SIGN This Letter:

http://www.gopetition.com/online/23266.html

This letter was sent and thought to be received by President-Elect Barack
Obama from leading ecologist Stephen R. Carpenter. This petition is simply
to support the gravity of Dr. Carpenter's advice to save our life support
systems.

Please sign and forward on to demonstrate your support for these basic, but
necessary national priorities for Brack Obama's presidency.

The objective of this petitions is to organize citizens who support Stephen
R. Carpenter's position of saving human life support systems, emphasize the
urgency of the situation to the Obama administration and draw attention to
the seemingly unnoticed 1,300 leading scientists' consensus report.

Used with permission of Stephen R. Carpenter.

http://www.gopetition.com/online/23266.html

November 2008--

Dear President-Elect Obama,

Congratulations on your election, which has created a sense of optimism in
America that has never occurred before in my lifetime.

Yet earth’s life support systems have deteriorated more in our lifetimes
than in any other era of human history. With earth’s population increasing,
and consumption per person growing much faster than population, humans are
heating the climate, polluting air and water, degrading landscapes and
turning coastal oceans to dead zones. America’s food supply depends on a few
fragile crops, grown using practices that degrade soil, air and water to
yield foods of low nutritional value that harm our health. The U.S. is not
investing in the education and innovation needed to create agriculture and
energy technologies that can get us through the 21st century. Details are
found in a consensus report of more than 1300 leading scientists from more
than 90 nations including the U.S. (http://www.MAweb.org). These findings
support the following priorities for your presidency.

Decrease America’s dependency on coal and oil and increase the supply of
energy from non-polluting technologies: We must decrease emission of
greenhouse gases, and the era of cheap oil is over. We must accelerate
development of clean energy technologies using wind, sun and tides. These
investments must be based on scientific information to avoid bogus remedies,
such as grain biofuels, that sound good but do not in fact solve the
problem. We must increase conservation through better buildings, efficient
transportation, and renewal of industry. We must improve agriculture and
forestry practices to reduce energy consumption and increase carbon storage
in soil.

Stop subsidizing agriculture that destroys land, water and health. Create
incentives for agriculture that maintains land and water resources and
yields healthy food: Agriculture must shift to practices that use less
energy for tillage and transport of food, produce healthy food for local
consumption, train more people in diverse farming practices, build soil
instead of degrading and eroding it, and maintain clean water and air. These
reforms can be accomplished by reforming federal subsidies.

Have a population policy: In global impact, the U.S. is the world’s most
overpopulated nation, mainly because of our high per-capita consumption. Our
population is growing rapidly. Global population growth is a key driver of
degraded land, water, air and climate. Education of women is a powerful
lever to restrain population growth. If all the world’s women are educated
to high-school level, human impact on our life-support system will be more
than 30% lower by 2050. As a father of daughters, it is especially
appropriate for you to support education for all of the world’s women.

Invest in the education and innovation needed to create a society that could
thrive in the 21st century and beyond: Even though our universities and
research centers are the envy of the world, science education of the general
population of the U.S. is weak and must be made stronger. Education must be
reformed to encourage creativity. There are enormous opportunities for
innovations in agriculture, energy, and infrastructure that will lead to a
moderate climate, rich landscapes, and clean air and water into the future.
These technological opportunities are being seized by other nations while
the U.S. lags behind. We must restore American leadership in creating
technology that maintains our life support system while providing the
energy, food and shelter that people need.

Sincerely yours,

Steve Carpenter

Stephen Alfred Forbes Professor of Zoology
Center for Limnology
University of Wisconsin
Madison, Wisconsin 53706 USA

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