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NYT editorial: Save the Economy, and the Planet; "a radical shift from defeatism and denial"

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DeepModem Mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-28-08 01:12 AM
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NYT editorial: Save the Economy, and the Planet; "a radical shift from defeatism and denial"
Save the Economy, and the Planet
Published: November 26, 2008

Environment ministers preparing for next week’s talks on global warming in Poznan, Poland, have been sounding decidedly downbeat. From Paris to Beijing, the refrain is the same: This is no time to pursue ambitious plans to stop global warming. We can’t deal with a financial crisis and reduce emissions at the same time. There is a very different message coming from this country. President-elect Barack Obama is arguing that there is no better time than the present to invest heavily in clean energy technologies. Such investment, he says, would confront the threat of unchecked warming, reduce the country’s dependence on foreign oil and help revive the American economy.

Call it what you will: a climate policy wrapped inside an energy policy wrapped inside an economic policy. By any name, it is a radical shift from the defeatism and denial that marked President Bush’s eight years in office. If Mr. Obama follows through on his commitments, this country will at last provide the global leadership that is essential for addressing the dangers of climate change....

Still two months from the White House, Mr. Obama has convincingly reaffirmed his main climate related promises.

One is to impose (Congress willing) a mandatory cap on emissions aimed at reducing America’s output of greenhouses gas by 80 percent by midcentury. According to mainstream scientists, that is the minimum necessary to stabilize atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide and avoid the worst consequences of global warming. Mr. Obama’s second pledge is to invest $15 billion a year to build a clean economy that cuts fuel costs and creates thousands of green jobs. That includes investments in solar power, wind power, clean coal (plants capable of capturing and storing carbon emissions) and, as part of any bailout, helping Detroit retool assembly lines to build a new generation of more fuel-efficient vehicles.

Mr. Obama has surrounded himself with like-minded people who have spent years immersed in the complexities of energy policy. His transition chief, John Podesta, was an early advocate of assisting the automakers and of finding low-carbon alternatives to gasoline. Peter Orszag, his choice to run the Office of Management and Budget (where environmental initiatives went to die during the Bush years) is an expert on cap-and-trade programs to limit industrial emissions of greenhouse gases....

The historical landscape from Richard Nixon onward is littered with bold and unfulfilled promises to wean the nation from fossil fuels, especially imported oil. What is different now is the need to deal with the clear and present threat of global warming. What is also different is that the country has elected a president who believes that meeting the challenge of climate change is essential to the health of the planet and to America’s economic future.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/27/opinion/27thu1.html
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ryanmuegge Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-28-08 01:23 AM
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1. The only ones who were delusional were the people who thought
that the planet (and our own standard of living) could withstand India and China consuming like Americans WITHOUT first having a reliable, feasible, realistic, clean, and renewable source of energy. That would mean all of these free trade dreamers like...uhh, everybody in our government and many think tank economists.

Now, our standard of living is on an irreversible decline, and 95% of us in this country will have a living standard similar to Bangladesh, Rawanda, or Afghanistan within the next 5-10 years.
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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-28-08 01:31 AM
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2. Rec'd, and back-up. Both are doable!
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DeepModem Mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-28-08 01:40 AM
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4. I think I posted another piece on the subject a few days ago. If we could do this --
tackle the economic and climate crises at the same time -- it would be nothing short of a lifesaving miracle.
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BrklynLiberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-28-08 01:33 AM
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3. Jimmy Carter was the only one who not only talked the talk, but walked the walk
and his ideas would have had us free of Oil dependence years ago.
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