Climate Capsule Week of December 29
Monday, December 29, 2008
(National Wildlife Federation)
Highlight of the
Week Quote: Happening This
WeekWeek of
December
29
Repower America with Green Education,
Green Jobs, Green
Schools
National
Wildlife Federation has joined environmental
and conservation
organizations in recommending a green stimulus
proposal that would
repower America. The proposal would jumpstart
our economy by creating
as many as 3.6 million jobs, reducing
pollution, protecting public
health and safety, and restoring the
environment.
“Clean
energy investments create jobs, rebuild and
refuel our economy, and
reduce the pollution that is accelerating
global warming,” said Larry
Schweiger, President & CEO, National
Wildlife Federation. “The
investments in clean energy that forestall a
climate meltdown will aid
our recovery from the global financial
meltdown.”
A key area for
investment is in education and training,
because educational services
generate 23.1 jobs per $1 million in spending,
nearly five times more
jobs created than oil and natural gas sector
spending.
“Investing
in people through green education and training
is essential to get our
economy back on track,” said Kevin Coyle,
Vice President of Education
and Training, National Wildlife Federation.
“That’s why the
environmental community is urging a $9.2
billion investment for green
schools and colleges, environmental education
and green job training in
America’s classrooms to create 289,000 jobs
in the short-term and
ensure long-term economic growth.”
On
Thursday, January 8,
2009, experts will hold a telephone press
conference to discuss
recommendations for economic stimulus
investments in education and
training, one of the best investments for
short-term job creation and
sustained, across-the-board economic growth.
When:
Thursday, January 8, 2009 at 11a.m. -
12p.m.
Dial-In: Call
1-800-791-2345; Pin 16755
#
Contact: Aileo
Weinmann, National Wildlife Federation,
202-797-6801, weinmanna@nwf.org
The agriculture sector presents another
opportunity to create “clean-tech” jobs,
especially in rural areas. The
Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008
significantly expanded funding for USDA energy
programs, including
renewable energy systems, energy efficiency
improvements, and the
development of next generation feedstocks. Full
funding of these
programs and more could help to launch
thousands of jobs.
“While
frequently among the first programs to be cut
in tough economic times,
investments in USDA energy programs are
critical to launching thousands
of new jobs in our rural communities. Investing
in sustainable
next-generation biofuels, renewable energy, and
energy efficiency will
recharge America’s rural economy and restore
the environment,” said
Julie Sibbing, Director of Global Warming and
Agriculture, National
Wildlife Federation.
Climate Change May
Increase Human Health
Problems
Global
warming could lead to a rise in human health
problems due to exposure to harmful air
pollutants, according
to researchers in a study published in the
journal Environmental Health
Perspectives.
The
reviewers looked at how a changing climate
changes ground-level ozone,
a known lung irritant that affects tissues and
respiratory function.
According
to the study,
exposure to elevated levels of ozone is
associated with increased
hospital admissions for a range of respiratory
issues including asthma,
pneumonia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease.
"Projections
suggest that climate change will increase
concentrations of
tropospheric ozone, at least in high-income
countries, when precursor
emissions are held constant, which would
increase morbidity and
mortality," review authors Kristie L. Ebi and
Glenn McGregor wrote.
"The
potential impact of climate change on ozone
concentrations have not
been projected for low-income countries, many
of which currently have
significantly higher ozone
exposures.”
"As
we reduce vehicle-based emissions of
pollutants, urban concentrations
of ozone will also be reduced, thereby
positively protecting the health
of humans for generations to come,” said the
journal’s editor-in-chief
Hugh A. Tilson.
The
World Health Organization also asserts that
climate and weather have powerful direct and
indirect impacts on human
life.
“The fate of our economy and
environment hinge on how quickly we move to
repower America with clean energy
solutions.”
—Larry Schweiger, President
& CEO, National Wildlife
Federation.
Economic Message
of the
Week
New Jersey Releases Implementation
Strategies For Climate Action
Plan
New
Jersey has released a draft recommendation
report to deal with global
warming. The report provides scientific
analyses about major sources of
greenhouse gas emissions and outlines actions
that are needed to meet
emission limits established under the New
Jersey Global Warming
Response Act.
The state’s
Department of Environmental Protection draft
includes
40 recommendations to be shared with
stakeholders who will examine the
investment opportunities in the climate action
plan. The
recommendations could help create thousands of
jobs and save energy
costs in the long-term.
“This draft
report outlines a New
Jersey where employees commute without the
frustration of traffic and
the air pollution it causes, where energy is
clean, and where waste is
a thing of the past. Such ambitions are the
future of our environment
and our economy,” Governor Corzine said.
New Jersey is
particularly vulnerable to global warming
impacts, such as sea level
rise and loss of wildlife and and recreation
habitat, “with potentially
devastating ecological, economic and public
health impacts to New
Jersey,” according to the report.
To
learn more about global warming and New Jersey,
see NWF’s Solutions
to Global Warming state-specific fact
sheet. Click here
to read more about New Jersey’s new climate
action plan draft.
Group Uses Polar
Worms To Track Climate
Change
A
group of researchers affiliated with Colorado
State University (CSU) is hunting for worms
in Antarctica to help track our planet’s
changing climate.
A
research team of seven students led by a CSU
scientist has gone to the
Earth's southernmost continent for a 19th year
to study roundworms.
Soil ecologist and
environmental scientist Diana
Wall says her annual studies of worms in
Antarctica's McMurdo Dry Valleys help measure
climate change.
The
student team includes scholars from Brigham
Young University and the
University of Waikato in New Zealand. They
harvest the worms to track
where they live, and their studies help reveal
clues about soil quality
and the impacts of global warming.
Dr.
Wall's Antarctic researchers will spend two
months harvesting worms for much of each day,
which is facilitated by the
continent's round-the-clock sunlight this time
of year.
"We
talk about losing endangered species above
ground all the time," Dr.
Wall told the Greeley Tribune. "We want to know
if we lose soil
species, does it matter?"
Readers can follow
the annual worm hunts on one researcher's blog,
The World of Nematodes.
Congress
is on recess this
week.
