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Islands fear "end of history" due to climate changes

Islands fear "end of history" due to climate changes

Some low-lying island nations face the "end of history" due to rising sea levels unless the world takes stronger action to slow global warming, a spokesman said at U.N.

Reuters

CANCUN, Mexico (Reuters) - Some low-lying island nations face the "end of history" due to rising sea levels unless the world takes stronger action to slow global warming, a spokesman said at U.N. climate talks on Monday.


Kiribati, Tuvalu, the Cook Islands, the Marshall Islands and the Maldives were most at risk, said Antonio Monteiro Lima, a delegate of Cape Verde who is vice-chair of the 43-member Alliance of Small Island States.


"All these countries are at this moment struggling to survive ... they are facing the end of history," he told a news conference on the opening day of November 29 to December 10 negotiations among almost 200 nations on slowing global warming.


Island states say that storm surges are eroding beaches, blowing salt water onto farmland and contaminating fresh water supplies. In the longer term, they fear that rises in sea levels will wash them off the map.


AOSIS reiterated demands that the Cancun talks should work out a legally binding treaty by the end of 2011 to limit any temperature rise to below 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times.


That target is far tougher than a 2C ceiling set by most other nations in a non-binding Copenhagen Accord agreed at a 2009 summit. Goals for Cancun are modest, including setting up a new "green fund" to aid poor nations.


"We have clear scientific evidence, from sea level rise through desertification, of the impact on small, vulnerable countries," said Dessima Williams of Grenada, who chairs AOSIS at the talks.


She said AOSIS would on December 8 announce details of a deal to promote low-carbon economic growth for 17 small island states, backed by a group of developed nations as part of "fast-start" aid for the poor meant to total $30 billion from 2010-21.


The U.N. panel of climate scientists said in a 2007 report that seas were likely to rise between 18 and 59 cms (7-24 inches) this century, before accounting for the possibility of a change in the melt rates or Greenland and Antarctica.


Seas rose by about 17 cms in the 20th century, a trend the panel blamed on emissions of greenhouse gases, mainly from burning fossil fuels.


For Reuters latest environment blogs, click on: http://blogs.reuters.com/environment/

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Can Faith Slow Climate Change?

Can Faith Slow Climate Change?

As the moral implications of climate change become more apparent, faith communities around the world are taking action, both personal and political

LET THERE BE SOLAR: Faith communities are taking action--both personal, like installing solar panels on church rooftops, and political--as the moral implications of climate change become more apparent.

Give us all a reverence for the Earth as your own creation, that we may use its resources rightly in the service of others and to your honor and glory.


The prayer was recited regularly by a young Sally Bingham growing up in San Francisco.


Only years later, as an ordained Episcopal Church priest, did Bingham realize something was amiss with the childhood supplication.


"There was this terrible hypocrisy," she said. "This disconnect between what we said we believed in and how we behaved."


This bothered her for years until 1998 when, in her 50s, she finally took action.


Bingham founded what today is Interfaith Power and Light, a national campaign promoting "a religious response to global warming" that works with 10,000 congregations in 38 states.


"Climate change is one of the most challenging moral issues of our time," she said in an Earth Day sermon at San Francisco's Grace Cathedral where she is now Reverend Canon for the Environment.


Faith communities around the world are taking action - both personal and political - as the moral implications of climate change become more apparent.


While politics is split on climate change and governments worldwide have failed to pass meaningful climate legislation, faith communities are becoming a powerful force in the transition to green energy. By focusing on values rather than politics, they are transcending partisan pigeonholes and taking care of what they see as God's creation, and the people - particularly the poor - who depend on it.


"If you are called to love your neighbor, you don't pollute your neighbor's air," Bingham said.


More than 300 evangelical leaders have signed the Evangelical Environmental Network's climate call to action, including mega-church leaders like Rick Warren and Bill Hybels. A 2007 poll commissioned by the group found that 84 percent of evangelicals support legislation to reduce carbon emissions.


While mainline Protestants, Roman Catholics and Reformed Jews may have a stronger environmental presence, according to religious political scholar John C. Green, evangelicals - 26 percent of the U.S. population - are the most influential religious environmental faction.


"As evangelicals become more vocal on climate change, they have the potential to alter the position of the Republican party," said Green, director of the Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics for Religious Studies at the University of Akron and senior fellow at Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life.


But it's not there yet.


Religious political sway wasn't enough to push climate legislation through Congress this year. And a Pew Research Center Poll of 3,000 respondents found that most religious environmentalists do not derive their green leanings from their faith. Solid majorities of all major religious traditions favor strong environmental laws and regulations, according to the poll, and just under half of those who attend worship services regularly say their clergy speaks out on the topic. Yet the poll found that only six percent said their environmental views were primarily influenced by religion. Education and the media were more influential.


The poll, conducted over the summer, had a margin of error of 2.5 percent.


Still, Dan Lashof, Climate Center director for the National Resources Defense Council, sees results from political action in faith communities.


"It has a significant impact," said Lashof. "Faith communities put a high priority on ensuring that the United States makes a fair contribution to global efforts to address the impacts of climate change in developing countries."


President Obama's 2011 budget reflects the religious influence, Lashof said, with $1.9 billion requested for international climate adaptation. The U.S. Senate this summer released 2011 budget recommendations for over $1.2 billion in "fast start" investments for developing countries to address the impacts of climate change, speed a shift to clean energy and reduce tropical deforestation - part of the U.S. commitment to the Copenhagen Accord.

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Is the U.S. Falling Behind in the Clean Energy Race?

Is the U.S. Falling Behind in the Clean Energy Race?

A new report outlines a strategy for the federal government to encourage clean energy technology

Steven-Chu
SPUTNIK MOMENT: China is rapidly outdistancing the U.S. in clean energy technology development, a new "Sputnik moment," according to U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu.
In the 1970s, refrigerators were growing in size—and energy consumption. In one of the more successful government-supported programs for energy-efficient technology, research and development of better compressors now have provided refrigerators that are larger still—but use roughly the same amount of energy as the smaller iceboxes of the past.



Similar examples of the federal government at work range from the creation of an industry for producing natural gas from coal seams to the ongoing Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy (ARPA-E), a small-scale funding agency with outsized ambitions. As the U.S. faces what Secretary of Energy Steven Chu calls a "Sputnik moment" on energy—falling behind China and others in the race to develop clean energy technologies worth trillions of dollars—the question is: can the U.S. compete? And how?



"America still has the opportunity to lead in a world that will need a new industrial revolution to give us the energy we want inexpensively but also carbon-free. It's a way to secure our future prosperity," Chu said at a press event at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. on November 29. But "I think time is running out."



Creating a coordinated review


A new report from the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology released on November 29 looks at how best to accelerate the pace of change in energy technologies. The report's primary recommendation calls for setting up a quadrennial energy review—analogous to the quadrennial defense review from the Department of Defense that coordinates national security policy. Such a review would holistically coordinate the multiplicity of ways various elements of the government address energy: legislation, executive actions, research and development funding, demonstration projects, subsidies, incentives, standards, regulations, purchasing agreements, even tax policy.



"We've had technology du jour events quite regularly. We've had tax incentives that are stops and starts," says physicist Ernest Moniz of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, co-chair of the report, which recommends the DOE start the energy review process with an interim report by June 2011. "We just have to get something that is more stable."



The report also calls for a major investment in energy research and development as well as demonstration projects—jumping to $16 billion per year from roughly $5 billion now. As it stands, the U.S. spends roughly 0.14 percent of the federal budget on energy-related research. Including the comparatively small amount spent by the private sector, the total amount spent on research amounts to roughly 0.03 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product—a number three times smaller than the amount spent by Japan and far behind other nations as well.



One way to boost funds is new fees on the production and use of electricity and transportation fuels. Moniz notes that just 0.1 cent per kilowatt-hour of electricity and 2 cents per gallon of transportation fuels would yield about $8 billion per year, although such surcharges would need to be developed "with collaboration from industry and consumers. It's clearly easy to block something."



Game-changing targets


Ultimately, the idea is to fund innovation, broadly construed, with the aim of cost reduction for various clean energy technologies, ranging from better batteries for electric cars to carbon capture and storage at coal-fired power plants. "We are not interested in funding incremental work, we are interested in funding game-changing work," Chu said in his talk, noting the potential for the zinc-air batteries currently used in hearing aids to be scaled up into better batteries for electric vehicles. "There is the distinct possibility of giving [electric] cars that have a 100-mile range, a 500-mile range at one-third the cost."



Otherwise, the U.S. risks falling further behind in the race to dominate the clean energy technology markets of the future—becoming a customer, rather than a supplier. Other countries have specifically targeted this area. "We will accelerate the development of a low-carbon economy and green economy so as to gain an advantageous position in the international industrial competition," Chinese premier Wen Jiabao told the World Economic Forum in September 2009. "We will make China a country of innovation."



China has now become, among other things, the world leader in high-efficiency coal-fired power plants. "It's now competitive in terms of power per unit of investment, but you get a lot more power per unit coal," Chu noted. And the world's largest producer of photovoltaic cells—Suntech—imports raw materials from U.S. suppliers and manufactures its high-technology product in China.



At the same time, unlike the Sputnik space race with the Soviets, significant opportunity exists for the U.S. to collaborate with other countries. In coming years, China will be constructing buildings, cities, roads and transmission lines equivalent to the entire infrastructure of the U.S.—both a market opportunity for U.S. companies and a chance to determine the most effective technologies. "If we collaborate with China and India, we both come out better for it," Chu said.



Ultimately, getting energy policy right translates into environmental and national security improvements as well as economic development. "Energy is important because the economy is important, the environment is important, national security is important," says physicist John Holdren, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. "Energy is intimately intertwined with all three."



In fact, U.S. wealth creation over the last century has largely been driven by cheap energy and innovation, whether that be the invention of the airplane or integrated circuits. "Innovation is the key to prosperity and progress," Chu said, noting the key role government funding played in making the U.S. aerospace industry a world-leading enterprise. "You're making an expenditure because, in the long run, it's the future economic health of the country. That's not 20 years in the future; we're talking one, two, three years. We've got to make these investments."
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Leaked Cables Show U.S. Pressured Saudis to Accept Copenhagen Accord

Leaked Cables Show U.S. Pressured Saudis to Accept Copenhagen Accord

The handful of climate-related cables--among the hundreds of thousands of secret and unclassified messages released by the whistle-blower organization Wikileaks--show the United States put climate change at the center of its foreign policy relationship with the oil-producing giant

CLIMATE DIPLOMACY: The Obama administration leaned heavily on Saudi Arabia to associate itself with the Copenhagen Accord climate change agreement, confidential State Department memos show.
The Obama administration leaned heavily on Saudi Arabia to associate itself with the Copenhagen Accord climate change agreement, confidential State Department memos show.



The handful of climate-related cables -- among the hundreds of thousands of secret and unclassified messages released by the whistle-blower organization Wikileaks -- show the United States put climate change at the center of its foreign policy relationship with the oil-producing giant in the months after last year's blowout U.N. climate summit in Denmark.



"You have the opportunity to head off a serious clash over climate change," James Smith, the U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia, wrote to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as she prepared for a February visit to the kingdom.



"Saudi officials are very concerned that a climate change treaty would significantly reduce their income just as they face significant costs to diversify their economy," Smith wrote. "The King is particularly sensitive to avoid Saudi Arabia being singled out as the bad actor, particularly on environmental issues."



And in a memo summarizing the trip of Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Jeffrey Feltman to Saudi Arabia in January, Smith wrote that Feltman urged the country to send a formal notice to the United Nations indicating its acceptance of the climate pact.



"A/S Feltman noted the importance that the President places on climate change, and the Copenhagen Accord," Smith wrote. "Given that Minister of Petroleum Al-Naimi was involved in crafting the final agreement, A/S Feltman noted the United States is counting on Saudi Arabia to associate itself with the accord by January 31."



Saudi leaders were noncommittal, according to the cable, noting that the country's ministries would need to consult on the topic.



A push for information on key negotiators

The memos come as international climate talks kick off in Cancun, Mexico. This year, the focus of the United States is to nail down the agreements that President Obama and other world leaders made in Copenhagen and to devise a set of formal decisions setting in motion emission cuts and the mobilization of funding for poor countries that so far has been agreed to in principle.



The vast majority of the leaked cables deal with Iran's nuclear program and other diplomatic issues. But the handful of times that climate change is raised, it appears as a front-burner Obama administration issue, a ClimateWire review of the cables found. They provide new insight into the behind-the-scenes discussions leading up to Copenhagen and the focus of the administration after the meeting.



In the months before Copenhagen, the summit was listed as a "substantive issue" about which diplomats were directed to gather information. One memo getting a lot of attention asks U.S. envoys at the United Nations and elsewhere to procure credit card and frequent flier numbers as well as other biographical data. In that same document, diplomats are instructed to relate "perceptions of key negotiators on U.S. positions in environmental negotiations" and indications about how cooperative countries may be.



The document also asks diplomats to be on the lookout for information about whether countries adhere to their own environmental programs and laws, and any "efforts by treaty secretariats to influence treaty negotiations or compliance."



China makes a brief appearance in the cables. After a meeting of G-5 ambassadors in Beijing in May, acting Deputy Chief of Mission William Weinstein relayed to Washington that U.K. and Chinese officials discussed the then-upcoming Copenhagen talks.



"In the lead up to Copenhagen, China would not agree to targets on emissions, but was willing to be constructive and would come to Copenhagen with a package of action items related to nuclear power, renewable energy and reforestation," Weinstein wrote, adding that the U.K. diplomat added that "his impression was that China could be induced to do more on climate change."



Indeed, by the time nations met in Copenhagen, China had pledged to cut its carbon intensity about 45 percent below 2005 levels in the next decade.



Warning signals about skeptics in France

U.S. European envoys sent up warning flares early last year about both the U.S. political landscape and prospects for Copenhagen. In a memo called "Scenesetter," as Secretary Clinton prepared for a trip to France late last year, U.S. Ambassador to France Charles Rivkin included the heading, "An urgent focus on climate change."



In it, he wrote, "The French remain divided on how to respond to the Obama administration's approaches to climate change."



At the time, the U.S. House had passed legislation to cut carbon emissions about 17 percent below 2005 levels in the next decade -- a target that much of Europe considered pitifully low. The Senate later failed to pass any climate bill, and cap-and-trade legislation is these days considered dead for the foreseeable future.



According to the November 2009 cable, though, French analysts were early in recognizing a difficult U.S. political horizon, and American officials worked hard to stamp out concerns about the strength of the Obama administration's commitment to climate action.



"Even sophisticated observers are skeptical that long-term reduction goals legislated in the United States can be counted on as more than aspirations, especially if radical cuts are not imposed up front," Rivkin wrote. "We have reiterated that U.S. laws are reliably enforced by the federal government and by U.S. courts, using the Clean Air Act as an example."



Rivkin also said that officials in France's Ministry of Foreign Affairs took exception to a comment that Environment Minister Jean-Louis Borloo made criticizing the U.S. House measure, and described the minister's comments as "distracting attention from the need for China and India to reduce their rates of growth of GHG."



Germans lowered expectations before Copenhagen

And as Clinton arrived in Germany to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall in early December, climate change was also high on the agenda. According to the Nov. 5, 2009, cable, German officials wanted "strong U.S. leadership" going into the Copenhagen summit and advocated for a common position toward major emerging economies, particularly China and India.



That missive also gave early glimpses of the early efforts to try to dampen sky-high expectations for that meeting -- because of the unlikely possibility of U.S. action.



"German leaders recognize the challenge of passing climate change legislation in the U.S. and have lowered their expectations for the possibility of reaching a legally-binding agreement next month at Copenhagen," the cable notes. "They have begun to describe the summit as one step in a larger process -- a politically binding framework -- and may be preparing the German public for a less ambitious outcome."



Analysts said the Saudi memos, in particular, show the lengths the Obama administration went to in order to sway a fierce opponent of international climate action. Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil producer, has a long tradition of blocking movement in the U.N. climate talks. It and other oil-producing nations have, among other things, claimed a need for adaptation funding -- normally reserved for the poor nations that have done little to cause climate change but are bearing the brunt of weather disasters and other problems -- because of rising sea levels that threaten offshore oil rigs.



After the Copenhagen summit, Saudi officials expressed "satisfaction" with the political agreement. But so far, the country has not formally associated itself with the agreement.



Nevertheless, said World Resources Institute Climate Director Jennifer Morgan, the cables are "a sign, to me, that the administration is serious about climate change, and serious about it as a foreign policy topic if it is raising it with one of its partners who takes a different position with the U.S."

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Small-town Pa. mayor arrested for hospital protest

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Small-town Pa. mayor arrested for hospital protest

The Associated Press



















































































PITTSBURGH—A small-town mayor upset about the closing of a hospital in his community has been arrested at the hospital's corporate headquarters in Pittsburgh.

Pittsburgh police say Braddock Mayor John Fetterman was charged Monday with defiant trespassing for refusing to leave the U.S. Steel Tower downtown.

The skyscraper houses the offices of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, which Fetterman has criticized for closing its money-losing hospital in Braddock.

The 41-year-old mayor tells KDKA-TV that he was arrested while carrying a sign asking UPMC to provide Braddock with an urgent-care facility while the old hospital is demolished.

Braddock is a town of 2,700 about 10 miles east of Pittsburgh.






































































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Gov. Ed Rendell says he might have signed Castle Doctrine if gun ownership loophole were closed

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Gov. Ed Rendell says he might have signed Castle Doctrine if gun ownership loophole were closed

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Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell

Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell said he might have signed into law a bill to expand gun-owners’ rights if it had also contained a provision to close the so-called Florida loophole, which allows Pennsylvanians to obtain a gun permit from another state even if they are denied one by Pennsylvania.

Rendell and other gun-control advocates had sought unsuccessfully to end that practice. In a conference call with reporters today, Rendell said that provision might have tipped the balance and made him sign the expansion of the state’s Castle Doctrine, which he vetoed on Saturday.

The expanded Castle Doctrine would have allowed people to use deadly force to protect themselves outside of their home or office.

The bill also contained provisions to require homeless offenders or those who move into Pennsylvania on the Megan’s Law sex offender registry to register here.

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Rendell vetoes self-defense bill

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Rendell vetoes self-defense bill

ed_rendell.jpg
Pennsylvania Gov. Edward G. Rendell

Gov. Ed Rendell vetoed a bill Saturday that would have expanded a citizens' rights to defend themselves when attacked.

The bill would have broadened the so-called "Castle Doctrine," which gives citizens the right to defend themselves without attempting to flee when attacked in the home. The bill, sponsored by state Rep. Scott Perry, R-Dillsburg, would have expanded the law so that it applied outside homes.

In his letter outlining his veto, Rendell said, "I have grave concerns with the expansion included in this legislation."

The governor said that the bill as proposed "encourages the use of deadly force, even when safe retreat is available."

Perry had said that he had heard from many constituents on the issue, and that most favored the expansion of the Castle Doctrine.

"We're talking about the rights of law-abiding, free citizens to defend themselves," Perry told The Patriot-News earlier this month.

Dauphin County District Attorney Edward Marsico had opposed the bill. Earlier this month, he told The Patriot-News that it was a "solution in search of a problem." He said law-abiding citizens aren't getting charged for defending themselves from attackers, so there is no need to change the law.

Rendell's veto may only delay efforts to expand the law. The governor leaves office in January, and Gov.-elect Tom Corbett has said that he would be willing to sign legislation to expand the Castle Doctrine.

Rendell also vetoed another bill Saturday that would have blocked access to coroners' records from public view and inspection.

The Associated Press contribued to this report.

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From Baltimore to Boston, Comcast's Internet service out for hours

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From Baltimore to Boston, Comcast's Internet service out for hours

By PETER MUCHA
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Comcast's online services were offline for several hours last night.


Users from Baltimore to Boston started failing to get on the Internet about 8 p.m., and the system was back up and running about 11 p.m., corporate spokesman Bob Grove told the Baltimore Sun.


The Washington, D.C., area was also affected, another spokesman, Charlie Douglas, told CNN.


"Dear Comcast, thanks for staying on in Philadelphia," at least a couple of Twitter users posted.


TV and telephone service were not disrupted.


The cause was being investigated, but apparently the trouble had to do with domain name servers.


Such problems can be side-stepped, by using alternatives such as OpenDNS and Google Public DNS, writes the Washington Post's Rob








Pegoraro on his "Faster Forward" blog.


Calls to Comcast requesting more information were not immediately returned this morning.


Comcast says it is the leading provider of high-speed Internet services to American homes, with more than 15 million subscribers.

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Police: Man threw concrete chunks at truck, then hid in Old Navy - The York Daily Record


"Christmas" Removed From Plaza in Philadelphia, Will Now Become "Holiday" Village - Pagan Holiday Anyway!

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"Christmas" Removed From Plaza in Philadelphia, Will Now Become "Holiday" Village

PC madness...

Crews remove the word "Christmas" from the sign at Dilworth Plaza. VANCE LEHMKUHL / Daily News Staff

philly.com
It's that season again, which means that for the third year in a row, the German Christmas Village has set up a cozy collection of wooden booths and tree vendors in Dilworth Plaza on the west side of City Hall.

But a few shoppers noticed something amiss yesterday on the tall metal archways signaling the entrances to the shops. The archways had just one word on top - "Village."

It turns out that the letters spelling "Christmas" were removed yesterday afternoon from the archways on the north and west sides of the plaza, at the request of Managing Director Richard Negrin. They will be replaced with the word "Holiday."

City spokesman Mark McDonald said Negrin asked for the change after the city received complaints from workers and residents.

Thomas Bauer, of the German American Marketing Inc., which runs the Village, said he was happy to change the sign. He said the brochures and the posters would keep the Christmas Village title.

"People have to go to public buildings. They shouldn't feel offended," Bauer said, stressing that the name was not intended to upset anyone. "It's been very successful the last two years. People like the name. We built it like a German Christmas market. We did not think a lot about it."
So Philly.com has a poll next to the story asking if people were offended by the word "Christmas"
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