http://www.thedubyareport.com/co2.html

Read My Lips: "mandatory C02 reductions" In-Depth 
Special to The Dubya Report

March 14, 2001 
Last September when George W. Bush and Al Gore were neck-and-neck in the
polls, Bush declared carbon dioxide a pollutant, promised to regulate
power plant emissions, and criticized Gore for advocating voluntary
controls. On Tuesday, buckling under pressure from lobbyists,
contributors, and conservative members of Congress, Bush reneged on his
campaign promise. This comes as no surprise to residents of Texas, where
as Governor, Bush was the #1 recipient of donations from the Texas
Chemical Council, whose members released 187 million pounds of toxic
waste into Texas land, water, and air in 1996 alone. 

The Bush reversal followed threats by the Competitive Enterprise
Institute to fight Bush if he carried out his promise. CEI opposes
government regulation of business. Another business advocacy group, the
Global Climate Coalition had posted a statement on its web site
suggesting that the proposed regulations would harm the U.S. economy,
"and all American families, workers, seniors and children." The campaign
policy shift was contained in a letter to Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska
and three other Republican senators who had challenged his planned curbs.


The Bush letter attempted to use the California electrical crisis to
justify the policy change. The connection was unclear, however, as the
regulations would have affected coal burning power plants, primarily, and
California relies chiefly on other sources such as natural gas, nuclear,
and hydrolectric power. Power plants burning natural gas produce less
carbon dioxide than coal burning plants. 

The issue revealed a divided administration, with Vice President Cheney
reportedly opposing the regulations, while Treasury Secretary O'Neill and
EPA administrator Whitman advocating them. Former Governor Whitman had
spoken of the CO2 regulations during the last several weeks as if they
were policy. The policy reversal is seen by some observers as a major
rebuke for Ms. Whitman, one of the few representatives of the liberal
wing of the Republican party on the Bush cabinet. 

News organizations cited the conflict between the administration policy
reversal and the Bush campaign mantra that "a promise made is a promise
kept." Bloomberg reported Senator Harry Reid of Nevada as saying, "Maybe
we'll need to learn to read the president's lips more carefully." Senator
Reid is the ranking Democrat on the Environment and Public Works
Committee. 

Echoing the Bush letter, White House spokesman Scott McClellan said
yesterday that carbon dioxide should not have been included with
pollutants in the campaign document. Although carbon dioxide is not
listed as a pollutant in the Clean Air Act, a study, reported in the
science journal Nature, documented evidence gathered from satellites in
Earth-orbit that confirmed that carbon dioxide among other so-called
"greenhouse gases" were building up in the Earth's atmosphere. Greenhouse
gases are believed to be a major cause of global warming and climate
disruption. The decision also runs counter to the spirit of the Kyoto
Protocol, a 1997 U.N. agreement that seeks to reduce greenhouse gases
such as carbon dioxide. The United States signed the agreement, but the
Senate has not ratified it and Bush opposes it. 

Democratic Vice Presidential candidate Joseph Lieberman said that he
would introduce legislation on Thursday that would limit power plant
emissions, including carbon dioxide. "This is much more than a broken
campaign promise and political double talk.In this case, turnabout is
foul play, and could seriously hurt our efforts to reduce the enormously
consequential risks of rising planetary temperatures," Lieberman said. 

Environmental groups held a news conference Wednesday, and promised to
mobilize their memberships in response to the Bush anti-environment
decision. Kathryn Fuller, president of the World Wildlife Fund said,
"This response by the Bush administration will not only let down
Americans, it will outrage the global community." John Stanton, vice
president for air programs at the National Environmental Trust added "He
ran a campaign about bringing dignity back to the White House, and here
we have the president breaking one of his big promises he made on the
environment" The decision echoed abroad, as well. Margot Wallstroem,
environment commissioner of the European Union, said Bush's decision flew
in the face of scientific evidence about the causes and potential
solutions of global warming. "Nobody should ignore these warnings," she
said. 

 
References:
Ferguson, Alexander. "Bush Slammed for Abandoning Pollution
Pledge"Reuters 14 Mar. 2001.
Rosenkrantz, Holly. " Bush Shift on Coal Plant Pollution Followed
Lobbying (Update 2)" Bloomberg 14 Mar. 2001.  

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to