Site icon Conservation news

Bush calls climate change a ‘serious challenge’

Bush calls climate change a ‘serious challenge’

Bush calls climate change a ‘serious challenge’
mongabay.com
January 23, 2007

In his State of the Union Address Tuesday night, President Bush called climate change a “serious challenge” that needs to be met by reducing fossil fuel emissions. The president asked Americans to reduce their gasoline use by 20 percent over the next decade and called for increases in automobile fuel efficiency standards and use of alternative energy. Text from the speech appears below.


Related articles

American industry jumps on global warming bandwagon. On the eve of President Bush’s State of the Union address, American industry is fast-jumping on the global warming bandwagon, according to an article in today’s issue of The Wall Street Journal. Yesterday the CEOs of 10 major corporations asked Congress to implement binding limits on greenhouse gases this year, arguing that voluntary efforts to fight climate change are inadequate.

Global warming cap to cost U.S. 0.26% of GDP says Energy Department. A proposed cap-and-trade system to curb U.S. greenhouse-gas emissions will cost the U.S. economy 0.26 percent of annual GDP according to a new study by the Department of Energy’s Energy Information Agency (EIA). The EIA says that the plan would lead to higher energy prices including a 5 percent rise in the price of gasoline, an 8 percent climb in the price of heating-oil an 11 percent increase in the price of natural gas and electricity.

U.S. greenhouse gas emissions rise 0.6% in 2005 to new record. Emissions of heat-trapping gases, including carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide, rose by 0.6 percent between 2004 and 2005 according to a new report from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) of the U.S. Department of Energy. Since 1990, such greenhouse gas emissions have climbed by 16.9 percent. The Kyoto Protocol calls for a 7 percent reduction in emissions levels below 1990 levels by 2012.

Election results means U.S. climate action likely by 2010. “Enactment of mandatory U.S. climate action is plausible by 2008, and likely by 2010,” says a new report from the Pew Center on Global Climate Change. The Pew Center, which brings together business leaders, policy makers, scientists, and other experts to discuss climate change, says that “the new Democratic congressional majority puts control of the agenda in the hands of policymakers who, to a large extent, favor climate action.”




Exit mobile version