Another Day Older and the Climate Upset
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RE-COMMENCEMENT Nicholas
Altenbernd:
“I got the needed minutes free this morning to read the President’s
commencement
address you posted.
Wow. How good it is to hear and read oratory like this again!” And while I have you reading the words of one Nobel Peace
Prize laureate, why not read the words of another . . . AL
GORE: “Why the oil spill could change everything” Here, in
The New Republic. Little by little, we are destroying our habitat. Worth
getting up to speed on this? All
the more reason to check out . . . HOME
DEPOT LIGHTBULBS Here
. . . Competition for the U.S. light bulb market intensified
Monday as Home Depot said it's begun selling a "breakthrough" LED,
only a month after General Electric and Cree announced similar products. As the venerable incandescent begins its
Congress-mandated phaseout in 2012, the once staid light bulb sector is seeing
a frenzy of new, more efficient CFLs (compact fluorescent lamps), halogens and
LEDs (light emitting diodes.) Home Depot says the new 9-watt, $20 ECOSMART LED bulb,
made in the United States, uses about 80% less energy than a 40 watt
incandescent and contains no mercury as do most CFLs. It's also recyclable and
dimmable. If installed in a newborn's room today, "it will
probably not have to be replaced until the child is ready to graduate
college," says Home Depot's Jorge Fernandez in the announcement, which
adds that the bulb could save $155 in energy costs over its life and pay for
itself in less than two years. ☞
I haven’t tried these yet. Buy one and let us know what you think. I REPEAT: “Why the oil spill could change everything” Did
you know that the devastating flood in Nashville last month was described as a
“1000 year rain event?” Seriously: Isn’t this
worth a click? In
part: . . .
One important difference between the oil spill and the
CO2 spill [90 million tons a day, day in and day out] is that petroleum is
visible on the surface of the sea and carries a distinctive odor now filling
the nostrils of people on shore. Carbon dioxide, on the other hand, is
invisible, odorless, tasteless, and has no price tag. It is all too easily put
“out of sight and out of mind.” . . . And because the length of
time between causes and consequences is longer than we are used to dealing
with, we are vulnerable to the illusion that we have the luxury of time before
we begin to respond. . . . As
a result, we are capable – through inaction – of making truly
disastrous consequences inevitable long before the worst impacts are
manifested. Our perception of the dangers of the climate crisis therefore
relies on our ability to understand and trust the conclusions reached by the
most elaborate and impressive scientific assessment in the history of our
civilization. . . .
During the last 22 years, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has
produced four massive studies warning the world of the looming catastrophe that
is being caused by the massive dumping of global-warming pollution into the
atmosphere. Unfortunately, this process has been vulnerable to disruption and
paralysis by a cynical and lavishly funded disinformation campaign. . . .
The largest carbon polluters have, for the last 17 years, sought to manipulate
public opinion with a massive and continuing propaganda campaign, using TV
advertisements and all other forms of mass persuasion. It is a game plan
spelled out in one of their internal documents, which was leaked to an
enterprising reporter, that stated: “reposition global warming as theory
rather than fact.” In other words, they have mimicked the strategy
pioneered by the tobacco industry, which undermined the scientific consensus
linking the smoking of cigarettes with diseases of the lung and heart –
successfully delaying appropriate health measures for almost 40 years after the
landmark surgeon general’s report of 1964. Meanwhile, many other countries – including China
– have developed national strategies for leading the historic shift from
oil and coal to renewable forms of energy, higher levels of efficiency, smart
grids and fast trains, sustainable agriculture and forestry. Here in the United States, the House of Representatives
has passed a meaningful plan to move America in the same direction and
reestablish our capacity to provide leadership in the world community on the
most important issue facing the world today. The Senate, however, has
struggled for the last 17 months to find enough votes to take up its own
version of the same legislative plan. The unpleasant reality now spilling onto
the shores of the Gulf Coast is creating public outrage and may also be
generating a new opportunity to pass legislation, just as the oil spill 20
years ago from the Exxon Valdez created public momentum sufficient to
overcome the anti-environment special interests. There is new hope that by the
time the gusher from the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico is capped, so will carbon
emissions from the burning of oil and coal. It is understandable that the administration will be
focused on the immediate crisis in the Gulf of Mexico. But this is a
consciousness-shifting event. It is one of those clarifying moments that
brings a rare opportunity to take the longer view. Unless we change our
present course soon, the future of human civilization will be in dire
jeopardy. Just as we feel a sense of urgency in demanding that this ongoing
oil spill be stopped, we should feel an even greater sense of urgency in
demanding that the much larger and more dangerous ongoing emissions of global
warming pollution must also be stopped to make the world safe from the climate
crisis that is building all around us. Tomorrow:
The First of Marc’s 12 Things
© 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Andrew Tobias