel, carbon taxes in the north or
a tiny tax of a quarter-penny per dollar on international currency
transactions. Develop a regulatory mechanism that would require
every country, starting at its current baseline, to increase its
fossil-fuel efficiency by 5 percent per year. That means every country
would produce the same amount next year with 5 percent less carbon
fuel or produce 5 percent more with the same amount of carbon fuel.
Since few economies grow at 5 percent for very long, emissions reductions
would outpace long-term economic growth (for details, see "Solutions"
at www.heatisonline.org.)
To incorporate these mechanisms would generate millions
of new jobs, especially in developing countries. It would begin
to turn impoverished nations into trading partners. It would jump
start the renewable-energy industry into being a central driving
engine of growth for the global economy.
Ted Nordhaus & Michael Shellenberger
Co-authors, Break Through: From
The Death of Environmentalism to the Politics of Possibility
Kyoto failed for reasons having nothing to do with
the absence of U.S. involvement. The developed nations that ratified
the agreement saw their emissions go up, not down, by 4 percent
between 2000 and 2004. Even if Kyoto was perfectly implemented,
the emissions reduced would be one-seventh the amount of the emissions
China alone will produce over the next three decades.
Kyoto was based on the wrong models of past efforts
to regulate pollution. A better model is the creation of the European
Union after World War II through shared investments in coal and
steel. A post-Kyoto effort should bring down the price of clean
energy as quickly as possible through massive public-private investments
into technology innovation and infrastructure. Together the U.S.,
Europe and Japan should invest $100-200 billion per year, which
could stimulate $60-120 billion in private capital. This commitment
would bring down the price of clean energy while strengthening economic
ties between these countries. To achieve this politically, the next
president must sell the agenda as the only way to free ourselves
from oil while establishing American leadership and creating jobs
in the fast-growing and high-tech clean-energy markets.
Sarah Susanka
Architect and author, The
Not So Big House series and The Not So Big Life, www.notsobig.com
As someone who has done a significant amount of
inner work, as well as work in the world of architecture and design,
I'm very much aware that things are not what they appear to be.
We see the world as something outside ourselves that needs to be
fixed. Yet when we listen to the words of mystics and sages of all
ages, and when we study the findings of today's scientists, we come
to understand that there is in fact no separation between our individual
human bodies and the world. We are all interconnected and part of
one extraordinary movement of consciousness. What's more, the part
and the whole mirror one another. So to change the world, we must
truly do what Mahatma Gandhi said: "We must be the change we wish
to see in the world."
As long as we focus on a world separate from ourselves
and try to fix it without attending to our own individual imbalance,
planetary balance will continue to elude us. So, although I believe
that Kyoto signifies a very important recognition of the role we
play collectively, we have yet to see that it is our individual
role in becoming ever more present and aware in our own lives. That
holds the key to the shift we are seeking.
Aaron Lehmer
Program manager, green-collar jobs
campaign, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, www.ellabakercenter.org
Since the Kyoto Protocol was first introduced in
1997, consciousness has exploded around the urgent need to tackle
the global climate crisis. At the Ella Baker Center, we've forged
partnerships with groups serving low-income communities and green
businesses that are moving away from the pollution-based economy
of the past and toward a clean-energy economy. In collaboration
with the city of Oakland and the Apollo Alliance, we initiated the
Oakland Green Jobs Corps to train low-income residents to weatherize
our buildings, switch out inefficient technologies and install the
solar panels and wind farms that we'll need to power our future.
We can and must fight both poverty and pollution
at the same time by preparing those who have been left out of previous
economic booms for promising careers in the emerging green economy.
The task at hand is enormous and urgent: The twin threats of climate
change and oil dependence demand that we must take bold action now
to move our communities away from fossil fuels and toward renewable
energy solutions.
We know that this will require millions of people
rolling up their sleeves to literally transform the way we work,
live and play. This means that billions of dollars of new investment
in our cities will be needed. This is a historic opportunity to
both protect our climate and also uplift our communities, providing
dignified, green opportunities for all.
Jeff McIntire-Strasburg
Senior editor, www.GreenOptions.com;founder,
www.Sustainablog.org
It's tempting to focus on the fact that the U.S.
government still hasn't signed on to the Kyoto Protocols, and thus
conclude that we haven't made much progress. Despite the federal
government's very slow movement on the issue, though, I think we've
come quite far. Ten years ago, few would have imagined that a Republican
governor would sign off on the first greenhouse-gas emissions reduction
program for his state, or that companies like Wal-Mart, Duke Energy
and General Electric would be lobbying Congress for regulation of
carbon emissions.
We've got much farther to go, but I'm optimistic
that the United States will fully join the international effort
to combat global climate change. The general public, the business
community and state and local governments "get it." It's hard to
imagine that the next U.S. president and Congress will be able to
not act decisively without paying a heavy political price.
Brian Nowicki
California climate policy director,
Center for Biological Diversity, www.biologicaldiversity.org
When the Kyoto Protocol was initiated 10 years ago,
there was good reason to be seriously concerned about the impacts
of climate change on the world's ecosystems. Since then, science
has provided increasingly specific and disturbing projections, and
we have started seeing the impacts to the world's wildlife and habitats.
The decline in the Arctic sea ice is directly impairing the ability
of polar bears to hunt. Pikas adapted to high mountain weather are
losing lower elevation populations. Checkerspot butterflies along
the U.S. Pacific Coast are losing southern populations. A wide array
of plants and animals are facing the stresses that come from earlier
springs, more hot days and seasonal droughts. In the past 10 years,
it has become increasingly clear that global climate change not
only threatens a wide array of plants and wildlife, but also threatens
the integrity of entire ecosystems. If the world's biological diversity
is to survive the next 100 years, we not only need to make every
effort to avoid the worst impacts of climate change, we also need
to take serious measures to protect species and ecosystems from
the continued warming we have already committed to.
Faiz Shakir
Research director, Center for American Progress, www.americanprogress.org
In the years since Kyoto, the public cries for taking
action to regulate carbon-dioxide emissions are now deafening. To
respond to the climate crisis and transform our energy economy,
we need presidential leadership to curb this nation's oil usage,
cap and cut carbon-dioxide emissions, and increase investment in
renewable energy. While the Bush administration dithers and delays,
leadership in addressing this looming disaster has emerged from
two dozen U.S. states and the European Union.
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