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Politics : The Environmentalist Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockman_scott who wrote (6676)6/13/2006 8:34:36 AM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36917
 
A sooty position
TODAY'S EDITORIAL
June 13, 2006
According to an atmospheric scientist interviewed by the New York Times, the filters in the mountains of eastern California near Lake Tahoe contain so many sulfur compounds and other coal-related pollutants that they "are the darkest [filters] that we've seen" outside smoggy urban areas. But the soot and toxic chemicals pervading the mountaintop detectors do not originate from Los Angeles automobiles or power plants serving California's urban areas. Rather, these pollutants are exported to the western United States by Chinese coal-fired power plants. "Unless China finds a way to clean up its coal plants and the thousands of factories that burn coal," the New York Times reported Sunday, "pollution will soar both at home and abroad," including throughout the western United States.
    Already, China uses more coal to power its factories and generate electricity than the United States, Japan and the European Union -- combined. Recently, China's coal consumption has been rising by 14 percent a year. Indeed, every seven to 10 days, the NYT reports, a new coal-fired power plant big enough to serve every household in San Diego comes on line in China. None of these new plants, which are likely to operate for 75 years, has the most advanced pollution-control equipment, which has long been available in the West, including, of course, the United States. The NYT reports that "Chinese utilities have in the past preferred to buy cheap but often-antiquated [pollution-control] equipment from well-connected domestic suppliers instead of importing costlier gear from the West."
    Other developed nations essentially kowtowed to China by exempting it from the Kyoto treaty. This invited de facto rejection by Congress, where there has long been bipartisan opposition to the Kyoto Protocol's hugely unequal treatment of countries. After all, as the Kyoto-embracing New York Times acknowledged in its article, the increase in global-warming gases from China will likely "surpass by five times the reduction in such emissions that the Kyoto Protocol seeks" from advanced economies.
    Citing its status as a relatively poor, developing, emerging-market economy, China claims it cannot afford the more effective, more expensive pollution-control equipment. The real question, however, is whether the world can afford the consequences of China's failure to curb its pollutants. Regarding affordability, it is worth noting that China's cumulative trade surplus in goods with the United States since the beginning of 2000 has exceeded $800 billion. Last year alone, the U.S. trade deficit in goods with China was more than $200 billion, and it continues to increase by about $17 billion per month. China also recently became the world's largest holder of foreign-exchange reserves, which now exceed $875 billion.
    According to the International Monetary Fund, China had a current-account surplus last year of nearly $160 billion, or more than 7 percent of its gross domestic product. The United States, of course, enjoys a huge comparative advantage in the production of pollution-control equipment, which China can clearly afford to purchase from American firms.
    



To: stockman_scott who wrote (6676)6/13/2006 12:28:52 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 36917
 
the madness just won't stop
Whaling nations set for majority
By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News website


Spoils of "science"

Enlarge Image

Pro-whaling nations look set to command a majority of the votes when the International Whaling Commission (IWC) annual meeting begins on Friday.

Several countries which appear likely to vote with the pro-whaling bloc have joined the body in recent weeks.

UK marine affairs minister Ben Bradshaw said he is "very concerned".

A pro-whaling majority could lead to the scrapping of conservation and welfare programmes, though not a return to full-scale commercial whaling.

That would need three-quarters of delegates at the meeting in St Kitts & Nevis to vote in favour, which is extremely unlikely.

But a simple majority would be enough to end IWC work on issues which Japan believes to be outside its remit, such as welfare and killing methods, whale-watching and anything concerning small cetaceans such as dolphins.

"For the first time since the 1970s, the IWC would be under the control of the whalers," commented Vassily Papastavrou, a marine biologist working with the International Fund for Animal Welfare (Ifaw).

"Japan has said that it intends to undermine decisions which protect whales and stop the conservation work of the IWC," he told the BBC News website.

Divided world

The potential for collision is higher at this year's meeting than it has been for decades.

Hindus don't eat beef, that's their choice, but they don't try to prohibit the rest of the world from eating it

Rune Frovik
Formed in 1946, the IWC's original purpose was to regulate commercial whaling; and after it became obvious that some species were being depleted to the verge of extinction, that regulation took the most robust form possible: a global moratorium.

Norway made a formal objection to the ban and has continued to hunt, though catching radically fewer numbers than a century ago. Japan, and more recently Iceland, hunt under an IWC ruling which allows nations to catch whales for "scientific research".

Both have stepped up the size of their annual hunts in recent years, with the 2006 catch on target to exceed 2,000, the largest take since the introduction of the moratorium in 1986.

Pro-whaling nations insist that a limited return to commercial hunting is possible; stocks of some species are high enough, they maintain, charging that the IWC has become an organisation dedicated to preventing whaling, contrary to its purpose.

At the IWC's foundation is supposed to be sound science; arguments such as which stocks are sufficiently robust to hunt are in theory answered on a strict scientific basis.

But there are huge variations in estimates of minke whales, the species currently most hunted, which makes it almost impossible to set global catch limits.

The scientific process has also become mired in politics, with decade-long discussions on a mechanism called the Revised Management Scheme, designed to facilitate a return to limited commercial whaling, breaking down earlier this year.

The anti-whaling bloc is now led informally by Australia, New Zealand and Britain, with the US a major ally


Ben Bradshaw: "Very concerned" about support for whaling
Within the last year this group has co-ordinated letters of diplomatic protest to Norway and Japan, signed by 12 and 17 countries respectively.

"They are losing the argument, internationally and domestically," said Ben Bradshaw.

"None of the pro-whaling nations have markets for the meat; young Japanese, Icelanders and Norwegians don't eat it, consumption is falling."

This argument is countered by organisations supportive of whalers and whaling, such as Norway's High North Alliance.

"We think there is growing support for whaling in principle and in practice," said its secretary Rune Frovik.

"Whales belong to the animal kingdom. In some cultures they eat frogs, others don't; Hindus don't eat beef, that's their choice, but they don't try to prohibit the rest of the world from eating it.

"And we think that you can't find anything more environmentally friendly than whale meat - this is an animal which lived in nature, we are harvesting nature's surplus and you don't have to destroy nature to do that."

Horse trading

Whatever the moral rights and wrongs, it seems like that after years of trying the pro-whaling bloc may have built itself a working majority this time.

The run-up to each IWC meeting sees the opposing groups of nations trying to bring supportive new members into the organisation.

THE LEGALITIES OF WHALING
Objection - A country formally objects to the IWC moratorium, declaring itself exempt
Scientific - A nation issues unilateral 'scientific permits'; any IWC member can do this
Aboriginal - IWC grants permits to indigenous groups for subsistence food
The Marshall Islands, Guatemala and Cambodia have reportedly joined in recent weeks at Japan's behest.

But an accurate tally will only be possible when the Commission convenes on Friday in St Kitts; only then will it become clear which countries have sent delegates and paid their subscriptions, entitling them to vote.

"[The pro-whaling nations] had a majority last year on paper," said Ben Bradshaw, "but because some of their allies failed to turn up or pay their dues we won all the votes - but one of them by only one vote."

The fallout of a pro-whaling majority would be, in Mr Bradshaw's words, "international uproar".

How far the anti-whaling leaders would be prepared to go diplomatically against Japan, Iceland and Norway, with whom they have so much common ground on issues other than whaling, is a moot point.

There is talk of action aimed at the tourism industries of countries which have recently supported whaling, especially the small Caribbean states such as this year's host, St Kitts and Nevis.

A delegate from one of the anti-whaling nations told the BBC News website there would not be an organised boycott, but the word would be put out that certain nations which portray themselves as holiday destinations resplendent with natural beauty had supported the killing of whales.

Richard.Black-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk




To: stockman_scott who wrote (6676)6/20/2006 11:49:37 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36917
 
World CO2 emissions to rise 75 pct by 2030: EIA

By Timothy Gardner
Reuters
Tuesday, June 20, 2006; 10:40 AM

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Global emissions of the heat-trapping gas carbon dioxide will rise 75 percent from 2003 to 2030, the U.S. government forecast on Tuesday.

The world's emissions of CO2 will hit 43.7 billion tonnes in 2030, up from 25 billion tonnes in 2003, the Energy Information Administration, the statistics arm of the Department of Energy, said in its annual forecast, the International Energy Outlook.


By 2025 global CO2 emissions could hit 40.05 billion tonnes annually, a rise of 0.03 percent from its forecast issued last year, the EIA said.

Most scientists believe that a build-up in greenhouse gases, such as CO2, is raising temperatures and could bring catastrophic changes such as heatwaves, stronger storms and melting icecaps that could raise sea levels by almost three feet (one meter) by 2100.

Humans cause much of the buildup of CO2 by burning fossil fuels such as oil, gas, and coal. The EIA said coal combustion, which is growing in the United States, India and China, could overtake oil as the largest fossil fuel source of CO2 emissions from 2015 to 2030.

The forecast did not include potential effects of pending or proposed legislation, regulations, or standards, including the international emissions reduction pact known as the Kyoto Protocol.

"The Protocol does not address signatory obligations beyond 2012, making it impossible to asses its impacts on ... carbon dioxide emissions through 2030 in the context of a reference case projection," the EIA said in the forecast.

The Kyoto pact, which went into force early last year, requires 35 rich countries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to an annual average about 5 percent below their 1990 levels by 2008 to 2012. Countries signed on to the agreement have agreed to set tougher caps in the second phase of the plan, but no timetable has been set for agreeing on the goals.

DEVELOPING ASIA TO SURPASS NORTH AMERICA

The report said that in four years, CO2 emissions in rapidly developing countries in Asia, such as China and India, will surpass those from North America.

In 2003, CO2 emissions of 6.8 billion tonnes from North America, a less populous region than developing countries of Asia, were about 12 percent higher than those in developing Asia, according to the EIA.

By 2010, that changes. Developing Asian countries will emit about 9.1 billion tonnes of CO2, surpassing North American emissions by about 21 percent, according to the EIA.

Emissions from North America should average 1.3 percent growth per year from 2003 to 2030 and hit 9.7 billion tonnes by 2030, the EIA said.

In developing Asian countries emissions should average 3.6 percent growth to reach 16 billion tonnes by 2030, the report said.

The United States is the world's top emitter of greenhouse gases, but withdrew from the Kyoto pact in 2001. Total U.S. emissions have risen by 15.8 percent from 1990 to 2004, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has said.

In Russia and eastern Europe, which experienced an economic downturn late last century, CO2 emissions won't return to 1990 levels until after 2025, according to the EIA.

Emissions of CO2 in developed Asian countries will rise an average 0.9 percent per year from 2003 to 2030 to 2.6 billion tonnes, while OECD European countries will build an average 0.7 percent per year to 5.1 billion tonnes over the same time, the EIA said.

washingtonpost.com