Climate 411

The voices of a new clean energy future – June 8,2010

The Boston Globe “Oil spill is a sign to Congress: kick the fossil-fuel habit”

Editorial

“Beyond managing the current crisis, it is essential that the Senate pass a comprehensive energy law that steers the country in a cleaner, safer direction.”

The Economist “The blame game: The president can’t stop oil from gushing in the gulf. But he can improve America’s energy policies”

Editorial

“The catastrophe… has provided a chance to talk about deeper problems in energy policy: to spell out to Americans the true cost of the petrol they guzzle (including all the subsidies and distortions of trade) and to push for alternatives, facilitated by a price on carbon.”

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The voices of a new clean energy future – June 7, 2010

The Denver Post – “Set a standard for renewables

Editorial

“While we don’t want to see renewable energy propped up over the long haul by government subsidies, we think the environmental disaster in the gulf needs to prompt some soul-searching into the country’s reliance on fossil fuels. Hopefully, the slate of answers will include a renewable-energy standard.”

The New York Times – “The Spill and Energy Bill

Editorial

“Passing a comprehensive bill would be good for the economy, by creating new jobs; good for the environment, by reducing emissions; and good for national security, by reducing our dependence on unstable oil-producing countries. The president’s task now is to convert that rhetorical fervor into actual, filibuster-proof votes.”

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Blog highlights including eye witness account of the Gulf tragedy

The health benefits of climate policy are explored by Kate Sheppard on Ezra Klein.  Sheppard explains that

“health savings due to improvements in air quality alone would outweigh the potential costs of cutting carbon, as one study earlier this year found.”

On Grist, David Roberts dives into how the American Power Act will help clean up old coal.

“While we’re on the subject of existing power plants, there are other measures in the bill to accelerate the transition away from dirty coal, namely “financial and regulatory incentives, including expedited proceedings” for projects that shut down, retrofit, or switch fuels in old power plants. Depending on how powerful those incentives turn out to be and how performance-standards are implemented, the American Power Act could add up to a pretty decent way of taking on old coal. That’s something enviros have been seeking for decades.”

Also on Grist, there is a nice round-up of the recent showing of support for a climate bill.

“At last, Obama brings the love.”

Treehugger asks: “Who will answer our clean energy wake up call?” Leilani Munter, an environmental activist and race car driver, describes her personal experiences in Venice, Louisiana where she was confronted with the environmental degradation caused by the BP oil tragedy.

“I just got off the phone with one of my boat captains in Louisiana and he told me he saw six dead dolphins and ten dead turtles in the past few days….The only positive thing that can possibly come from this—the largest environmental disaster in American history—is if it causes us to change the way we are living on this Earth.”

On Businessweek,  there is an 8 page excerpt from Eric Pooley’s new book: The Climate War: True Believers, Power Brokers,  and the Fight to Save the Earth. This section focuses on how Duke Energy’s Jim Rogers

“helped break down his industry’s resistance to the carbon cap…What he did, beginning in 2006, was to join nine other Fortune 500 chief executives and the leaders of four national environmental groups to create a lobbying coalition intended to break the American business community’s de facto veto power over climate legislation. The U.S. Climate Action Partnership (USCAP), as the coalition called itself, got its start early that year when two green leaders, Fred Krupp of the Environmental Defense Fund and Jonathan Lash of the World Resources Institute, recruited Jeffrey R. Immelt.”

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The voices of a new clean energy future – June 4th, 2010

Huffington Post – “The Gulf Spill as a Breach to Our Environmental Security

Steven Cohen, executive director, The Earth Institute, Columbia University

NY Times columnist Tom Friedman recently wrote that this a crucial moment for President Obama to provide leadership on the movement to alternative energy and off of fossil fuels. And so it is, but we need to do much more than simply shift the energy base of our economy. We need to develop the capacity to both manage and police our use of technology.”

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The voices of a new clean energy future -June 3, 2010

June 1, 2010 – The Detroit News – “Clean energy bill creates jobs

Michael J. McCarty, president, United Steelworkers

“Our state is uniquely positioned to benefit from passing a strong, comprehensive clean energy and climate change bill. With unemployment that continues to lead the nation, we can’t afford to pass up an opportunity like the one that a clean energy economy will present us.”

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Obama shows support for clean energy and other top stories

On E2, President Obama shows his commitment to passing comprehensive climate and energy legislation this year. In a speech at Carnegie Mellow University on Wednesday, Obama said

“the votes may not be there right now, but I intend to find them in the coming months. I will make the case for a clean energy future wherever I can, and I will work with anyone from either party to get this done.”

Green has encouraging news on renewable energy development out west. It turns out that

“the power grid for five western states – Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico and Wyoming – could operate on as much as 30 percent wind and 5 percent solar without the construction of extensive new infrastructure.”


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