Climate Panel Recommends Global Temperature Ceiling, Carbon Tax

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Pastor Dale Morgan

unread,
Feb 28, 2007, 9:10:50 AM2/28/07
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
*Perilous Times and Global Warming

Climate Panel Recommends Global Temperature Ceiling, Carbon Tax*

By Peter Heinlein
United Nations
28 February 2007

A panel of scientists has presented the United Nations a detailed plan
for combating climate change. VOA's correspondent at the U.N. Peter
Heinlein reports the strategy involves reaching a global agreement on a
temperature ceiling.

A group of 18 scientists from 11 countries is calling on the
international community to act quickly to prevent catastrophic climate
change.

In a report requested by the United Nations and partially paid for by
the privately funded U.N. Foundation, the panel warns that any delay
could lead to a dangerous rise in sea levels, increasingly turbulent
weather, droughts and disease.

The report was issued three weeks after the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change concluded that global warming is real and caused in large
part by human activity. But unlike the IPCC report, this latest document
makes policy recommendations.

Panel member John Holdren of Harvard University says the world must be
mobilized immediately to avoid catastrophe. "Climate change is real,
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," he said.

The panel's recommendations include a series of steps to cut the rate at
which temperatures are rising. Chief among them are a global agreement
on an acceptable ceiling for temperature rise and finding ways of
adapting to cope with the damage already done.

Holdren, however, says even these measure will achieve very little
unless they are accompanied by a global tax on greenhouse gas emissions.
"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 United States is the biggest emitter of greenhouse gasses, but is
not a party to the cap and trade system contained in the Kyoto Protocol
on climate change.

Nevertheless, the Bush administration has set a target of cutting U.S.
greenhouse gas emissions by 18 percent by 2012, and is spending $3
billion a year on climate change research.

Peter Raven, the head of the Sigma Xi Scientific society and co-author
of the latest report, says success in limiting the effects of global
warming will require private sector leadership, and a combined effort by
the U.S. and the international community. "The private sector is doing a
very good job, and kind of leadership we're calling for from the United
Nations and international organizations and the kind of leadership the
United States is moving towards will both be key ingredients in that,"
he said.

A U.N. spokesman says Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is considering
calling a summit meeting on climate change later this year.
Environmental activists are calling on Mr. Ban to play a leading role in
the process of negotiating a successor to the Kyoto agreement, which
expires in 2012.

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages