Daily Archives: February 9, 2013

State of the Union 2013: On climate change, which Obama will show up Tuesday? – POLITICO.com

http://www.politico.com/story/2013/02/state-of-the-union-2013-obama-climate-change-87407.html

Last year’s address had a focus on energy but scant mention of climate change. | AP Photo

By ANDREW RESTUCCIA | 2/9/13 4:42 PM EST

President Barack Obama’s annual addresses to Congress offer a glimpse at a leader whose rhetoric on energy and the environment has changed dramatically over the past four years — from his calls to pass sweeping climate legislation in 2009 to a full-throated embrace of natural gas last year.

The speeches also matched the ebbs and flows in Obama’s political fortunes.

Four years ago, as a popular president with Democratic House and Senate majorities, Obama told Congress that his greenhouse gas proposals would “transform our economy, protect our security and save our planet from the ravages of climate change.” But in his 2011 State of the Union address following the shellacking of the midterm elections, he didn’t use the word “climate” even once.

Now, past his reelection worries, Obama put climate back atop the agenda in last month’s inaugural address. Supporters say they’re expecting much of the same in Tuesday’s State of the Union speech, with more focus on actions the administration is preparing to pursue. …(more).

Read more: http://www.politico.com/story/2013/02/state-of-the-union-2013-obama-climate-change-87407.html

Global Climate Change http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre130
Environmental Justice http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre145
Environment Ethics http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre120

Climate change and the president – The Washington Post

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/climate-change-and-the-president/2013/02/09/317db2fa-7239-11e2-a050-b83a7b35c4b5_story.html#

By Editorial Board, Saturday, February 9, 6:21 PM

PRESIDENT OBAMA will deliver his 2013 State of the Union address on Tuesday, and expectations are high that he will devote significant time to climate change. We hope that he adopts a different approach to explaining the need for action than he did in much of his first term.

In past addresses, talking about green jobs didn’t work, nor did talking about energy independence. The credible way to justify fighting climate change is to discuss the science, the real reason to cut carbon emissions. There is overwhelming evidence that the planet is warming. The widespread burning of fossil fuels, meanwhile, pumps heat-trapping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere every second. There is still uncertainty about exactly how sensitive the climate system is to a given increase in carbon dioxide concentrations — but not enough uncertainty to justify ignoring the risks of rising temperatures.

Putting a slowly rising, significant price on carbon emissions would encourage people to burn less fossil fuel without micromanaging by Congress or the Energy Department. This approach would enlist market forces to green the energy sector. It would also allow for similar policies in other nations to connect with America’s, creating a bigger, global market for carbon.

Anything like carbon pricing must get lawmakers’ approval, though, which is the first reason Mr. Obama should make reaching out to them on climate policy a priority. True, a coalition of anti-regulation Republicans and coal-state Democrats killed the last major effort to price emissions, a 2010 cap-and-trade bill. But, in the big budget reform politicians have been promising, they will need new revenue from somewhere. A carbon tax would be an ideal source.

Even second- and third-best alternatives would need Congress’s say-so. These include establishing a national clean energy standard requiring that a defined and rising amount of electricity come from sources cleaner than coal, the top climate villain. Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, the Energy Committee’s lead Republican and a voice of reason within her party, just released a 121-page plan with other ideas that could serve as a basis for some congressional action, such as paying for energy technology research, reforming subsidies for green power, advancing hydropower and promoting energy efficiency.

The president should also remind Congress that, without ambitious action from lawmakers, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) can and will act on its own. The EPA has already established or is in the process of establishing a range of new air pollution rules. These rules will ensure than no new conventional coal plants are built in the United States, and they will force the closure of some particularly awful, ancient coal-fired facilities. More regulations are likely in store in Mr. Obama’s second term. The EPA, for example, has not yet set rules regulating the carbon emissions of major, existing sources of greenhouse gases. Using the EPA’s top-down approach, though, is not the best way to reduce carbon emissions. Mr. Obama should invite Congress to work with him on a better alternative.

More on this debate: The Post’s View: Pollution here and abroad The Post’s View: Obama’s second-term climate The Post’s View: After a hot year, a climate agenda The Post’s View: California’s climate change experiment The Post’s View: The carbon tax

Global Climate Change http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre130
Environmental Justice http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre145
Environment Ethics http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre120

BBC News – Blizzard paralyses north-east US and Atlantic Canada

9 February 2013 Last updated at 14:09 ET

Millions of people across New England have being warned to stay indoors

Related Stories

A major snowstorm has brought swathes of the north-eastern US and eastern Canada to a standstill, leaving about half a million homes without power.

High winds and blizzard conditions have emptied the centre of Boston and Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick has banned all non-essential traffic.

Millions of people across New England have been warned to stay indoors. The region’s airports are closed.

Many areas are under two feet (60cm) of snow and more snowfalls are expected.

Analysis

Rajesh Mirchandani BBC News, New York

In Coney Island and Brighton Beach, we found several people shovelling snow from outside their homes. These parts of Brooklyn were hit hard by Hurricane Sandy in October. In some places, piles of debris from that storm are now covered by piles of snow from this one.

We met Louis Plaza cleaning out two properties he looks after. Like many people we spoke to, he was in good spirits and resigned to a day of shovelling.

“There’s no way I could have prevented this,” he told me. “There’s no way I could have prevented Sandy. So you just deal with it, you deal with what life throws you.”

Earlier in Manhattan, people and cars were joining the hundreds of snow ploughs and gritters that had been working all night. After Sandy, it seems New York authorities left nothing to chance for this storm. It also helped that the impact was not as bad as had been feared. As Mayor Bloomberg put: “It looks like we dodged a bullet”.

Blizzard warnings are in effect for much of the coastal section of the north-eastern US, from Newark, New Jersey to southern Maine. ….(more).

Global Climate Change http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre130
Environmental Justice http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre145
Environment Ethics http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre120

Blizzard Paralyzes Connecticut


AssociatedPress

Published on Feb 9, 2013

The storm dumped at least 2 feet of snow throughout Connecticut, paralyzing much of the state. The governor ordered all roads closed Saturday until further notice, and even emergency responders were stuck on highways. (Feb. 9)

Global Climate Change http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre130
Environment Ethics http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre120

Noam Chomsky on the Propagandized Media


phrygian20

Published on Dec 8, 2012

“The Big Idea” – a half hour interview between Noam Chomsky and British journalist Andrew Marr, first aired by the BBC in February 1996.

Transcript available at http://www.aithne.net/index.php?e=news&id=4&lang=0

Global Climate Change http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre130
Environment Ethics http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre120

Noam Chomsky NEW Interview (Focus Magazine, Italy)


Akshay Pahilajani·

Published on Jan 25, 2013

http://archive.org/details/NoamChomsky-ForumVideoMagazineitaly-2012

Environmental Justice http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre145
Environment Ethics http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre120

Noam Chomsky – Rightward Shift of US Politics


TYTInterviews

Published on Jan 30, 2013

Noam Chomsky is Professor Emeritus at MIT, and one of the nation’s leading intellectual critics of the US political, corporate and national security apparatus. In this long interview, Cenk Uygur of TYT and Professor Chomsky discuss President Obama, the rightward shift of US politics over the past few decades, drone strikes, the labor movement, Aaron Swartz, the role of the media and what hope we have for the future.

Noam Chomsky website: www.chomsky.info

Chomsky Interview from 2010: http://youtu.be/rwqkvF7umpk

Global Climate Change http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre130
Environment Ethics http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre120

Horse meat-tainted food scandal widens


AlJazeeraEnglish

Published on Feb 8, 2013

The food scandal persists over horse meat being passed off as beef. This time it is frozen lasagne: the meat in some cases was found to be more than 60 percent horse. The ready meals were made in Luxembourg for the Swedish firm Findus. Packets of lasagne have been withdrawn in Sweden as well as in the UK. Al Jazeera’s Peter Sharp reports.

Environmental Justice http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre145
Environment Ethics http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre120
Food-Matters http://Food-Matters.TV

Severe snowstorm hits North America


AlJazeeraEnglish

Published on Feb 9, 2013

Richard Angwin has the latest forecast for the huge storm that’s battering northeastern USA and eastern Canada.

Global Climate Change http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre130
Environment Ethics http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre120

The Center for Health and the Global Environment | Harvard Medical School

CHGE-About

 

http://chge.med.harvard.edu/

The Center was founded in 1996 to study and promote a wider understanding of the human health consequences of global environmental change.

The Center is an official Collaborating Center of the U.N. Environmental Programme, and is one of the most trusted sources of information on this subject in the world.

Global Climate Change http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre130
Environmental Justice http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre145
Environment Ethics http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~envre120