-Caveat Lector-

Thursday June 07 08:31 AM EDT

Panel Tells Bush Global Warming Is Getting Worse

By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE with ANDREW C. REVKIN The New York
Times

In a conclusion that may change President Bush (news - web sites)'s
environmental policy, a panel of scientists said that global warming was a
real problem and getting worse.

WASHINGTON, June 6 A panel of top American scientists declared today
that global warming was a real problem and was getting worse, a
conclusion that may lead President Bush to change his stand on the issue
as he heads next week to Europe, where the United States is seen as a
major source of the air pollution held responsible for climate change.

In a much-anticipated report from the National Academy of Sciences (news
- web sites), 11 leading atmospheric scientists, including previous skeptics
about global warming, reaffirmed the mainstream scientific view that the
earth's atmosphere was getting warmer and that human activity was largely
responsible.

"Greenhouse gases are accumulating in earth's atmosphere as a result of
human activities, causing surface air temperatures and subsurface ocean
temperatures to rise," the report said. "Temperatures are, in fact, rising."

The report was requested by the White House last month in anticipation of
an international meeting on global warming in Bonn in July but arrived just
before President Bush leaves next week for Europe, a trip that includes
talks on global warming with leaders of the 15 European Union (news - web
sites) countries in Goteborg, Sweden.

European leaders expressed outrage in March when Mr. Bush rejected the
global warming pact known as the Kyoto Protocol (news - web sites), an
international treaty negotiated in Kyoto, Japan, in 1997, and the subject has
been building as an important test of the administration's foreign policy.

In the White House's first official acknowledgment of the academy's
conclusions, Condoleezza Rice (news - web sites), Mr. Bush's national
security adviser, told reporters today, "This is a president who takes
extremely seriously what we do know about climate change, which is
essentially that there is warming taking place."

Mr. Bush and many in his cabinet, who discussed the subject at length on
Tuesday, have been trying to hammer out a proposal on limiting the
pollutants that cause global warming.

"A cabinet-level working group is still working on what it wishes to say to
the president before we go to Europe," Ms. Rice said.

She said Mr. Bush would talk with the allies "a little bit about what we've
learned thus far."

Without being specific, Ms. Rice said Mr. Bush was being guided by
certain principles in formulating a proposal.

"One would want to be certain that developing countries were accounted
for in some way, that technology and science really ought to be important
parts of this answer, that we cannot do something that damages the
American economy or other economies because growth is also important,"
she said.

In response to critics who have suggested that Mr. Bush is ignoring an
issue of mounting international concern, Ms. Rice portrayed the group as
feverishly committed to educating itself and coming up with a proposal.

"It has been a matter of bringing up to speed some of the highest- ranking
people in this government," she said. "I would dare say dare challenge you
to find a situation in which you've had so many high-ranking people sitting
there week after week after week, understanding the challenge that we face
in global climate change, everybody from the vice president, the secretary
of state, the secretary of interior, secretary of agriculture. It has been quite
something to see all of these people grappling with the issue."

Administration officials have said privately that the White House could have
handled the matter with greater tact, and Ms. Rice conceded as much
today.

"The president had made clear when he was a candidate that he did not
believe the Kyoto Protocol addressed the problem of climate change in a
way that the United States could support," she said. "In retrospect, perhaps
the fact that we understood that we had already said this was not
immediately observable to everybody, and it might have been better to let
people know again, in advance, including our allies, that we were not going
to support the protocol."

This was unusually blunt talk from a White House that until now has
fastidiously avoided the phrase "global warming" and repeatedly
expressed doubts about the clarity of the science underlying the theory that
emissions from smokestacks and tailpipes were heating the atmosphere in
ways that posed a threat.

In an indication of the headwind that Mr. Bush is sailing into next week in
Europe, the journal Science, published by an American scientific
organization, recently carried an open letter signed by 16 prestigious
scientific panels in countries around the world calling for "prompt action" to
reduce the gases like carbon dioxide that trap heat like in a greenhouse.

The increase in temperatures, the editorial said, "will be accompanied by
rising sea levels, more intense precipitation events in some countries and
increased risk of drought in others and adverse effects on agriculture,
health and water balance."

It continued, "We urge everyone individuals, businesses and governments
to take prompt action to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases."

Many international business executives have been pressuring the
administration to move more aggressively on the issue. And so has a
powerful band of Mr. Bush's closest advisers, including Secretary of State
Colin L. Powell, Ms. Rice, Treasury Secretary Paul H. O'Neill, and Christie
Whitman, the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (news -
web sites).

Today's report reflects the increasing certainty of the scientific community
here and abroad that the warming of the last 50 years is probably because
of the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations. The panel said the
degree of confidence in this conclusion was "higher today than it was 10 or
even 5 years ago."

Still, it said, large uncertainties limit predictions of the extent and
consequences good and bad of future warming. But it affirmed the
scientific consensus that human- caused climate warming could well be a
dominant environmental problem throughout the new century, depending on
how fast the gases accumulate in coming decades.

"Human-induced warming and associated sea level rises are expected to
continue through the 21st century," it said.

And it said that "national policy decisions made now and in the longer-term
future will influence the extent of any damage suffered by vulnerable human
populations and ecosystems later in this century."

The report thus all but eliminates one reason the administration has been
using to forestall any action on global warming.

And it deals a strong card to Democrats on Capitol Hill who have long
sought more aggressive action on global warming. Senator John Kerry,
Democrat of Massachusetts and a leading advocate of action said of the
report, "It confirms in stark terms the reality that many of us had accepted a
considerable amount of time ago and refutes an effort by the White House
to seek some sort of escape hatch from that reality."

Senator Chuck Hagel, Republican of Nebraska and a longtime critic of the
Kyoto Protocol, instead highlighted the uncertainty mentioned in the report
and drew the opposite conclusion of Mr. Kerry.

"This report is certainly not a prescription for the drastic measures required
under the Kyoto Protocol," Mr. Hagel said in a statement.

Nonetheless, in a nod toward the unanimity of the scientific community, he
added: "This report does provide us with enough evidence to move forward
in a responsible, reasonable and achievable way to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions. It provides us with a basis to move forward with an
alternative to the Kyoto Protocol."

Environmentalists hailed the report as a significant step in the long effort to
force the United States to curtail greenhouse gases. Phil Clapp, president
of the National Environmental Trust, said, "The president can no longer
wiggle out of aggressive action by arguing that the science is inconclusive."


Mr. Clapp also suggested that the report called into question Mr. Bush's
proposed energy plan, which seeks to step up production of coal, oil and
gas-fired power plants.

"This makes the president's energy plan look completely irresponsible," he
said.

Mr. Clapp said environmental groups had estimated that if the energy plan
was fully put into effect, it would increase the pollution that causes global
warming by 35 percent over the next decade.

The report was written by 11 atmospheric scientists who are members of
the National Academy of Sciences. The authors included Dr. Richard S.
Lindzen, a meteorologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(news - web sites), who for years has expressed skepticism about some of
the more dire predictions of other climate scientists about the significance
of human-caused warming.

The report was requested on May 11 in a letter to Dr. Bruce Alberts, the
president of the National Academy of Sciences, from John M. Bridgeland,
deputy assistant to the president for domestic policy, and Gary Edson,
deputy assistant to the president for international economic affairs.

A statement from the academy today said, "The White House requested
this fast-track review of the state of climate science in preparation for
international discussions on global warming scheduled to take place in the
coming weeks."

Initially, the White House asked two questions of the academy: What are
the greatest strengths and weaknesses in the science pointing to human-
caused warming? And, are there significant differences between the full
scientific analysis completed recently by the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, sponsored by the United Nations (news - web sites), and
the final executive summary?

There have been three assessments of global warming by the international
panel since 1990, and each has drawn a more conclusive picture than the
last of the link between human activities and the prospects for significant
harm to agriculture, ecosystems and coastlines.

But conservatives in Congress notably Senators Hagel and Larry E. Craig,
Republican of Idaho and groups representing industries whose business
depends on fossil fuels have long criticized the findings of the international
panel as biased, pointing particularly to differences between the
voluminous chapters on complicated scientific points and briskly worded
summaries that tend to influence policy.

The panel, led by Dr. Ralph J. Cicerone, the chancellor of the University of
California at Irvine, met initially in California and spent the next weeks
intensively sifting the existing science.

The report does provide some ammunition for critics in its description of
the conclusion of the international climate group. It concluded, for example,
that the international panel had a tendency in its executive summary to
understate caveats and focus on the harsher possible consequences of
climate warming. But over all, the panel described the international work as
"admirable" and robustly supported its conclusions.

In a telephone interview today, Dr. Cicerone said he hoped the report, by
spelling out the scientific basis for various predictions, would dispel some
unwarranted skepticism about aspects of the warming problem.

One climate scientist who critiqued a draft of the new report for the
academy said no one in the administration should be surprised at the firm
nature of the result.

"They asked a string of questions that might have been appropriate in
1990," the scientist said.

"Hello?" he said. "Where've you been the last decade?"


ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
http://www.anomalous-images.com

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to