Will there be Any Money Left for the Environment?

by BallyZACA | October 13, 2008 at 12:01 pm
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Will there be Any Money Left for the Environment?

Will there be Any Money Left for the Environment?

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It would be a b***ch if we solve the financial crisis and end up drowning in our own ignorance!

WASHINGTON - The economic free fall gripping the nation may bring down one of the main environmental objectives: capping the greenhouse gases that are blamed for global warming.

Democratic leaders in the House and the Senate, and both presidential candidates, continue to rank tackling global warming as a chief goal next year. But the focus on stabilizing the economy probably will make it more difficult to pass a law to reduce carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. At the very least, it will push back when the reductions would have to start.

As one Republican senator put it, the green bubble has burst.

"Clearly it is somewhere down the totem pole given the economic realities we are facing," said Tom Williams, a spokesman for Duke Energy Corp., an electricity producer that has supported federal mandates on greenhouse gases. Duke is a member of the U.S. Climate Action Partnership, an association of businesses and nonprofit groups that has lobbied Congress to act.

Just months ago, chances for legislation passing in the next Congress and becoming law looked promising. The presidential candidates support mandatory cuts and a Democratic majority is ready to act on the problem after years of the Bush administration's resisting federal controls.

But the most popular remedy for slowing global warming, a mechanism know as cap-and-trade, could put further stress on a teetering economy.

Under such a system, the government would establish a market for carbon dioxide by giving or selling credits to companies with operations that emit greenhouse gases. The companies can then choose whether to invest in technologies to reduce emissions to meet targets or instead buy credits from other companies who have already met them.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Rep. Rick Boucher, D-Va., said that in light of the economic downturn, a bill that would give polluters permits free of charge would be preferable.

"The first way we can control program costs is by not charging industrial emitters," said Boucher, who released a first draft of a bill this past week with the chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich. Giving away right-to-pollute permits was one of the options.

Engine for growth?
Other Democrats, however, see a cap-and-trade bill — and the government revenues it would generate from selling permits — as an engine for economic growth. Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama supports auctioning off all permits, using the money to help fund alternative energy.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/...d/18298287/?GT1=45002

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BallyZACA

It's true that financial systems are among the most integrated parts of the modern world. Not every nation is happy about serving in this ad hoc alliance to save capitalism.

But if nothing else, leaders are learning that they can pull together constructive initiatives in the face of danger. And if they can save banks, why not the environment? If they can stop the spread of shareholder panic, why can't they stop the spread of nuclear weapons?

"We may find if we deal with the global credit crisis, we will start to think we can deal with the problem of global warming, or energy, or rogue states," says Colin Camerer, an economic behaviorist at California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

"This might help invest world institutions with greater responsibility."

http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/1014/p01s04-wogn.html

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SOLARLIFE
SOLARLIFE
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 16:09 on October 13th, 2008

BallyZACA, I like this story. bailout first banks now car industry: $ 50bn GM, 50bn Euro for German car industry Opel. The clean air we just forget in the crisis.

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BallyZACA

Shan... have got and copied into my archives for future reference.  Am now awaiting Part 3, good reading, your story has helped me to have a broader understanding of how religion plays a role in world affairs, both social and political.

The world's richest nations MUST do what is required to stabilize the planet's environment NOW, before it reaches a tipping-point of no return.  We're all in the same boat together, as this vehicle (the planet) is the only thing we all have in common.  If, we destroy it any further and continue taking it for granted mankind would have failed its greatest responsibility! 

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