Climate 411

Video: Fred Krupp on Global Warming and Leadership

Fred Krupp, EDF’s president, is the newest star of the Washington Post‘s power-broker video series “On Leadership.”

In it, Fred talks about what it will take to get a clean energy bill passed in Congress, the need for Presidential involvement, and “putting together the recipe that wins.” He says:

  • “What we’re working on is the biggest most awesome threat to the future of humanity, maybe save nuclear weapons, that I know of.”
  • “I think a lot of far-sighted business people …see a future where we’re going to have to do things in a new way.”
  • “The leaders who are resistant [to change] are usually the ones who don’t see it coming. They can’t see over the horizon.”
  • “If we work hard enough … we can get 60 votes for doing something that’s in everybody’s interest and is truly transformational.”

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Video: More on Those Forged Letters

People are using the word “astroturfing” a lot lately, but this video makes it clear that the people working for the lobbyists trying to block cap and trade legislation stooped to a level even lower than that.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tjsnlETBf0

Angry? Share the video with your friends!

Also posted in Climate Change Legislation / Comments are closed

Link: Veterans and National Security Experts on Global Warming

Screen shot of the web site about national security and climate change

A coalition of national security and veterans organizations launched a new web site today about the dangers of climate change.

It’s a great way to show people what’s at stake for our troops and our country in the climate change debate.  It’s called Operation Free.

Thanks to Vote Vets, Vet PAC, The Truman National Security Project, and NSI for putting this together.

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How Cap and Trade Was Born

The latest Smithsonian magazine has an in-depth piece that tells the story of “How an unlikely mix of environmentalists and free-market conservatives hammered out the strategy known as cap-and-trade.”

The story is powerful — it starts with a hike,  leads to fury within the Bush White House and ends with results:

Almost 20 years since the signing of the Clean Air Act of 1990, the cap-and-trade system continues to let polluters figure out the least expensive way to reduce their acid rain emissions. As a result, the law costs utilities just $3 billion annually, not $25 billion, according to a recent study in the Journal of Environmental Management; by cutting acid rain in half, it also generates an estimated $122 billion a year in benefits from avoided death and illness, healthier lakes and forests, and improved visibility on the Eastern Seaboard. (Better relations with Canada? Priceless.)

Cap-and-trade — a term that first appeared in print that year — quickly went “from being a pariah among policy makers,” as an MIT analysis put it, “to being a star — everybody’s favorite way to deal with pollution problems.”

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Link Round-Up: How Many Ways Can Sarah Palin Get It Wrong?

You have to give Sarah Palin credit for getting attention — her op-ed in the Washington Post on climate change legislation triggered an avalanche of blog posts and opinion columns. Here’s a round-up:

The facts, please!

Why is she doing this?

Really, everyone is piling on!

It wasn’t just the usual environmental crowd who were taken aback by Palin’s claims. People taking issue with her stance popped up in unexpected places:

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Link: TNR on How Climate Bill Allocates Allowances

Brad Plumer over at TNR has a good post about how allowances are allocated in the climate bill in front of the House. He goes into detail about how savings will be passed through to consumers, including some insight from our own Nat Keohane.

Also posted in Climate Change Legislation / Read 1 Response