Climate Change

Gore to Senate: Pass Stimulus Bill



Former vice president Al Gore testifies at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on global warming. (Jim Lo Scalzo/Bloomberg News)



Updated 12:41 p.m.

By Juliet Eilperin

Former vice president Al Gore urged lawmakers this morning to adopt a binding carbon cap and push for a new global climate pact by the end of this year in order to avert catastrophic global warming, calling the president's economic stimulus package a "down payment" on a new energy future.

Appearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Gore delivered a short slide-show that amounted to an update of his Oscar-winning documentary "An Inconvenient Truth," lecturing some of his former colleagues that even if the world halted greenhouse gas emissions now the world could experience a temperature rise of between 2.5 to 7.5 degrees Fahrenheit by 2100.

"This would bring a screeching halt to human civilization and threaten life everywhere on earth, and this is by the end of this century," Gore said. He also called for the passage of the stimulus package, calling it "the first step" in regaining "control of our destiny."

"I urge this Congress to quickly pass the entirety of President Obama's Recovery package," he said.

The high-tech display included a graphic illustration of how the Arctic's permanent summer ice cover has melted in recent decades, a pulsating image the Nobel Peace Prize winner described as "thirty years in less than thirty seconds," and a short video clip of a scientist who ignited the methane gas seeping out of the melting Arctic permafrost.

After the audience watched the flames leap up and the researcher scurry away, Gore remarked, "She's O.K. The question is, are we?"

Gore received a largely-sympathetic hearing from the panel. The committee's chairman John Kerry (D-Mass.) chided some conservatives who seized on the recent snowstorm in D.C. to question whether climate change is real, saying, "To the naysayers and skeptics and deniers still out there, let me add: a little snow in Washington does nothing to diminish the reality of this crisis."

Kerry delivered a lecture to developing nations as well from the dais, saying the U.S. would not make the mistake of leaving emerging economies out of any future climate agreement as it did during negotiations over the Kyoto Protocol in the early 1990s.

"In Kyoto people stiff-armed that discussion. But the landscape has shifted over the past decade, and now China is the world's largest emitter," Kerry said. "Developing countries will account for three-quarters of the increase in global energy use over the next two decades. A global problem demands a global effort, and today we are working toward a solution with a role for developed and developing countries alike, which will be vital as we work to build consensus here at home in tough economic times."

Gore didn't sugarcoat his message to senators today. While politicians including President Obama have touted the importance of exploring "clean coal technology," the former vice president said it was unlikely this technological advance "will occur in the short term, or even in the near term. We must avoid becoming vulnerable to the illusion that this is near at hand. It is not."

"That's a very direct and honest answer," Kerry replied, "and I appreciate it."

However Indiana Sen. Richard Lugar, the committee's top Republican, asked Gore to draw on his experience as "a practicing politician" to explain how senators could muster a broad bipartisan majority for any international treaty that could come out of Copenhagen at the end of the year.

After distancing himself from his political past -- "I'm a recovering politician. I'm on about Step Nine." -- the former Democratic presidential nominee said developing countries' willingness to embrace binding climate goals coupled with the new scientific evidence of recent warming should boost the chances of a treaty passing the Senate.

Alluding to Obama's announcement this week that he would tighten U.S. auto emissions, Gore added, "President Obama's leadership, as manifested just two days ago, can itself be an important new element in [mobilizing] support for what needs to be done."

Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), who supporters a carbon tax rather than a cap-and-trade system, said he thought the only way to construct a bipartisan coalition on climate change was to be honest about what it means to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

"I think we can build consensus around transparency," Corker said, adding that when it comes to addressing global warming, "We're really talking about increasing the price of carbon."

Corker, who suggested Congress would be better off passing a carbon dioxide tax that would be fully-refundable to taxpayers, said even lawmakers who have some reservations about a carbon cap's economic impact need to acknowledge it will likely become reality.

"We're now firing with real bullets," he said. "The stars are aligning, and my sense is this year something may actually occur."

Gore's opening remarks, as prepared for delivery, follow:



We are here today to talk about how we as Americans and how the United States of America as part of the global community should address the dangerous and growing threat of the climate crisis.



We have arrived at a moment of decision. Our home - Earth - is in grave danger. What is at risk of being destroyed is not the planet itself, of course, but the conditions that have made it hospitable for human beings.



Moreover, we must face up to this urgent and unprecedented threat to the existence of our civilization at a time when our country must simultaneously solve two other worsening crises. Our economy is in its deepest recession since the 1930s. And our national security is endangered by a vicious terrorist network and the complex challenge of ending the war in Iraq honorably while winning the military and political struggle in Afghanistan.



As we search for solutions to all three of these challenges, it is becoming clearer that they are linked by a common thread - our dangerous over-reliance on carbon-based fuels.



As long as we continue to send hundreds of billions of dollars for foreign oil -- year after year -- to the most dangerous and unstable regions of the world, our national security will continue to be at risk.

As long as we continue to allow our economy to remain shackled to the OPEC roller-coaster of rising and falling oil prices, our jobs and our way of life will remain at risk. Moreover, as the demand for oil worldwide grows rapidly over the longer term, even as the rate of new discoveries is falling, it is increasingly obvious that the roller coaster is headed for a crash. And we're in the front car.



Most importantly, as long as we continue to depend on dirty fossil fuels like coal and oil to meet our energy needs, and dump 70 million tons of global warming pollution into the thin shell of atmosphere surrounding our planet, we move closer and closer to several dangerous tipping points which scientists have repeatedly warned - again just yesterday - will threaten to make it impossible for us to avoid irretrievable destruction of the conditions that make human civilization possible on this planet.



We're borrowing money from China to buy oil from the Persian Gulf to burn it in ways that destroy the planet. Every bit of that's got to change.



For years our efforts to address the growing climate crisis have been undermined by the idea that we must choose between our planet and our way of life; between our moral duty and our economic well being. These are false choices. In fact, the solutions to the climate crisis are the very same solutions that will address our economic and national security crises as well.



In order to repower our economy, restore American economic and moral leadership in the world and regain control of our destiny, we must take bold action now.



The first step is already before us. I urge this Congress to quickly pass the entirety of President Obama's Recovery package. The plan's unprecedented and critical investments in four key areas - energy efficiency, renewables, a unified national energy grid and the move to clean cars - represent an important down payment and are long overdue. These crucial investments will create millions of new jobs and hasten our economic recovery - while strengthening our national security and beginning to solve the climate crisis.



Quickly building our capacity to generate clean electricity will lay the groundwork for the next major step needed: placing a price on carbon. If Congress acts right away to pass President Obama's Recovery package and then takes decisive action this year to institute a cap-and-trade system for CO 2 emissions - as many of our states and many other countries have already done - the United States will regain its credibility and enter the Copenhagen treaty talks with a renewed authority to lead the world in shaping a fair and effective treaty. And this treaty must be negotiated this year.



Not next year. This year.



A fair, effective and balanced treaty will put in place the global architecture that will place the world - at long last and in the nick of time - on a path toward solving the climate crisis and securing the future of human civilization.



I am hopeful that this can be achieved. Let me outline for you the basis for the hope and optimism that I feel.



The Obama Administration has already signaled a strong willingness to regain U.S. leadership on the global stage in the treaty talks, reversing years of inaction. This is critical to success in Copenhagen and is clearly a top priority of the administration.



Developing countries that were once reluctant to join in the first phases of a global response to the climate crisis have themselves now become leaders in demanding action and in taking bold steps on their own initiatives. Brazil has proposed an impressive new plan to halt the destructive deforestation in that nation. Indonesia has emerged as a new constructive force in the talks. And China's leaders have gained a strong understanding of the need for action and have already begun important new initiatives.

Heads of state from around the world have begun to personally engage on this issue and forward-thinking corporate leaders have made this a top priority.



More and more Americans are paying attention to the new evidence and fresh warnings from scientists. There is a much broader consensus on the need for action than there was when President George H.W. Bush negotiated - and the Senate ratified - the Framework Convention on Climate Change in 1992 and much stronger support for action than when we completed the Kyoto Protocol in 1997.



The elements that I believe are key to a successful agreement in Copenhagen include:

* Strong targets and timetables from industrialized countries and differentiated but binding commitments from developing countries that put the entire world under a system with one commitment: to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide and other global warming pollutants that cause the climate crisis;

* The inclusion of deforestation, which alone accounts for twenty percent of the emissions that cause global warming;

* The addition of sinks including those from soils, principally from farmlands and grazing lands with appropriate methodologies and accounting. Farmers and ranchers in the U.S. and around the world need to know that they can be part of the solution;

* The assurance that developing countries will have access to mechanisms and resources that will help them adapt to the worst impacts of the climate crisis and technologies to solve the problem; and,

* A strong compliance and verification regime.

The road to Copenhagen is not easy, but we have traversed this ground before. We have negotiated the Montreal Protocol, a treaty to protect the ozone layer, and strengthened it to the point where we have banned most of the major substances that create the ozone hole over Antarctica. And we did it with bipartisan support. President Ronald Reagan and Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill joined hands to lead the way.



Let me now briefly discuss in more detail why we must do all of this within the next year, and with your permission, Mr. Chairman, I would like to show a few new pictures that illustrate the unprecedented need for bold and speedy action this year.



Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am eager to respond to any questions that you and the members of the committee have.

Posted at 10:33 AM ET on Jan 28, 2009 | Category: Climate Change

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