U.N.-backed scientists warn of doomsday unless greenhouse gas emissions are cut

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Mar 1, 2007, 7:09:55 PM3/1/07
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*Perilous Times and Global Warming*
*
U.N.-backed scientists warn of doomsday unless greenhouse gas emissions
are cut
*
Posted: March 01, 2007

WASHINGTON – A panel of 18 scientists from 11 countries reported to the
United Nations today that catastrophic climate change is inevitable
without a global tax on greenhouse gas emissions – a plan that would
impact the U.S. disproportionately to the rest of the world.

John Holdren, the Teresa and John Heinz professor of environmental
policy at Harvard University, speaking for the panel said the world must
establish a consensus on an acceptable ceiling for temperature rise and
find ways to cope with the damage already wrought by climate change.
However, these measures will be ineffective in themselves if they are
not accompanied by a global tax on greenhouse gas emissions, he added.

"We don't think ultimately society will get it right in terms of the
full range and scope of activities needed to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions until there is an additional incentive in the form of a price
on greenhouse gas emissions, either through a carbon tax or a cap and
trade approach," he said.

The report was requested by the United Nations and partially funded by
the U.N. Foundation. It predicts global warming trends leading to
dangerous rising sea levels, increasingly turbulent weather, droughts
and weather-related pestilences.

It is the latest of a stream of dire forecasts about climate change.
Three weeks ago, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concluded
global warming was real and caused by human activity. Two weeks ago, the
board of directors of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science issued a statement claiming atmospheric concentration of carbon
dioxide is higher than it has been for at least 650,000 years.

"Climate change is real," said Holdren today. "It's already happening.
It's already causing harm. It's accelerating and we need to do something
about it, and we need to do something about it seriously, starting now.
Our specific conclusions are that if the world were to go past the point
of an increase above pre-industrial temperatures greater than 2 to 2.5
degrees Celsius, we would be in a regime where the danger of intolerable
and unmanageable impacts on well-being would rise very rapidly."

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is considering calling a summit on
climate change later this year.

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