Climate Capsule Week of November 24
Monday, November 24, 2008(National Wildlife Federation)
Week of November 24, 2008
|
Highlight of the
Week President-elect Barack Obama delivered a
speech via video
recently to the Governors
Global Climate Summit in From
December 1-12, world leaders will gather in
The
American public stands behind Obama’s call for
action. A
new poll from Zogby International of 2008
election voters shows 78 percent of voters
agree that investing in clean energy is
important to revitalizing “The
time for Report: Southeast Water Becoming More
Uncertain National
Wildlife Federation has released its new
report about water use and drought in the
southeastern Since 1960, the region’s population doubled and water use for municipalities, irrigation, and thermoelectric power more than tripled. The Southeast is one of the fastest growing parts of the country—58 of the fastest 100 growing counties in the nation are in the nine states of the Southeast. More Variable and Uncertain Water Supply: Global Warming’s Wake-Up Call for the Southeastern U.S. details how: ·
Water supply in the
· Rapidly expanding population, irrigation, and thermoelectric power use has increased water demand; · The astonishing biodiversity of the Southeast is also at risk; and · The Southeast should plan for increasing variability in water supply. Strategies for
meeting the increasing demand for water in the
region have not typically accounted for the
regular occurrence of drought, as illustrated
by recent droughts. During 2007 alone, crop
losses are estimated at more than $1.3 billion
and wildfire ravaged 600,000 acres in
For more information, please contact: Aileo Weinmann, National Wildlife Federation, 202-797-6801, weinmanna@nwf.org. Happening This
Week |
Quote:
—Tom
Perriello, the new Representative-elect for
Economic Message of
the Week An increasing number of leading corporations and environmental organizations are calling on Congress and the incoming Obama Administration to pass meaningful climate protection legislation to drive economic recovery. Two major coalitions, USCAP and BICEP, point to the economic benefits and job creation that will result from taking such action. Representatives
for U.S. Climate
Action Partnership, a coalition
of 26 corporations and 6 non-profit
environmental and conservation organizations,
recently held a USCAP said that cap-and-trade legislation is urgently needed to prevent the serious impacts of climate change. Legislation is necessary to spur innovation in green technologies that will create jobs, increase economic activity and provide the foundation for a vibrant, low-carbon economy. Nike,
Starbucks, Levi Strauss, Sun Microsystems and
Timberland have formed a new coalition called
Business for
Innovative Climate and Energy
Policy (BICEP).
This new
business coalition also calls for strong
climate and energy legislation to spur the
clean energy economy and reduce global warming
pollution.
BICEP’s key principles
include stimulating renewable energy, promoting
energy efficiency and green jobs, requiring 100
percent auction of carbon allowances, and
limiting new coal-fired power plants to those
that capture and store carbon emissions.
Rep.
Waxman: New House
Energy And Commerce Chairman
House Democrats have selected Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) as the next chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, succeeding current Chairman John Dingell (D-MI). “We congratulate incoming Chairman Henry Waxman and applaud him for his commitment to 'achieve energy independence and tackle climate change' as top priorities for committee action,” said Larry Schweiger, president and CEO of the National Wildlife Federation. “Congressman Waxman has laid out his climate legislation principles, which are supported by National Wildlife Federation and have already won support from more than 150 members of the House. We welcome the opportunity to work with him, the incoming Obama Administration and members of both sides of the aisle to enact climate legislation in 2009. “We have been delighted to work with Congressman John Dingell and look forward to continuing our work together on wildlife conservation and climate change. He has been a conservation champion for more than a half century. We at the National Wildlife Federation owe him our deep appreciation for an extraordinary environmental legacy, a legacy that he will continue to build in the months and years ahead.” |
