A better ethanol policy would include requirements and incentives linked to new or emerging technologies that don’t create new competition for other already viable (e.g., corn) crops with established markets or lead to cleared tropical forests or savannas. Policies should instead promote only ethanol derived from growing high-diversity prairie hay grown on degraded lands, for instance, or from corn cobs.
April 16, 2008
Agricultural Law Blog Post on Renewable Fuel Standard
On Tuesday, Josh Fershee posted a critique of the US renewable fuel standard (RFS), which mandated expanded use of biofuels, including ethanol. Agricultural Law post He criticized the RFS on the grounds that cellulosic fuels are more green, and the RFS acan be met with ethanol from corn and other non-cellulosic sources. In addition, Fershee noted that the studies indicating that fuel crops were greener than gasoline did not consider whether the fuel crops would replace rangelands or forest lands already sequestering carbon. He opines:
I agree, but I would go further. The policy should restrict ethanol to cellulosic fuels that are not produced on lands converted from food crops.
April 16, 2008 in Africa, Agriculture, Asia, Climate Change, Economics, Energy, Forests/Timber, Governance/Management, International, Land Use, Law, North America, South America, Sustainability, US | Permalink | TrackBack
April 10, 2008
Bread
I went to purchase some bread for a student potluck last night. The store's bakery had posted apologies about the price of bread, citing the rise in wholesale wheat prices. I knew prices were going up -- to be expected when the falling value of the dollar encourages exports, I thought. But I was shocked to pay almost $ 4 for a loaf of bread. So I began to wonder -- why? Is the effect of biofuels showing up already in food prices? What's happening?
Here's what I found in my brief review on how much bread I paid for bread. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Food Price Index during the last month is about 50% higher for all foods than a year ago -- led in large part by even greater increases in meat and grain prices, including rice, corn and wheat, "supported by a persistent, tight supply and demand situation'' Bloomberg report Unlike crude oil, wheat prices have not yet hit inflation-adjusted highs -- that honor is left for the period of Soviet Union's desperate wheat purchases during the 1970s. But they have increased 50% in the last 6 months.
The NY Times reported that the world’s wheat stockpiles have fallen to their lowest level in 30 years, and stocks in the United States have dropped to levels unseen since 1948. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations estimates that world wheat production will rise this year to nearly 664 million tons, from about 655 million tons — not enough to replenish stocks and push down prices. In December, the organization noted that high international grain prices were causing food shortages, hoarding and even riots in some places. The NYT reports:
The United States Department of Agriculture’s 10-year forecast, released Tuesday, sees the wheat shortage as temporary. Stockpiles were predicted to fall this year to 312 million bushels, from 456 million bushels, before rebounding to about 700 million bushels by the end of the decade.Higher prices “will encourage additional acreage and production,” the report said. Wheat plantings will rise to 65 million acres in the 2008-9 season, from 60.4 million this year, the Agriculture Department said, though it predicted the number would then fall because of competition from other crops. NYTimes story
So, we can expect a year or so of relief from these prices. And then? "Competition from other crops" -- does that mean biofuels? I'm still looking for an answer, so stay tuned.
April 10, 2008 in Agriculture, Climate Change, Economics, Energy, Governance/Management, International, Land Use, North America, Physical Science, Sustainability, US | Permalink | TrackBack
March 17, 2008
Drink Water for Life
This article is written by Denise Olivera, Columbia School of Journalism, about the Drink Water for Life Challenge originated by 1st Congregational Church, U.C.C. of Salem, Oregon. The article was covered by the Great Reporter newsservice link The congregation pledges to give up some of its lattes, sodas, etc. during Lent and give the money to our Pure Water Fund. In celebration of Lent, spring, or World Water Day, please chose to follow this lead.
March 17, 2008 in Africa, Agriculture, Air Quality, Asia, Australia, Biodiversity, Cases, Climate Change, Constitutional Law, Economics, Energy, Environmental Assessment, EU, Forests/Timber, Governance/Management, International, Land Use, Law, Legislation, Mining, North America, Physical Science, Social Science, South America, Sustainability, Toxic and Hazardous Substances, US, Water Quality, Water Resources | Permalink | TrackBack
March 14, 2008
DOT Downplays Transportation Report on Climate Change Impacts and Prevents Press from Interviewing the Author
HT to Lance Olson Climate Change Yahoo group:
Specifically the report, Impacts of Climate Change and Variability on Transportation Systems and Infrastructure: Gulf Coast Study, analyzes how Gulf Coast roads and highways, transit services, oil and gas pipelines, freight handling ports, transcontinental railroad networks, waterway systems, and airports are likely to be harmed by heat waves, extreme precipitation events, sea level rise, increased hurricane intensity, and storm surge damage associated with climate change. The report outlines why changes must be incorporated in transportation planning now in order to avoid serious future problems.
Three hours after the report was posted online Wednesday, DOT issued an uninformative and misleading press release on a separate Web site. The press release lists only one contact - a DOT press official. Reporters who have tried to interview the report's lead author, Federal Highway Administration official Michael Savonis, have been explicitly told by DOT officials that the author and the press cannot communicate with each other. As lead author, Savonis should be allowed to brief and respond to press inquiries.
March 14, 2008 in Climate Change, Economics, Energy, Environmental Assessment, Governance/Management, Law, North America, Sustainability, US | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
March 07, 2008
Plug in to NRDC's Blog
There's a little something for everyone here -- but some of the most prominent environmental lawyers in the world are blogging here. NRDC Blog
March 7, 2008 in Africa, Agriculture, Air Quality, Asia, Australia, Biodiversity, Cases, Climate Change, Constitutional Law, Economics, Energy, Environmental Assessment, EU, Forests/Timber, Governance/Management, International, Land Use, Law, Legislation, Mining, North America, Physical Science, Social Science, South America, Sustainability, Toxic and Hazardous Substances, US, Water Quality, Water Resources | Permalink | TrackBack
March 05, 2008
Pulitzer Prize Anyone??? Only if you write by March 12th
Well, no prize, but...You can become a Pulitzer Center Citizen Journalist!!!
- Pick an issue. Issues list "Should US environmental standards apply when multinational companies develop the petroleum resources of fragile ecosystems such as Peru's Amazon forest?" should be of particular interest. Extraterritorial application of US environmental standards
- Read the corresponding coverage at Pulitzer’s website.
Your article should draw on information from the Pulitzer Center articles; but you may also include include original reporting of your own or firsthand
experiences. The goal is to provide fresh insight in a compellingly written
article.
- Share your perspective on the issue and write your best article at Helium by March 12th.
March 5, 2008 in Africa, Agriculture, Air Quality, Asia, Australia, Biodiversity, Cases, Climate Change, Constitutional Law, Economics, Energy, Environmental Assessment, EU, Forests/Timber, Governance/Management, International, Land Use, Law, Legislation, Mining, North America, Physical Science, Social Science, South America, Sustainability, Toxic and Hazardous Substances, US, Water Quality, Water Resources | Permalink | TrackBack
By any measure, oil hits historic high price over $ 104
In 1980, when OPEC used its monopoly power to dramatically cut the supply of oil, oil prices reached an inflation-adjusted high between $ 90 and $ 103. The wide variation reflects the difficulty in those times of establishing the market price of oil and the difficulty in choosing a way to adjust for inflation. But now we don't need to worry about those details: oil prices are hitting historic levels. Dow Jones Marketwatch
March 5, 2008 in Economics, Energy, Governance/Management, International, North America, Sustainability, US | Permalink | TrackBack
March 03, 2008
SCOTUS commentary on Exxon Valdez argument
The SCOTUS blog commentary seems to track my view that SCOTUS will limit punitives. SCOTUS blog The context in which the Supreme Court is deciding the case, maritime law, is interesting. The court is acting as a common law court and developing common law rules. So, in theory, it could write any rule, including one that follows State Farm. But, if I understand the context correctly, due process still applies. So even its common law rule will have to comport with State Farm. Right?
March 3, 2008 in Biodiversity, Cases, Constitutional Law, Economics, Energy, Governance/Management, International, Law, North America, Sustainability, US, Water Quality | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
February 28, 2008
The $ 3 Trillion Dollar War
Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz estimates the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to the United States alone will exceed $ 3 trillion -- yes that is not a typo, that is a "t" trillion. His new book, “The Three Trillion Dollar War,” co-authored with Harvard University professor Linda Bilmes, will be released tomorrow. They argue that the cost to America of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has been vastly underestimated. Indeed when factors such as interest on debt, future borrowing for war expenses, a continued military presence in Iraq and lifetime health-care and counseling for veterans are counted, the wars’ cost to the United States ranges from $5 - $ 7 trillion. The book's estimates are the subject of a hearing today by the Joint Economic Committee of Congress. McClatchy News
Obviously $ 3 trillion dollars is real money -- but what could we have bought for $ 3 trillion dollars? The entire US government budget for the next year. Reduction of the national debt by 30%. Or how about something that would actually expand US influence throughout the world -- providing full funding for the entire cost of meeting the Millenium Development Goal of reducing by half the number of people who lack safe drinking water and sanitation is $ 11.3 billion per year for 10 years. Perhaps supplying everyone in the world with safe drinking water and sanitation might cost three times that. So for 10% of the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan we could have saved about 1 million lives per year that are lost to water-borne diseases, provided water for 2 billion people, and sanitation for 4 billion people. And we worry about the genocide in Darfur, Sudan.....
February 28, 2008 in Africa, Asia, Australia, Economics, EU, Governance/Management, International, North America, South America, Sustainability, US, Water Resources | Permalink | TrackBack
The Exxon Valdez argument -- what's law got to do with it, got to do with it?
At least for our result-oriented friend Justice Scalia, its all about the money. Yesterday when the Exxon Valdez punitive damages case was argued before the U.S. Supreme Court, plaintiffs' counsel Jeffrey Fisher suggested hopefully that the justices had agreed to hear the case because of an unsettled aspect of maritime law, Scalia said sharply: "That," the justice said, "and $3.5 billion." SCOTUS argument transcript for Exxon Valdez
So count the votes.
Votes to overturn the appellate court's decision reducing the verdict to $ 2.5 billion and award no punitive damages: Scalia, Roberts, Thomas. Roberts would argue the corporation cannot be punished without culpability. Scalia and Thomas would argue no punitive damage award is ever appropriate.
Votes to reverse and remand for punitive damages to roughly $ 800,000, which would be twice the compensatory damages consistent with the rule of thumb suggested previously in State Farm: Kennedy, Breyer, and Souter.
Votes to affirm: Ginsberg, Stevens. Ginsberg showed her sympathies. Stevens limited his questions to those about Exxon's responsibility for the Captain's actions -- phrased in a way that suggests he believes Exxon is liable.
My guess. 6-2 limiting damages to twice the amount, with concurring opinions by scalia and roberts. Alito is not participating. Lots of media are talking about the consequences of a 4-4 split, which would affirm. I don't think there's any chance of that.
February 28, 2008 in Biodiversity, Cases, Constitutional Law, Economics, Energy, Governance/Management, Law, North America, Sustainability, US, Water Quality | Permalink | TrackBack
February 23, 2008
Election 2008 -- The Candidates Speak in Their Own Words -- Part II:Hillary Clinton
During the last year, Foreign Affairs published a series of pieces on the 2008 presidential election, allowing candidates to frame their foreign policy in their own words. Foreign Affairs Election 2008 I am reviewing those pieces for discussions of global environmental issues, including climate change. I find this a particularly useful approach because it allows candidates to move beyond sound bites and into the substance of what they believe.
I expect to look at all of the current candidates: Democratic and Republican. The first candidate I am reviewed was Barack Obama. Today's post is Hillary Clinton.
Here's the foreign policy of Hillary Clinton with respect to the environment (especially global warming) in her own words:
The tragedy of the last six years is that the Bush administration has squandered the respect, trust, and confidence of even our closest allies and friends. At the dawn of the twenty-first century, the United States enjoyed a unique position. Our world leadership was widely accepted and respected, as we strengthened old alliances and built new ones, worked for peace across the globe, advanced nonproliferation, and modernized our military....At the same time, we embarked on an unprecedented course of unilateralism:..Our withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol and refusal to participate in any international effort to deal with the tremendous challenges of climate change further damaged our international standing....At a moment in history when the world's most pressing problems require unprecedented cooperation, this administration has unilaterally pursued policies that are widely disliked and distrusted....
We need more than vision, however, to achieve the world we want. We must face up to an unprecedented array of challenges in the twenty-first century, threats from states, nonstate actors, and nature itself...Finally, the next president will have to address the looming long-term threats of climate change and a new wave of global health epidemics....
But China's rise is also creating new challenges. The Chinese have finally begun to realize that their rapid economic growth is coming at a tremendous environmental price. The United States should undertake a joint program with China and Japan to develop new clean-energy sources, promote greater energy efficiency, and combat climate change. This program would be part of an overall energy policy that would require a dramatic reduction in U.S. dependence on foreign oil....
We must find additional ways for Australia, India, Japan, and the United States to cooperate on issues of mutual concern, including combating terrorism, cooperating on global climate control, protecting global energy supplies, and deepening global economic development...
As president, I will make the fight against global warming a priority. We cannot solve the climate crisis alone, and the rest of the world cannot solve it without us. The United States must reengage in international climate change negotiations and provide the leadership needed to reach a binding global climate agreement. But we must first restore our own credibility on the issue. Rapidly emerging countries, such as China, will not curb their own carbon emissions until the United States has demonstrated a serious commitment to reducing its own through a market-based cap-and-trade approach.
We must also help developing nations build efficient and environmentally sustainable domestic energy infrastructures. Two-thirds of the growth in energy demand over the next 25 years will come from countries with little existing infrastructure. Many opportunities exist here as well: Mali is electrifying rural communities with solar power, Malawi is developing a biomass energy strategy, and all of Africa can provide carbon credits to the West.
Finally, we must create formal links between the International Energy Agency and China and India and create an "E-8" international forum modeled on the G-8. This group would be comprised of the world's major carbon-emitting nations and hold an annual summit devoted to international ecological and resource issues.
February 23, 2008 in Africa, Agriculture, Air Quality, Asia, Australia, Biodiversity, Cases, Climate Change, Constitutional Law, Economics, Energy, Environmental Assessment, EU, Forests/Timber, Governance/Management, International, Land Use, Law, Legislation, Mining, North America, Physical Science, Social Science, South America, Sustainability, Toxic and Hazardous Substances, US, Water Quality, Water Resources | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
February 18, 2008
ExxonMobil Deliberately Misled Blogosphere About Funding Global Warming Denialists
Yesterday's post on ExxonMobil (2/17/08) highlighted that it had
funded the Frontiers of Freedom and its Center for Science and Public Policy (CSPP link ) during 2006, contrary to its claim that it was not
funding global warming denialists. You may wonder about the
context in which ExxonMobil made this claim.
Remember last year when the IPCC 4th Assessment report came out – the Guardian wrote a story about American Enterprise Institute soliciting result-oriented denialist analyses of the IPCC report and that report included information about ExxonMobil’s funding of AEI. Guardian 2/2/07 Report. During conversations in late January and early February, 2007 with me and other bloggers, Maria Surma Manka from Green Options [Giant Part I Post; Giant Part II Post], Jesse Jenkins from Watthead [ExxonMobil Posts], Tom Yulsman from Prometheus [Post on earlier conversations -- I can't recall whether Tom participated in the February call, but I believe he did], Stuart Staniford from The Oil Drum [ExxonMobil AEI Post], Ken Cohen, ExxonMobil’s Vice President for Public Affairs had assured us that ExxonMobil was no longer funding controversial denialist groups like Competitive Enterprise Institute and it did not fund AEI with the intent that they engage in denialist analyses. The first conference call occurred in late January and the second on the same day that the Guardian story and the IPCC report came out.
Cohen spent considerable time before the IPCC report came out in January 2007 trying to convince us that ExxonMobil was changing its Neanderthal stripes, truly accepted that anthropogenic global warming was a serious problem, and was ready to take a responsible role in the future discussions of how to reduce GHG emissions. Admittedly Cohen did that in the truly diplomatic way of saying that ExxonMobil had not effectively communicated its position that anthropogenic global warming is real and that GHG emissions need to be reduced.
During the February call, Cohen knew that the Guardian’s report about ExxonMobil’s funding of AEI and AEI’s alleged solicitation of result-oriented denialist analyses threatened to undercut public perception of ExxonMobil as a responsible actor. Indeed, those reports ended up on CNN. So, Cohen went out of his way to schedule this call about the Guardian’s allegations.
As Maria recounted that discussion:
“We had no knowledge that this was going on,” insisted Cohen. He explained that Exxon funds a lot of different groups, and “when we fund them, we want good analysis." Exxon does not condone what AEI did, but Cohen confirmed that it does continues to fund AEI, although other groups like the Competitive Enterprise Institute are not funded by them anymore.
Cohen assured us that Exxon is “trying to be a constructive player in the policy discussion and not associate [themselves] with those that are marginalized and are not welcome in that discussion.” The IPCC report “is what it is,” and Exxon does not believe in engaging in scientific research that preordains an answer. Cohen:
…that's the issue with AEI: Are they preordaining an answer?…I can understand taking a market approach or a government interventionist approach, but this is not a question of trying to find who’s right or who’s wrong. Let’s let the process work.
But, I asked, how can you grant AEI nearly two million dollars (n.b. slsmith -over the entirety of AEI operations, not annually) and not know what they’re doing with the money? Turns out that Exxon conveniently funds the “general operations” of AEI, not specific programs that would allow them to track how the money is being used. Perhaps Exxon needs to think hard next time before it funds an organization so clearly disinterested in constructive solutions.
Cohen was consistently explicit in Exxon's
position that global warming is happening and mainly caused by human
activities. If that is true, then how will Exxon fight the huge misperception
that it’s still the planet's largest naysayer? Cohen conceded that the company
needed to do a better job of communicating its position on global warming,
rather than allowing a fact sheet or
news release on their website to do the work.
Cohen kept telling us that the 2006 contribution report was coming out, but declined to give us any specifics about ExxonMobil’s contributions to AEI or other groups, but he said Competitive Enterprise Institute was no longer funded. Cohen continued to defend AEI as a responsible, albeit very conservative, think tank doing legitimate policy research. And frankly, I supported him on that score during the calls because at least some of the work done by AEI is just that. And I was not nearly as skeptical as others about ExxonMobil's protestations of innocence. See my post on the AEI matter ELP Blog Post on AEI
Here’s why yesterday I called ExxonMobil’s behavior in early 2007 deliberately misleading. Initial Post on 2006 Funding Report
As the quoted material above indicates, Cohen in early February 2007 led us to believe that ExxonMobil was no longer in the denialist camp and did not condone AEI soliciting denialist analysis (if indeed that’s what they had done). He claimed that ExxonMobil no longer associated with marginalized denialist groups. He suggested that the 2006 report would indicate that ExxonMobily had disassociated itself from the Competitive Enterprise Institute, which brought us the classic, sadly humorous “Carbon dioxide: they call it pollution, we call it life!” TV commercials. You tube link to CEI Energy commercial.
From this discussion, it seems clear that Cohen knew precisely which “public information and policy research” organizations that were funded by ExxonMobil during 2006. Yet, while he perhaps sat with the 2006 report in front of him and refused to release its contents, the 2006 contribution report later showed that in 2006 ExxonMobil provided $ 180,000 to Frontiers of Freedom and the CSPP, the policy center it created with ExxonMobil's funding several years ago. P.S. Cohen denied funding CSPP in an e-mail today, but unless my sight is failing: CSPP is reported as the Science and Policy Center under Frontiers of Freedom Download 2006 ExxonMobil's "public information and policy research" contributions If that’s not supporting denialists and associating with marginalized denialist groups, I don’t know what is!
Take a good look at the high quality analysis of global warming that CSPP provides:
(1) the amicus curiae brief filed in Mass. v. EPA by lawyers from the Competitive Enterprise Institute
(2) Dr. Ball's The Science Isn't Settled powerpoint presentation - Dr. Ball is the Chairman of the Natural Resources Stewardship Project which describes its first project on understanding climate change as "a proactive grassroots campaign to counter the Kyoto Protocol and other greenhouse gas reduction schemes." NRSP describes Dr. Ball as the "lead participant in a number of recent made-for-TV climate change videos, The Great Global Warming Swindle."
(3) Joe Daleo's Congressional Seminar on global warming in March 2007 devoted to disputing the IPCC's report and arguing that anthropogenic global warming from greenhouse gas emissions are not a real problem.
(4) CSPP's May 2007 rebuttal of Al Gore's testimony, which suggests there is no scientific consensus that CO2 emissions are causing global warming
(5) a nonsensical piece on "Gore's Guru," positing that because Dr. Revelle, who died in 1991, had cautioned in 1988 and 1991 against drawing rash conclusions about global warming might still take that position. I call it nonsensical because Dr. Revelle suggested that we wait 10-20 years to see if the trends continued. We've waited and now we've answered that question: between 1998 and 2008 we witnessed incredibly dramatic global warming and the scientific community has spent the last 10-20 years studying whether indeed human-caused GHG emissions are responsible for much of that warming. We and ExxonMobil know its answer to that question.
Obviously, the blogosphere is not the only group worried about ExxonMobil's funding choices. Britain's national academy of scientists, The Royal Society, in September 2006 took ExxonMobil to task about its funding of denialist groups. Royal Society letter
Well, maybe ExxonMobil finally pulled the plug on FF and its “Science and Policy” center in 2007 (and so Cohen was just tap-dancing around the embarrassing, but not on-going, reality of funding denialists). Although, FF's CSPP might survive: it apparently does have funding from two major tobacco companies!
Maybe ExxonMobil has rethought its policy on funding organizations whose primary contribution to the climate change discussion is to distribute continued attacks on those who conclude that the current state of climate science supports an effective policy to reduce GHG emissions. I’d like to think so – but we won’t know until ExxonMobil releases its 2007 contributions report. I requested that Cohen release it to me; he declined.
However, even if it had
defunded FF and CSPP (and other denialist groups), I’m not sure I’d believe that ExxonMobil hadn’t found new denialist outlets to fund.
If the Guardian and other media or the blogosphere produce a big enough stir on this story, perhaps it will. But I am astonished that, just as it was selling itself as a responsible player on global warming, ExxonMobil would act so irresponsibly and so deceptively. And I am deeply embarrassed at my naievete in believing what Ken Cohen and ExxonMobil were selling about ExxonMobil’s born again conversion to a responsible position on anthropogenic global warming.
Watch out, though, ExxonMobil knows that the question is no
longer whether global warming is real, but what to do about it. You can bet it
is smart enough and devious enough to fund a lot of “public information and
policy research” that will muddle policy discussions about global warming
legislation and may assure that not much is done to regulate GHG emissions from oil and gas and that what is done doesn’t cut hardly at all
into ExxonMobil’s astounding profits: $41 billion for 2007 and almost $ 12 billion in the 4th quarter of 2007 alone. ExxonMobil profits post
I have a modest suggestion for ExxonMobil: do not fund organizations whose published information, analysis, and research on global warming or climate change has primarily sought to undercut the conclusions reached by the joint statement published in 2005 by 11 national academies of science, including the United States, Canada, Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, India, Brazil and China . That statement is linked here: Joint Science Academies' Statement: Global Response to Climate Change
Unless and until ExxonMobil stops funding the sort of stuff that Center for Science and Public Policy is peddling, I hope that the new President and Congress will not believe a single word that is said about global warming policy by ExxonMobil or any of denialist and anti-regulatory "public information and policy research" organizations it funds.
February 18, 2008 in Africa, Agriculture, Air Quality, Asia, Australia, Biodiversity, Cases, Climate Change, Constitutional Law, Economics, Energy, Environmental Assessment, EU, Forests/Timber, Governance/Management, International, Land Use, Law, Legislation, Mining, North America, Physical Science, Social Science, South America, Sustainability, Toxic and Hazardous Substances, US, Water Quality, Water Resources | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Foreign Affairs - The Candidates in Their Own Words --
During the last year, Foreign Affairs published a series of pieces on the 2008 presidential election, allowing candidates to frame their foreign policy in their own words. Foreign Affairs Election 2008 I am reviewing those pieces for discussions of global environmental issues, including climate change. I find this a particularly useful approach because it allows candidates to move beyond sound bites and into the substance of what they believe.
I expect to look at all of the current candidates: Democratic and Republican. The first candidate I am reviewing is Barack Obama. I chose Obama first in part because I am torn between Clinton and Obama. Although I respect John McCain's leadership on climate change, I could not vote for a Republican after the 1994 - 2006 Republican congressional legacy and the debacle of Bush's presidency for virtually every freedom and human need. I also disagree with McCain's position on Iraq.
In his own words, Barack Obama primarily addresses climate change as a matter of global policy. He ties the US response to global warming to his overall foreign policy in this way:
Strengthened institutions and invigorated alliances and partnerships are especially crucial if we are to defeat the epochal, man-made threat to the planet: climate change. Without dramatic changes, rising sea levels will flood coastal regions around the world, including much of the eastern seaboard. Warmer temperatures and declining rainfall will reduce crop yields, increasing conflict, famine, disease, and poverty. By 2050, famine could displace more than 250 million people worldwide. That means increased instability in some of the most volatile parts of the world.
As the world's largest producer of greenhouse gases, America has the responsibility to lead. While many of our industrial partners are working hard to reduce their emissions, we are increasing ours at a steady clip -- by more than ten percent per decade. As president, I intend to enact a cap-and-trade system that will dramatically reduce our carbon emissions. And I will work to finally free America of its dependence on foreign oil -- by using energy more efficiently in our cars, factories, and homes, relying more on renewable sources of electricity, and harnessing the potential of biofuels.
Getting our own house in order is only a first step. China will soon replace America as the world's largest emitter of greenhouse gases. Clean energy development must be a central focus in our relationships with major countries in Europe and Asia. I will invest in efficient and clean technologies at home while using our assistance policies and export promotions to help developing countries leapfrog the carbon-energy-intensive stage of development. We need a global response to climate change that includes binding and enforceable commitments to reducing emissions, especially for those that pollute the most: the United States, China, India, the European Union, and Russia. This challenge is massive, but rising to it will also bring new benefits to America. By 2050, global demand for low-carbon energy could create an annual market worth $500 billion. Meeting that demand would open new frontiers for American entrepreneurs and workers.
February 18, 2008 in Africa, Agriculture, Air Quality, Asia, Australia, Biodiversity, Cases, Climate Change, Constitutional Law, Economics, Energy, Environmental Assessment, EU, Forests/Timber, Governance/Management, International, Land Use, Law, Legislation, Mining, North America, Physical Science, Social Science, South America, Sustainability, Toxic and Hazardous Substances, US, Water Quality, Water Resources | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
February 06, 2008
Candidates Compete for Green Title
After the Bush administration legacy, it is refreshing to see both Democratic and some Republican candidates competing for the title of Mr. or Ms. Green. See the comparison in Grist.
February 6, 2008 in Africa, Agriculture, Air Quality, Asia, Australia, Biodiversity, Cases, Climate Change, Constitutional Law, Economics, Energy, Environmental Assessment, EU, Forests/Timber, Governance/Management, International, Land Use, Law, Legislation, Mining, North America, Physical Science, Social Science, South America, Sustainability, Toxic and Hazardous Substances, US, Water Quality, Water Resources | Permalink | TrackBack
October 18, 2007
Ruth Norton Smith (Nov 27, 1921 - Oct 14, 2007)
Ruth Norton Smith died peacefully in Boulder, Colorado on Sunday, October 14, 2007 after enjoying her full measure of life.
Ruth was born in Oklahoma on November 27, 1921 in a tent in Oklahoma. She was raised during the Depression years, moving frequently as her family farmed and followed the tunneling, mining, and other work available to her father. Ultimately, her family settled in southern California. There Ruth met the love of her life, Herbert Frank Smith, a carpenter and union organizer, whom she married on June 4, 1941.
In WW II, while her husband served in the Navy in the South Pacific, Ruth became a Rosie the Riveter, building bombers, and then joined the Women’s Army Corps, serving as a nurse. After the war, they settled in the Los Angeles area, where she became a real estate broker and the mom of two children, Greg in 1948 and Susan in 1953.
In 1955, her family moved to Colorado where she worked side by side with her husband to build two of the largest home-building companies in Colorado, Happy Homes and Fireside Homes, and a prominent real estate firm. When she left real estate and home-building in the late 1960s, Ruth became a political and market researcher for Research Services, Inc. and later became a researcher for the U.S. Census Bureau, from which she retired in 1989.
Ruth was a life-long Democratic political activist with a passion for peace, civil rights, and all aspects of social justice. She served in every capacity: running political campaigns, serving as a precinct committee woman, county, congressional district, and state delegate, pollwatcher, and election judge. She worked with Metro Denver Fair Housing center as a realtor, helping the first African-American families in Jefferson County to find housing. She volunteered with youth mentoring programs in Four Points and with Metro Denver Urban Coalition, Another Mother for Peace, Meals on Wheels, and countless other organizations.
Ruth was too busy with her family, volunteer work and career for many hobbies. She thrived on the stimulating conversations born by inviting friends and guests from all over the world and from every walk of life to dinner. She also found great pleasure in reading, traveling and attending theatre and opera performances.
Ruth was a warm, intelligent, extroverted vibrant woman who loved and was loved by virtually everyone she met. Her loss will be sorely missed by the many friends and family she has left behind, including her sister Lorene, her brother Fred, her son Greg, her daughter Susan, and her grandchildren Clint Smith, Brent Smith, Nathanial Smith-Tripp and Sarah Smith-Tripp. Her family and friends will gather at Mt. Vernon Country Club on Sunday, October 21, 2007 at 10:30 am for a celebration of her life. The family requests that no flowers be sent and suggests donations to Meals on Wheel or a charity of your choice.
October 18, 2007 in Africa, Agriculture, Air Quality, Asia, Australia, Biodiversity, Cases, Climate Change, Constitutional Law, Economics, Energy, Environmental Assessment, EU, Forests/Timber, Governance/Management, International, Land Use, Law, Legislation, Mining, North America, Physical Science, Social Science, South America, Sustainability, Toxic and Hazardous Substances, US, Water Quality, Water Resources | Permalink | TrackBack
October 16, 2007
Thank you to Read/Write Web
Read/Write Web has listed Environmental Law Prof Blog prominently in its list of the 35 best environmental blogs. [35 best environmental blogs] Thanks!
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September 19, 2007
Who Owns the Arctic?
With the Russian flag planting last monthn and Canada promising to build military bases, the race for the Arctic has begun in earnest. Some of the better news articles can be found below. A most intriguing suggestion by my Energy Law students is that the Arctic Circle indigenous peoples, who currently have six non-voting participants in the Arctic Council, could seek recognition as a sovereign nation -- and assert claims against all of the current claimants. That would certainly change the terms of debate!
Chicago Tribute link
Arctic claims are poles apartRussian flag-planting a signal of global race for vast oil, gas deposits <>
By Tom Hundley
Tribune foreign correspondent
TROMSO, Norway
Not
since 1925, when local hero Roald Amundsen set off from here on his
first attempt to fly over the North Pole, has there been so much
excitement in Tromso, a picturesque port that has long been used as a
staging area for Arctic exploration.
The buzz began early this month when an expedition led by Russian
lawmakers used a miniature submarine to plant a Russian flag on the
seabed 2 miles under the North Pole, symbolically staking a claim to
the vast mineral and energy wealth that lies under the ice cap.
That ruffled feathers in Canada, another country with Arctic ambitions.
"This isn't the 15th Century," scoffed Foreign Minister Peter McKay,
referring to a time when explorers claimed whole continents for God and
king.
But a week later, Prime Minister Stephen Harper visited Canada's far
north and announced plans to build two military bases in its polar
regions. And now two more claimants to the Arctic seas, the U.S. and
Denmark, have launched their own polar mapping expeditions. The Danish
team set sail from Tromso Aug. 12, while the American icebreaker Healy
departed from Barrow, Alaska, last week.
The flurry of activity recalls the heyday of polar expeditions a
century ago when Robert Peary, Richard Byrd, Robert Scott, Amundsen and
others raced to be the first to the Arctic and then the Antarctic.
But as the latter-day scramble for strategic resources beneath the ice
begins to heat up, Norway, a country with deep Arctic roots both
physical and psychological, takes the long view. The Norwegian
government has emphasized the need to structure a long-term system of
international governance for the polar regions; its scientists and
researchers are calling for cooperation rather than competition.
Here in Tromso, 220 miles north of the Arctic Circle, Russia's flag-planting produced wry smiles.
'A kind of showbiz act'
"Most people here saw it as a kind of showbiz act, more for internal
political purposes than for international science or research," said
Geir Gotaas head of administration at Tromso University's Roald
Amundsen Center for Arctic Research.
"It doesn't mean a thing," said university President Jarle Aarbakke.
"All it does is confirm what we knew in advance -- that the Russians
are very interested in the polar region."
The reason is no secret. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates that
about a quarter of the world's undiscovered oil and gas lies beneath
the Arctic's waters.
Until recently, these deposits were thought inaccessible. But as the
polar ice cap succumbs to global warming more quickly than expected and
with new subsurface pumping technologies coming online, some experts
believe the Arctic could go into production in a generation.
While there is some uncertainty about the causes of climate change, the
fact that it is occurring is not in dispute, especially in the polar
regions, where temperatures are rising at double the rate of those in
more temperate latitudes, and the ice cap is melting three times faster
than anticipated.
What this means, according to a UN climate survey published earlier
this year, is that the polar ice cap will no longer be a year-round
phenomenon, and the world is likely to have a new navigable ocean in
about 2030-2050.
Going "over the top" would shorten the sea route between the Far East
and Western Europe by a third. A major realignment of the world's
shipping lanes would result. Fish stocks also would migrate north,
bringing fishing fleets.
All of this would bring profound change to Norway, a small nation of
4.5 million people that tends to think of itself as an isolated country
on the northern periphery of Europe. Suddenly, it would find itself
thrust into the thick of things.
For Norwegians, the Arctic has always been an important part of their national identity and patrimony.
"We don't have a culture of heroes in Norway, but Amundsen is a hero,"
said Gunn Sissel Jaklin, communications director at the Norwegian Polar
Institute, a research organization in Tromso.
"Exploring the Arctic is part of Norwegian history; it was part of
establishing ourselves as a nation and forming a national identity,"
she said.
On his recent tour of Canada's Arctic region, Prime Minister Harper
declared that "Canada's new government understands that the first
principle of Arctic sovereignty is: Use it or lose it." Canada's claims
include sovereignty over the Northwest Passage sea lanes, a potential
source of disagreement with the United States.
The "use it or lose it" philosophy is something Norwegian governments have always understood.
"Norway's strategy to protect its claim is, No. 1, to be present.
Presence is used to research, develop and harvest the Arctic," said
Tromso University's Aarbakke.
"You have to be there on the sea, with the coast guard. You have to
take pirate fishing very seriously. And when it comes to oil and gas,
you have to be there at the negotiating table, with the scientific
proofs," he said.
For Norway, the elephant in the room is actually a bear. Norway shares
a 120-mile Arctic border with Russia, and the Norwegians learned long
ago that you don't poke the Russian bear in the eye.
Which explains, in part, Norway's studied non-reaction to Russia's underwater flag-waving.
"The Russians are doing what the UN asked them to do -- they are
substantiating their claim. It's in compliance with international law
... and the commission will decide if they are right or wrong," said
Liv Monica Stubholt, Norway's deputy minister for foreign affairs,
referring to the UN's Commission on the Limitations of the Continental
Shelf, a body of scientists that reviews claims to territory beneath
the sea.
In the Arctic, the key dispute is whether the Lomonosov Ridge, a vast
underwater mountain range stretching across the North Pole, is an
extension of Russia's continental shelf, or a part of Greenland, which
belongs to Denmark.
Rather than point fingers at Russia, Stubholt said Norway would prefer
to see the U.S. Senate ratify the 13-year-old UN Convention on the Law
of the Sea, which would give the U.S. a seat on the commission and a
stake in a non-belligerent resolution of the competing claims.
Ratification has been blocked by a line of conservative lawmakers going
back to former Sen. Jesse Helms, (R.-N.C.) and today led Sen. James
Inhofe (R.-Okla.). They fear that signing the treaty would cede too
much control to the UN.
Administration backs treaty
But the Bush administration now favors signing the treaty, and Sen.
Richard Lugar (R.-Ind.), the ranking Republican on the Foreign
Relations Committee, will try to muster support for its ratification
when Congress reconvenes.
"If the U.S. doesn't sign the treaty soon, they will be put aside when
the decisions are taken," said Johan Petter Barlindhaug, a Tromso
businessman who specializes in Arctic construction projects.
Toronto Star Link
The Arctic Cold War
Andrew Chung
With
precious little ability to enforce its claims in the Arctic, Canada may
be falling behind in asserting itself not in law, but in real life.Others
think cases where conflicts are already apparent – Canada and Denmark
have claims to the same continental shelf as Russia, even if we don't
precisely know where those claims lie – render the commission
irrelevant. "The commission can't deal with information presented where
there is a conflict," explains University of Victoria's Ted McDorman,
an expert in the Law of the Sea. "It has no power to decide ... so like
other ocean boundary disputes, it will ultimately come down to some
level of negotiation. Political negotiation."In these cases, power may, in the end, trump
international law in determining who gets what in the Arctic, he says.
"Power means the ability to keep other people out."He doesn't think
there would be war, but the concern is "Russia has a head start,"
Posner argues. "It's got a lot of ships that can operate in the Arctic.
Canada has very few."Byers has
said Canada needs heavy-duty icebreakers, not the smaller vessels the
government has promised to the navy, to properly assert its sovereignty
in the Passage, but also to properly research its claim to the Arctic
seabed.<> Foreign
minister Peter MacKay was indeed correct when he said of Russia’s
provocative flag planting in the North Pole’s sea bed that, “This isn’t
the 15th Century.” He was suggesting that in our modern, more
civilized world, codified international law, and not antediluvian games
of finders-keepers, will decide claims of geographic ownership. And
Russia, a sophisticated player in global diplomacy, has made statements
in the past that it couldn’t agree more. But then MacKay's
Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, said he was amazed by Canada's
response. "We're not throwing flags around," he told the Russian media.
"We just do what other discoverers did." Most experts believe
that international law, in the form of the United Nations' Convention
on the Law of the Sea, will play an integral role in figuring out the
unfolding conflict in the Arctic. But don't count out the
intrepid explorers of yesteryear and the kind of de facto international
law they practised. In spite of the convention, some believe it's
possible for countries to operate in a manner predating international
law – or to ignore whatever decisions may flow from it. The
story of the Arctic is still one of the future. Currently, it's a
frozen hinterland, but with the polar ice caps melting, some
predictions have it opening up to serious exploration and economic
exploitation within 30 years. And the U.S. Geological Survey estimates
that 25 per cent of the world's undiscovered oil and gas remains locked
up deep beneath the frigid waters. "It's striking that the
confluence of high energy prices and melting has created a vast new
area that countries are going to have to fight over," says
international law specialist Eric Posner. "Not necessarily in a
military sense, but they will struggle over this area, and we haven't
had a situation like this for quite a long time." One of the main
struggles will be over the 1,800-kilometre-long Lomonosov Ridge between
Siberia and Canada's Ellesmere Island. Russia believes the ridge
belongs to it, and therefore so does the North Pole. Its dramatic
submarine dive in the Arctic this month, the first to reach the polar
sea bottom and carried out by Russian scientists, was to "prove" that
fact. The next step is for Russia to submit its scientific
findings to a UN commission of geological experts struck to review any
country's claim to the sea bed far beyond its borders – a "continental
shelf." These procedures were set out in the 1982 Law of the Sea
Convention, regarded as one of the most important pieces of
international law, governing the use of our vast oceans and their rich
resources. For many centuries, the seas belonged to no one.
Except for a narrow band around a nation's coastline, the high seas
were a free-for- all. But growing concerns over foreign fishing vessels
and pollution, and knowledge of the rich mineral and oil wealth under
the sea floor, changed everything. In 1945, U.S. President Harry
Truman unilaterally tossed aside the freedom-of-the-seas doctrine and
proclaimed exclusive ownership of its huge continental shelf. Other
countries, including Canada, soon followed, asserting control over
waters sometimes hundreds of kilometres beyond their borders. By the
1950s, oil drilling on the ocean floor was rapidly expanding. The
Law of the Sea eventually gave legal status to navigational rights,
resources, marine protection and territorial sea limits, as well as a
way to settle disputes. It established a generous "exclusive economic
zone" for coastal states, extending 320 kilometres from their
shorelines. But potential riches, from gas and oil to diamonds and
gold, didn't always stop there. States realized continental shelves
would need to be accounted for. A process to submit claims to
these extensions and a commission to evaluate them and make
recommendations was set up. Russia made the first claim, in 2001,
followed by Brazil and six other countries. The most recent was France
earlier this year. Canada has yet to make its claim. How that process will play out remains anyone's guess, because no claim has yet been resolved. For
this country, says Michael Byers, Canada Research Chair in global
politics and international law at UBC, the Law of the Sea is "a good
news story in terms of the rule of law and of multilateral cooperation
in a situation where one of the alternatives is a military contest over
resources, which is the last thing any sane person from a less powerful
country would want. International law is what protects our interests
most of the time." Byers says the conflict over the Arctic
involves only those areas where nations' continental shelves may
"overlap," perhaps less than 10 per cent of any claims made or yet to
come. He maintains that the fact the treaty is steeped in science,
along with the expertise of the commission, will lend the whole process
legitimacy and compel countries to accept the commission's
recommendations. But even if it's all about science, this won't be an exact science.
Countries will, for instance, try to justify ownership over the same
seabed. "The Russians are going to make the most extensive claim
possible," Byers predicts. "It will be based on an interpretation of
the scientific evidence that is as favourable to them as possible." International law
allows for disputes to be adjudicated through a special Law of the Sea
Tribunal. But Canada and Russia, in ratifying the treaty, both declared
they would opt out of being compelled to send a dispute over maritime
boundaries to the tribunal. It could be years before nations
reach that stage. Canada is still gathering details for its submissions
to the UN. Countries have just 10 years after ratifying the Law o
