Some good NYT articles

Current article -- below -- on Supreme Court Ruling 
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/03/opinion/03tues1.html?em&ex=1175745600&en=5d03d7ac7b3fbecd&ei=5070



here is a collection of 20 or so quite informative articles from
various angles of the issue -- from past NYTs on GW. Its worth the
read if you have an hour or so -- to understand the issue better --
and approaches to address it. 

http://www.nytimes.com/ref/science/earth/energy.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/03/science/earth/03clim.html?em&ex=1175745600&en=61f7d0ebcafa354d&ei=5087%0A


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The Court Rules on Warming

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Published: April 3, 2007

It would be hard to overstate the importance of yesterday's ruling by
the Supreme Court that the federal government has the authority to
regulate the carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases produced by
motor vehicles.

It is a victory for a world whose environment seems increasingly
threatened by climate change. It is a vindication for states like
California that chose not to wait for the federal government and acted
to limit emissions that contribute to global warming. And it should
feed the growing momentum on Capitol Hill for mandatory limits on
carbon dioxide, the principal greenhouse gas.

The 5-to-4 ruling was a rebuke to the Bush administration and its
passive approach to the warming threat. The ruling does not require
the government to regulate greenhouse gases. But it instructs the
Environmental Protection Agency to reconsider its refusal to regulate
emissions, urges it to pay attention to the scientific evidence and
says that if it takes the same stance, it has to come up with better
reasons than its current "laundry list" of excuses.

The ruling also demolishes President Bush's main justification for not
acting — his argument that because the Clean Air Act does not
specifically mention greenhouse gases, the executive branch has no
authority to regulate them. The president has cited other reasons for
not acting, including costs. But his narrow reading of the Clean Air
Act has always been his ace in the hole.

The court offered a much more "capacious" reading of the act, as
Justice John Paul Stevens wrote for the majority. The plaintiffs — 12
states and 13 environmental groups — had argued, and the court agreed,
that while the act does not specifically mention greenhouse gases, it
gives the federal government clear jurisdiction over "any air
pollutant" that may reasonably be anticipated to endanger "public
health or welfare." This interpretation was first set forth by Carol
Browner, administrator of the E.P.A. under President Clinton, and
remained agency policy until Mr. Bush reversed it in 2001.

The administration had also argued that the states did not have
standing to sue on this issue because they could not show that they
would be harmed by the government's failure to regulate greenhouse
gases. The court ruled that the states have a strong and legitimate
interest in protecting their land and their citizens against the
dangers of climate change and thus have standing to sue.

The ruling reinforces state efforts in other ways. California and
nearly a dozen other states have adopted their own regulations
requiring lower greenhouse gas emissions from cars and trucks. These
rules, however, require federal approval, which seemed unlikely as
long as the agency could claim that carbon dioxide was not a pollutant
— a claim it can no longer make.

The E.P.A. had also argued that reducing emissions would require it to
tighten fuel efficiency standards, a job assigned by law to the
Department of Transportation. The automakers have made much the same
argument against California's emissions rules. But the court said that
the E.P.A. could not shirk its responsibilities just because another
department sets mileage standards. The agency is clearly in for some
serious soul-searching.

The decision was unnervingly close, and some of the arguments in the
dissent, written by Chief Justice John Roberts Jr., were cause for
concern — especially his comments about the "complexities" of the
science of climate change, which is too close for comfort to the
administration's party line.

Still, the Supreme Court, for the first time, has said that global
warming is a real and present danger. This can only encourage those on
Capitol Hill and in the states who are growing increasingly impatient
for aggressive action.
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