Showing posts with label Bush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bush. Show all posts

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Bush bashed over vapid climate conference

Time Magazine reported on the White House organised Climate Change Conference. They were rather unflattering of Bush, and set him up as a foil for Clinton to do what he does best. Shine.

Look at the photos accompanying the article.



Clinton looks steely and resolved, Bush defensive ... hunched. Clinton's jaw is firmly set, in contrast to the slack-jawed look of Bush, which is unfortunately what can happen when one is photographed mid-sentence. He is looking down, Clinton is looking forwards. George is looking a mite wan against Bill's robust complexion.

If you think I am letting my biases get in the way of my judgement, you should read Time Magazine reporter and resident climate change geek, Jason Decrow.

Start with the headline — Climate Change: Filling the Bush Gap. Positioned above Bush's photo, the aforementioned gap seems to refer to the one between his hears. Very unfairly too.

Reporting on Bush:

You could Amtrak down to the White House and hear President George W. Bush tell the world's major economies that this global warming thing might actually be a problem and that we should maybe consider doing something about it eventually.

No hint of scorn for Clinton:


Of the three, it was the Clinton meeting that proved the best bet —

[...]

As part of his Clinton Climate Initiative, launched in August 2006, the former President has brought together business and philanthropy to generate locally focused efforts to reduce energy use and carbon emissions.

While President Bush offered mostly empty rhetoric, on Friday afternoon Clinton reeled off pledge after concrete pledge for his climate initiative: $150 million to harness geothermal energy in Africa, $5 million for the Alliance for Climate Protection in the U.S., $210 million for carbon offsetting in the developing world.

While UN action on climate change remains stalled by the deadlock between the developed and the developing world, Clinton has proved remarkably successful in fostering real engagement and investment on global warming across national lines. "Clinton just really gets it," says Ted Nordhaus, co-author of the new environmental politics book Break Through.

Good to see some balanced journalism, the type where you call a spade a spade.

Monday, July 16, 2007

Global warming caused by too much science

Not a bad characterisation of GWB's global warming policy.

clipped from www.alternet.org

In the video posted at the Alternet page linked above, Will Ferrell plays "the Commander-in-Chief of the World" is this faux promo about climate change. In it Bush struggles to explain the issue and rails against "facts" and "scientific data". It's silly and funny at first, until you find out it's not too far off from the real thing.

blog it

Sunday, June 10, 2007

A Jury Of Your Pyrrhus

G8 climate deal is failure or triumph, depending whom you ask.

clipped from www.grist.org
lifted from gr!st
Daily Grist
Yesterday, the G8 agreed to a climate deal it's been fine-tuning for weeks. It notably did not commit to German Chancellor Angela Merkel's goal of cutting greenhouse-gas emissions 50 percent by 2050, but it did say countries would "consider seriously" adopting such a goal. Thanks, George! The agreement also endorses Bush's plan to bring developing countries to the negotiating table, but confirms that the U.N. is the best place to work out future climate treaties. Many observers were outraged that the U.S. had once again purple-nurpled the world, but others tried to look on the bright side. "While Europe has been itching on the starting blocks for the past decade, Bush has been sulking in the changing room," said one European policy adviser. "At least he is now on the track." Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, chief climate adviser to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, offered this take: "The United States is now on a bandwagon they cannot stop."

Friday, June 08, 2007

Bush seriously considers 50% emissions cut by 2050

Full marks to the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, for turning Bush's forward thrust on climate change into advantage with a neat little judo throw to extract "serious consideration" for her preferred benchmark of 50% cuts by 2050 - backed by the EU, Canada and Japan. Sure, Bush didn't commit to any targets, but he also didn't expect to find himself suddenly lying on his back being helped up by a smiling Merkel. Ippon to the Chancellor - a classic demonstration of back-rub blow-back.

clipped from news.bbc.co.uk

G8 leaders agree to climate deal

Leaders of the G8 nations have agreed to seek "substantial" cuts in emissions in an effort to tackle climate change.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the G8 would negotiate within a UN framework to seek a replacement for the Kyoto Protocol by the end of 2009.

No mandatory target was set for the cuts, but Mrs Merkel's preference for a 50% emissions cut by the year 2050 was included in the agreed statement.

"We agreed... that CO2 emissions must first be stopped and then followed by substantial reductions," the German chancellor said.

Global greenhouse
gas emissions must
stop rising, followed
by substantial global
emission reductions.
G8 statement

BBC
Her preferred benchmark of 50% cuts by 2050 - backed by the EU, Canada and Japan - would be given serious consideration, she said.

From the agreed text published on the G8 website; the leaders agreed to take "strong and early" action.

"Taking into account the scientific knowledge as represented in the recent IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] reports, global greenhouse gas emissions must stop rising, followed by substantial global emission reductions," the text says.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

US to sink G8 Summit climate change deal, not CO2

What to make of the Luddite-like obstructionism the US is deploying into the proposed G8 Summit climate change deal mooted for next month in Germany? The deal is wanted by G7 of the other G8 countries, and being pushed very hard by the hosts. :::[Suburban Guerilla]

The US has rejected any prospect of a deal on climate change at the G8 summit in Germany next month, according to a leaked document.

Despite Tony Blair’s declaration on Thursday that Washington would sign up to “at least the beginnings” of action to cut carbon emissions, a note attached to a draft document circulated by Germany says the US is “fundamentally opposed” to the proposals.

The note, written in red ink, says the deal “runs counter to our overall position and crosses multiple ‘red lines’ in terms of what we simply cannot agree to”. …

The tone is blunt, with whole pages of the draft crossed out and even the mildest statements about confirming previous agreements rejected. “The proposals within the sections titled ‘Fighting Climate Change’ and ‘Carbon Markets’ are fundamentally incompatible with the President’s approach to climate change,” says another red-ink comment.

It's medieval in vision. I hope for Bush's legacy, and everyone else's future, that he has something better than a backrub for Angela Merkel, this time. There is two weeks for him to change his mind. Every thinking, acting American should email their senator and congressman, and the Whitehouse, and their media editors, and make it known that they strongly disagree with the concept of polluting the climate in order to maintain dependence on ever-diminishing, cheap-for-now, finite and foreign reserves of energy. It's not right for our kids to pick up the tab just to maintain a very narrowly-served dependence on festy fossil fuel.

:::[Online petition - America, join the G8 Climate Deal]

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Monday, May 14, 2007

Washington wishes world would fry

Still panting after undermining the Kyoto Agreement, the American Government is now attacking the draft agreement of next month's G8 summit, watering down clauses agreeing to keep temperature rises under 2C this century.

As anyone who has been following global warming knows, when the world average temperature tips over 2 degrees Celsius from what it is today, we engage runaway climate change. Ciao to this benign climate that as seen the exponential growth of humans since the last ice age - it sure has been fun, especially inventing the Internet.

Something has to happen. We have to save the Internet.
clipped from news.bbc.co.uk

The US is trying to block sections of a draft agreement on climate change prepared for next month's G8 summit, according to documents seen by the BBC.
Washington objects to the draft's targets to keep the global temperature rise below 2C this century and halve greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

A clause saying "climate change is speeding up and will seriously damage our common natural environment and severely weaken (the) global economy... resolute action is urgently needed in order to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions" is struck out.

They are trying to lay landmines under a post-Kyoto agreement after they leave office
Philip Clapp

So are a statement that "we are deeply concerned about the latest findings confirmed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)", and a commitment to send a "clear message" on international efforts to combat global warming at the next round of UN climate talks in December.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Global Warming Watch picked up by Reuters

Upon randomly checking my BlogBurst workbench I discovered that one of my posts in early April was picked up by Reuters UK. It's a buzz for this blogger, and explains the recent spike in traffic . As I am experimenting with Clipmarks' clip-to-blog function, I clipped the first few paras.
clipped from uk.reuters.com
Reuters

Bush forced to regulate carbon dioxide from cars Powered by BlogBurst

POSTED: Monday, April 02, 2007

FROM BLOG: Global Warming Watch - This blog is currently heating up at an average of 0.2°C per decade. Come back often.

The following blog post is from an independent writer and is not connected with Reuters News. The opinions and views expressed herein are those of the author and are not endorsed by Reuters.com.

In enormous news for the mitigation of global warming, the US Supreme Court has forced their federal government to regulate carbon dioxide emissions from cars. The directive forces the Bush Administration into a major policy u-turn: :::[CNN]

In a 5-4 decision, the court said the Clean Air Act gives the Environmental Protection Agency the authority to regulate the emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases from cars.


powered by clipmarksblog it


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Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Will Bush propose carbon dioxide emissions surge in State of the Union speech?

Chief executives from Alcoa Inc., PB America Inc., DuPont Co., Caterpillar Inc., General Electric Co., and Duke Energy Corp., and executives of Lehman Brothers, PG&E Corp., PNM Resources, FPL Group and four leading environmental organizations have signed a letter asking Bush to announce big emission cuts on the eve of his State of the Union address: :::[Yahoo! News]

WASHINGTON - The chief executives of 10 major corporations and business groups, on the eve of the State of the Union address, urged President Bush on Monday to support mandatory reductions in climate-changing pollution and establish reductions targets.

"We can and must take prompt action to establish a coordinated, economy-wide market-driven approach to climate protection," the executives from a broad range of industries said in a letter to the president.
Big business has the big picture. Does Bush? Or will he continue to regurgitate policy and climate-science formulations arrived at deep in the bowels of fossil-fuel funded thinktanks like the Competitive Enterprise Institute? Hmmm?

He shows no sign of learning from the Baker Report recommendations on an Iraq exit strategy and, in fact, is doing the opposite and proposing a surge of troops. So why should the Stern Report findings have sunk in for him? Sir Nicholas was only a World Bank economist and Chancelor of the Exchequer, after all.

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Monday, April 10, 2006

Global warming: Bush stands on fast thinning ice

I know I am behind the times but the sober speech given recently by US Senator Barack Obama bears reading if you haven't already: The Coming Storm: Energy Independence and the Safety of Our Planet (Chicago, IL. April 3rd, 2006). It's great to see some leadership taken on global warming for a change...

"The issue of climate change is one that we ignore at our own peril. There may still be disputes about exactly how much we're contributing to the warming of the earth's atmosphere and how much is naturally occurring, but what we can be scientifically certain of is that our continued use of fossil fuels is pushing us to a point of no return. And unless we free ourselves from a dependence on these fossil fuels and chart a new course on energy in this country, we are condemning future generations to global catastrophe."

...and to read these gems...

"And yet, when it comes to finding a way to end our dependence on fossil fuels, the greatest vacuum in leadership, the biggest failure of imagination, and the most stubborn refusal to admit the need for change is coming from the very people who are running the country."

...

"This is not a serious effort. Saying that America is addicted to oil without following a real plan for energy independence is like admitting alcoholism and then skipping out on the 12-step program. It's not enough to identify the challenge - we have to meet it."

He talks of Shishmaref, the first village to reluctantly up and move because of global warming, harbinger for the 40% of the world's population who live within 60 km of the coast.* They are harbingers in every sense as the word derives from Middle English herbengar, or person sent ahead to arrange lodgings.

Fellow harbingers and Arctic and Antarctic photographers, Brian and Cherry Alexander have been to the Inuit village in Alaska to snap the ice before it melts.

Shishmaref - A Casualty of Global Warming (photo essay)
Artic Meltdown (photo essay)

Planet Ark reports that it is going to be expensive to relocate the village of 600 people to a new spot 22kms (13.5 miles) away.

The cost of moving Shishmaref is currently estimated at $150 million to $180 million, said Bruce Sexauer, a senior planner for the Corps' Alaska district.

The pro rata cost of relocating Sydney's 5 million strong population then is a silly $1,250,000,000,000 to $1,500,000,000,000. While strictly an apples with oranges comparison, it does show that the cheapest option is to do all we can to fight global warming now to mitigate extreme climate change. The alternative is to keep investing big in cheap energy now to save enough of an inheritance to pay for your children and grandchildren's global warming induced relocation costs, currently estimated at $250,000 to $300,000 per child or grandchild by the US Army Corps of Engineers. Don't forget to adjust for inflation.

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Saturday, April 08, 2006

How to Free Iraq, by George Bush

I know it is off-topic but I think this is clever: Free Iraq in Flash. Anyway, how can oil ever be off-topic in a blog about global warming? Ta Pip Wilson.


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Thursday, March 23, 2006

White House cooks global warming warnings.

If the Office of Special Plans handling of intelligence to justify the Iraq invasion was like the White House's treatment of the science of global warming, would the US have gone to war?

What if, instead of the now famous 16 words, Bush had had two more words inserted into his State of the Union Address in 2003? And he had dropped the adjective "significant" that he used to describe quantities of uranium?
"... Saddam Hussein may recently have sought uranium from Africa."
Would the American people have let him sacrifice 2,319 soldiers lives, so far, solely on 'may have sought uranium', or would there have been a demand to find out more instead? And if Bush had said the following...
"Saddam Hussein might aid and possibly protects terrorists, including, potentially, members of al-Qaeda."
....would the American people have invaded Iraq, or would they preferred to have diverted their resources to really catching Osama Bin Laden - really the person responsible for the 9/11 attack?

What if Vice President Cheney stated the following on March 17, 2002?
"We think it's possible they might have biological and chemical weapons."
Would the American people have felt this merited the disabilities of 16,653 wounded US soldiers?

Even after the invasion, on January 22, 2004, Vice President Cheney insisted that,"there's overwhelming evidence that there was a connection between al-Qaeda and the Iraqi government." What if he instead had insisted the following?
"the uncertainties remain so great as to preclude meaningfully informed decision making with respect to the evidence that there was a connection between al-Qaeda and the Iraqi government."
Would you have considered $249,336,128,723 worth the taxpayer cost so far?

Specifically, the stated justification for the invasion included Iraqi production and use of weapons of mass destruction, alleged links with terrorist organizations, and human rights violations in Iraq under the Saddam Hussein government. (From Wikipedia).

It was the certainty of their evidence with which the neo-cons took these casus belli to the US public, and it was with the same certainty that the US public endorsed the invasion. The language used to sell the invasion helped. Rumsfeld described his evidence that Iraq was harbouring al-Qaeda terrorists as "bulletproof" (as "bulletproof" as an Iraqi Humvee) in a 2002 Defense Department briefing. Bush used "clear evidence of peril" to argue we must not wait for the final proof in the form of a mushroom cloud.

I make this point because the US government continues to alter the facts to fit them into pre-fabricated policy. America's leading global warming scientist, James Hansen, director of NASA's Goddard Institute, has described to 60 minutes how this is happening. It seems that the White House now controls 100% of what the tax-paying public hears about climate change from it's leading scientific institute:
Restrictions like this e-mail Hansen's institute received from NASA in 2004. "there is a new review process" the e-mail read. "The White House (is) now reviewing all climate related press releases," it continued.
All climate related press releases and research findings are edited with what has been described as a 'heavy hand'. One heavy hand belonged to the chief-of-staff at the White House Council on Environmental Quality", Phil Cooney, according Rick Piltz who part produces a report for Congress every year entitled "Our Changing Planet".

Piltz told 60 minutes Cooney edited climate reports in his own hand. In one report, a line that said earth is undergoing rapid change becomes "may be undergoing change." Note the dropping of the adjective rapid to describe change.
"Uncertainty" becomes "significant remaining uncertainty." One line that says energy production contributes to warming was just crossed out.
Just crossed out.

Just like that.

Much like the CIA report that warned that was no relationship between Saddam and al Qaeda which was 'just crossed out' while 72 percent of the American public believed that Saddam was responsible for 9/11. Osama Been Laughing.

So why is he so cautious about the climate findings? What are the qualifications of this great uber-scientist, Phil Cooney? As a scientist, it seems he makes a great lawyer. Oh, and a former oil industry lobbyist according to 60 minutes . So I went to the Exxon Secrets database to see what I could find out about him. It was down at the time of writing, and I will come back with the data, but suffice to say at this point Phil Cooney is an ExxonMobil stooge.

In October 2003, the Pentagon issued it's worse case scenario on global warming and climate change, called, "An Abrupt Climate Change Scenario and It?s Implications for United States National Security". It talks of the rapidly reduced life carrying capacity of the environment, massive famines, 400 million environmental refugees, nuclear arms proliferation and the nuclear wars that would result when different country's compete for natural resources. It predicts what could happen to North America if the Thermohaline System (also known as Gulf Stream or Atlantic Conveyor or North Atlantic Thermohaline System), a current that circulates seasonal heat around the northern hemisphere, transporting moderate climates to the continents it touches.
Colder, windier, and drier weather makes growing seasons shorter and less productive throughout the northeastern United States, and longer and drier in the southwest. Desert areas face increasing windstorms, while agricultural areas suffer from soil loss due to higher wind speeds and reduced soil moisture. The change toward a drier climate is especially pronounced in the southern states.

Coastal areas that were at risk during the warming period remain at risk, as rising ocean levels continues along the shores. The United States turns inward, committing its resources to feeding its own population, shoring-up its borders, and managing the increasing global tension.
If Iraq has proved anything, it has proved that you just can't change the facts to fit your wish list. But how I would have loved to have read, instead, these words issuing from the mouth of the President of the world's largest CO2 emitting country:
"Facing clear evidence of peril, we cannot wait for the final proof -- the smoking gun -- that could come in the form of a Collapsed Atlantic Heat Conveyor." Bush said in an October speech in Cincinnati, Ohio.
People, it is time to think for yourselves. Rapid climate change is happening. The Atlantic Conveyor is now slowing down.

And the resulting quagmire is going to make the Iraq war look like it was a cakewalk.


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Friday, February 03, 2006

How Bush switched to grass.

MPR NewsRadio follows up President Bush's STFU switchgrass lead to discover more about it, and how switchgrass made it to the final draft of the President's speech. They contacted David Bransby, Professor of Energy Crops at Auburn University, Alabama:
MPR News: Do you have any idea of how switchgrass came to make it into the State of the Union ... what lobbyist or special interest group was putting it in there?

David Bransby: Well, our Senator Sessions from Alabama ...

MPR News: Senator Jeff Sessions from Alabama?

David Bransby: Correct, yes, and I had a call from his office then had a few emails go backwards and forwards, and I just got one right before you called ... to say that it was a last minute inclusion in the speech, it was Senator Sessions who helped to get it in there.
Charlie Quimby examines President Bush's credentials as a warrior on oil addiction:

The Old Bait and Switchgrass

Clever headline!
Energy independence - 'breaking our dependence on imported oil ' is as heroic and challenging a goal as any we have fought for in the past.
- Sen. Wayne Allard (R-Colorado)

I've already questioned the president's sincerity for making us fight for this heroic goal with the right hand of energy conservation tied behind our back. Now, it's time to ask how deep his commitment to investment in renewable energy technology really goes ... more ...
Across The Great Divide

NewsBlog5000 reckons Bush is Just Kidding about the Oil - that it is just a high-spirited yet harmless joke.
President Bush is known for his odd sense of humor. One of the oddest things the president does is insert jokes into the State of the Union address. This year the big joke was alternative energy. More:
Student Chinahand blogged it in real-time.

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