See also:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/12/031203080010.htm
ScienceDaily News Release:
Top Scientists Conclude Human Activity Is Affecting Global Climate

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2003/12/04/MNG0Q3F 
PCT1.DTL&type=science
Climate Change Laid to Humans
Report Warns There's 'No Doubt' Industry is Primary Cause

http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/23067/story.htm
Climate talks must focus more on poor - UN expert

"Beyond Kyoto: Advancing the International Effort against climate change"
Press Release
http://www.pewclimate.org/press_room/sub_press_room/december3.cfm
Download the Entire Report (pdf)
http://www.pewclimate.org/document.cfm?documentID=273
Download the Overview (pdf)
http://www.pewclimate.org/document.cfm?documentID=274

-----

http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2003/dec/09/yehey/opinion/20031209opi7.html
The Manila Times Internet Edition | OPINION >
Tuesday, December 09, 2003

Experts discount generic fix for global warming

By Stephen Leahy , InterPress Service

The failure or success of the embattled Kyoto Protocol on reducing 
greenhouse gas emissions should not sway countries in the South from 
developing their own, more appropriate agreements, according to a new 
report.

Kyoto-or a Kyoto-type of agreement-will not work for developing 
countries, Elliot Diringer, director of international strategies at 
the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, told IPS.

A wide range of mechanisms, and regional approaches in particular, 
will be needed instead, the Pew report says.

The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change is meeting 
in Milan, Italy, from December 1-12 to attempt to rescue the 1997 
Kyoto Protocol.

The Protocol is an agreement on reducing greenhouse gas emissions 
that has been signed by 177 countries, including the United States. 
While the George W. Bush administration withdrew its support, the 
agreement could still be enforced if Russia joins the European 
countries and others, including Canada that has ratified it.

Russia was widely expected to ratify the treaty until top officials 
expressed concerns this month that it would hinder economic growth.

However, even with strong efforts far beyond those of Kyoto in 
developed countries, developing country emissions must fall below 
business-as-usual projections if atmospheric greenhouse gas (GHG) 
concentrations are to be stabilized by 2100, the Pew report notes.

The report, 'Beyond Kyoto: Advancing the International Effort Against 
Climate Change,' found that the rapid rise in GHG emissions in the 
South is driven by development imperatives-in particular, the need 
for energy and economic growth. This is actively encouraged by flows 
of investment and technology supporting conventional paths of 
development.

The authors of the report consulted experts, officials and 
stakeholders from more than 30 countries. Pew is a nonpartisan 
US-based group funded by charitable organizations.

"Trade and development flows from the North need to be recast to both 
meet the needs of the South and the need to reduce greenhouse gas 
emissions," said Diringer.

Development assistance for energy ought to be directed to low-carbon 
emitting energy sources, he notes. However, this does not open the 
door for mega-dams or nuclear power plants because they pose their 
own significant environmental impacts.

But in order to focus on climate change, more pressing issues of food 
security, poverty relief, energy growth and access, urban transport, 
and land use need to be addressed first, the report advises.

Fortunately, climate-favoring activities are the ancillary benefits 
of many sound development programs, the authors observe.

"Ultimately, then, integrating climate and development objectives 
calls for a new political bargain with new political actors to 
redefine collective responsibilities to address climate change," the 
report says.

Two leading US scientists have turned up the heat on the Bush 
administration in another new report that states there is a 
90-percent chance global temperatures could rise 4.9 ¼C, melting the 
world's ice sheets.

The study, which reviewed all of the available scientific data, was 
carried out by Thomas Karl of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration's (noaa) National Climatic Data Center in the state of 
North Carolina, and Kevin Trenberth, director of the Climate Analysis 
Section at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (ncar) in 
Colorado. It appears in the December 5 issue of the journal Science.

The authors say there is no doubt that human activities are changing 
the global climate and will continue to do so for at least the next 
100 years.

"The likely result is more frequent heat waves, droughts, extreme 
precipitation events and related impacts, e.g., wildfires, heat 
stress, vegetation changes, and sea-level rise which will be 
regionally dependent."

Karl and Trenberth estimate that between 1990 and 2100, global 
temperatures will rise by 1.7¼C to 4.9¼C as a result of 
human-produced emissions of greenhouse gases, primarily from burning 
oil, coal and natural gas.

This temperature increase will have widespread impacts on society and 
the environment, including melting the great ice sheets of Greenland 
and Antarctica and inundating the world's coasts, they say.

A footnote at the end of the article states their conclusions are 
their own, and not those of the US government.

Indeed, the Bush administration has disputed much of what Karl and 
Trennberth say, arguing that reducing emissions of fossil fuels would 
cost too much, and that the science underlying the causes and impacts 
of climate change was too uncertain.

Karl's boss, Bush appointee James Mahoney, does not think the 
evidence is all that clear that human activity is mainly responsible 
for increases in greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide.

Mahoney, a meteorologist who became deputy director of the noaa and 
head of the Climate Change Science Program in April 2002, has been 
reported as challenging Karl and Trenberth's vision of a grim future.

The San Francisco Chronicle newspaper quoted Mahoney as saying, "I 
think a number of skeptical scientists would also challenge them."

Pat Michaels is one of those skeptical scientists. Michaels, a 
professor of environmental sciences at the University of Virginia, 
was upset by the report and the fact that the most prestigious 
scientific journal in the United States would publish it.

The report is alarmist and greatly exaggerates the risks, he says.

Michaels, who is often quoted in the US media, is a senior fellow at 
the Cato Institute, a right-wing think-tank funded by corporations, 
including those in the oil and gas industry.

It is hardly coincidental that a paper by two proponents of the Kyoto 
Protocol was published this week, he told IPS.

"The editors of Science also have strong political views on Kyoto," 
Michaels said.

Kyoto would do little to reduce global temperature increase and costs 
too much, he argues. Global warming is happening, but it is on the 
order of a minuscule 0.75¼C over the next 50 years, he says, adding 
that the "slight increase is something many people like you in Canada 
would be happy to have."

Global temperatures have already risen 0.6¼C, between 1899 and 2001. 
Even with an additional 0.75¼C by 2050-which other scientists besides 
Michael agree on -it is a global average. That means local 
temperatures could be much higher, leading to some of the significant 
impacts outlined in the article.

"Significant further change is guaranteed," Karl and Trenberth write. 
"The rate of change can be slowed, but it is unlikely to be stopped 
in the 21st century."

Karl and Trenberth also agree with the Pew report that greatly 
improved international cooperation and action is absolutely necessary.

"Climate change is truly a global issue, one that may prove to be 
humanity's greatest challenge," they conclude.

   

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