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----- Original Message ----- 
From: secr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, May 21, 2001 12:13 PM
Subject: [mobilize-globally] Greens warn Bush of opposition to come


Subject:
         [gaia-l] Greens warn Bush of opposition to come
    Date:
         Sun, 20 May 2001 19:53:10 -0300
    From:
         "Mark Graffis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Reply-To:
         [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      To:
         "x3" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "gaia"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
         "Danny Fagandini" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>




UK: May 21, 2001

LONDON - Britain's Green Party has warned U.S. President George W. Bush
his
plan to tackle the U.S. energy crisis would face a barrage of criticism
at a
European Union summit next month.

Jean Lambert, Green Party spokeswoman and European Parliament member,
said
on Friday Greens across Europe would martial their forces to blast
Bush's
energy policy.

"Bush's plans to increase drilling for fossil fuels and increase nuclear

capacity are potentially disastrous," Lambert said at the launch of the
Green's campaign for Britain's June 7 general election.

"He is taking the completely wrong direction and should be concerned
with
reducing demand for energy, not with producing more of it. We will
certainly
focus on Bush and his environmental policies at the summit in Sweden,"
Lambert said, referring to the Gothenburg meeting set for June 13.

While the Greens have yet to make headway in mainstream British
politics,
they are a political player in parts of continental Europe, and have
become
a potent force in Germany.

Bush, who has been slammed by international environmental groups over
his
plans to expand U.S. coal, oil and nuclear power production, is
scheduled to
attend the summit.

He has called his energy strategy a remedy to "the most serious energy
shortage" since the 1970s.

But the European Commission unveiled its own strategy earlier this week
to
put environmental protection at the heart of all its policies and to
make
the EU the world leader in sustainable economic development.

Europe and the United States have locked horns over environmental policy

since Bush pulled out of the 1997 Kyoto climate change deal in March.

European Commission President Romano Prodi will submit his paper, "A
Sustainable Europe for a Better World", to EU Leaders at the summit.

The Green party, which is fielding 140 candidates in the campaign for
the
June 7 British election, is touting policies of fairer taxation,
increased
petrol duty and a ban on genetically modified foods.

Story by Jason Hopps

REUTERS NEWS SERVICE








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