climate change
Last edited 19 December 2007 at 2:13pm
Commenting on today's announcement of a proposed new EU law on car emissions, Anna Jones, transport campaigner for Greenpeace, said:
"These Brussels bureaucrats must be driven to distraction. They should hang their petrol-heads in shame at their kowtowing to a car industry seemingly obsessed with wrecking the climate.
"The EU has let car manufacturers speed off with a weak proposal that lacks any long-term standards and offers an open road to overweight gas-guzzlers."
Posted by bex — 19 December 2007 at 1:05pm
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A couple of days ago, I wrote that leading climate scientist and director of Nasa's Goddard Institute James Hansen was planning to write to Gordon Brown, urging him to stop the new coal rush in the UK.
Here's the full text of that letter. It's powerful stuff, and piles the pressure onto Gordon Brown ahead of next month's decision by Medway Council, on whether to allow the first new coal plant in 30 years to be built at Kingsnorth.
Last edited 19 December 2007 at 12:59pm
NASA expert tells PM, "You have the potential to influence the future of the planet"
Dr James Hansen, the world's leading climate scientist, has today written a remarkable letter to Gordon Brown telling the Prime Minister his energy policy could be a "tipping point for the world."
Hansen is best known for his research in the field of climatology and his testimony on climate change to congressional committees in the 1980s that helped raise broad awareness of the global warming issue.
Posted by bex — 17 December 2007 at 4:37pm
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It's all too depressingly familiar. The Bali consensus was watered down by low tactics from the US (supported by Japan, Canada, Australia and others). The strong science that should be driving the
process was relegated to a footnote. And work to reduce emissions from deforestation still has a long way to go, thanks to the inclusion of a loophole that may allow some industrialised countries to swap binding targets for voluntary goals.
But the fact that we have a Bali Mandate at all - including a process, a deadline and a guarantee that several of the most important issues are on the agenda - is worth a celebration in itself.
Last edited 14 December 2007 at 4:12pm
The renowned NASA climate scientist Dr James Hansen today challenged Gordon Brown to end UK moves to build new coal-fired power stations.
Energy giant E.ON is currently seeking permission to build the country's first new coal-fired plant for more than thirty years at Kingsnorth in Kent. Now Hansen is writing to Brown explaining why he thinks it is crucial that Britain rules out the plan.
Speaking at the American Geophysical Union (AGU), the largest gathering of the year for Earth scientists, Dr Hansen said:
Posted by bex — 14 December 2007 at 2:47pm
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For environmentalists partial to a mild bit of schadenfreude over their tea and toast, this morning's Today Programme was a treat. You can listen to it here, if you're quick (Fiona and farnishk, I think you'll like John Humphreys' stance).
Environment minister Hilary Benn was invited on to talk about how things have been going in Bali (not so well). As Benn waxed lyrical about the urgent need for action to reduce emissions, Humphreys pulled him up on the yawning gap between the government's rhetoric and reality, what with the government wanting to build new runways and all. Then he pulled him up again. And again. And again. And again. It was a little like listening to a kitten being mauled by a teddy bear.
Posted by jamie — 14 December 2007 at 2:40pm
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After last
week's amazing news that Ireland
is going to ban inefficient light bulbs in early 2009, we thought it was time
to give our own government a squeeze on the issue. The speed at which our
neighbour across the Irish Sea will be ditching incandescent bulbs has shown
just how ineffective London
has been so far.
Not only
does Ireland now join the
likes of Australia, Venezuela and Cuba who have already laid down
bulb legislation, it also proves our own government is dragging its feet.
Earlier this year, a voluntary phase-out of inefficient bulbs by the end of
2011 was announced which even at the time was pretty rubbish. Thousands
of small retailers aren't covered by the scheme so incandescent bulbs will
still be on sale beyond that date. Ireland's tough new legislation now
makes this initiative look even more feeble.
Posted by bex — 14 December 2007 at 1:01pm
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The sparks are flying in Bali as the talks enter the final round. After the US tried to derail the negotiations, Al Gore took the stage and lambasted the Bush Administration for blocking negotiations.
"[M]y own country - the U.S. - is principally responsible for obstructing progress here in Bali,'' he said, before urging the delegates to "find the grace to navigate around this enormous obstacle" and move forward without the US.
Last edited 14 December 2007 at 1:00am
From Friends of the Earth, WWF-UK and Greenpeace.
Last edited 13 December 2007 at 8:10pm
An extraordinary document leaked to Greenpeace in Bali this evening reveals that the United States is trying to destroy international efforts to tackle climate change.