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Military Planners Focus on Security Aspects of Climate Impacts
As a new administration committed to addressing climate change takes office, intelligence and defense officials are laying plans to address the national security implications of a warmer planet. In recent months, U.S. military planners have discussed the impact on personnel, equipment and installations of extreme weather events, rising ocean temperatures, shifts in rainfall patterns and stresses on natural resources.
Institutional Investors Call for Climate Agreement
Global institutional investors holding more than $6 trillion in assets pushed policymakers to quickly hash out a binding agreement to cut greenhouse gas emissions and promote clean technology.
Maldives Launches Relocation Fund
The Maldives will begin to divert a portion of the country's billion-dollar annual tourist revenue into buying a new homeland - as an insurance policy against climate change that threatens to turn the 300,000 islanders into environmental refugees.
IEA: 2 degree Rise May Be An Impossible Goal
The world will have to bet on extreme measures to avoid serious global warming, the International Energy Agency said, adding that an EU target to limit the planet's temperature increase to 2 degrees Celsius may not be achievable.
ExxonMobil Posts Largest Quarterly Profit Ever
Exxon Mobil Corp. set a quarterly profit record for a U.S. company, surging past analyst estimates. Exxon Mobil, the leading U.S. oil company, said its 2008 third-quarter net profit was $14.83 billion, or $2.86 per share, up from $9.41 billion, or $1.70, a year earlier.
Chiina's Coal Diet Costs $250 Billion in Human Damages
China's dirty and dangerous coal mining industry cost the country a hidden $250 billion last year in lost and damaged lives, wasted energy and environmental devastation, according to a survey.
Climate Impacts Will Displace Millions In Coming Decades
Environmental damage such as desertification or flooding caused by climate change could force millions of peoples from their homes in the next few decades,
UN: Biofuels Causing More Hunger Than Climate Protection
The Western world needs to rethink its rush to biofuels, which has done more harm pushing up food prices than it has good by reducing greenhouse gases, a United Nations report said.
Despite Windfall Profits, Subsidies to US Oil Firms Soar
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 would generate an additional 32.9 billion dollars in new oil subsidies in the form of tax breaks, reduced royalty payments, and accounting gimmicks over a five-year period.
Emissions Up 38% Since 1992
Underscoring the magnitude of the challenge posed by global warming, new U.S. government data estimates that worldwide emissions of carbon dioxide have gone up 38% since 1992, when the United Nations agreed to a framework for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Emissions Up Sharply in 2007
Worldwide man-made emissions of carbon dioxide -- the main gas that causes global warming -- jumped 3 percent last year.That means the world is spewing more carbon dioxide than the worst case scenario forecast by a Nobel Prize-winning group of international scientists in 2007. Scientists said if the trend does not stop, it puts the world potentially on track for the highest predicted rises in temperature and sea level. Overall, the world's emissions have risen about 38% since 1992.
Chicago Plans 25 Percent Reduction Below 1990 Levels by 2020
Chicago mayor Richard Daley rolled out a plan to sharply reduce emissions of carbon dioxide. The plan aims for a 25 percent reduction in carbon dioxide emissions from 1990 levels within 12 years, and includes increased investments in public transit and installing additional green roofs.
Philippines Seen Especially Vulnerable to Climate Change
The Philippines is very vulnerable to climate change and its diverse species will be the first to be wiped out if the temperature warms up, a US-based Filipino physicist said.
Intelligence Agencies See Climate as Major Security Risk for Next President
For poorer countries, climate change "could be the straw that breaks the camel's back," while the United States will face "Dust Bowl" conditions in the parched Southwest. U.S. intelligence agencies have accepted the consensual scientific view of global warming, including the conclusion that it is too late to avert significant disruption over the next two decades.
World Bank Funded Coal Plant Will Out-Emit Tunisia
The new Tata Ultra Mega power plant in western India will become one of the world's 50 largest greenhouse-gas emitters. And the World Bank is helping make it possible.A year after World Bank President Robert Zoellick pledged to "significantly step up our assistance" in fighting climate change, the development institution is increasing its financing of fossil-fuel projects around the globe.
McCain Vows to Build 45 New Nuclear Plants
McCain pledged to build 45 new nuclear plants by 2030, a sharp increase over the nation's 104 operating commercial reactors.
Cost of Yucca Mountain Waste Site Soars
The planned U.S. nuclear waste dump at Yucca Mountain in Nevada will cost billions more than previously estimated due to a hike in the amount of waste it will have to dispose of and inflation, the Energy Department said.
ExxonMobil Reports Largest Quarterly Profit in History
Exxon Mobil reported second-quarter earnings of $11.68 billion, the biggest quarterly profit ever by any U.S. corporation, but the results fell well short of Wall Street expectations and shares fell in premarket trading.
Arctic Oil Reserves Can Meet Three Years World Demand
The Arctic Circle holds an estimated 90 billion barrels of recoverable oil, enough supply to meet current world demand for almost three years, according to the US Geological Survey.
Ice Melt Forces Russian Researchers to Evacuate Arctic Camp
Russian scientists are evacuating a research station built on an Arctic ice floe because the ice has melted to a fraction of its original size, a spokesman said.
Bush Leaves Warming to Next President
The Bush administration rejected its own experts' conclusion that global warming poses a threat to the public welfare, launching a comment period that will delay action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions at least until the next president takes office.
Bush Ignores Supreme Court Order on Greenhouse Gases
The Bush administration has decided not to take any new steps to regulate greenhouse gas emissions before the president leaves office, despite pressure from the Supreme Court and broad accord among senior federal officials that new regulation is appropriate now.
Developing Giants Reject G-8 Plan
China, India and other energy-guzzling developing nations on Wednesday rejected key elements of a global warming strategy embraced by President Bush and leaders of wealthy nations. And the U.N's top climate official dismissed the G-8 goals as insignificant.
World Bank: Biofuels Drive Food Costs Up by 75 Percent
Biofuels have forced global food prices up by 75% - far more than previously estimated - according to a confidential World Bank report obtained by the Guardian. The damning unpublished assessment is based on the most detailed analysis of the crisis so far, carried out by an internationally-respected economist at global financial body.
The figure contradicts the US government's claims that plant-derived fuels contribute less than 3% to food-price rises.
G-8 Vows to Halve Current Emissions by 2050
Pledging to "move toward a low-carbon society," leaders of the world's richest nations endorsed the idea of cutting greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2050, but from current levels rather than 1990's, as had been proposed.
BLM Reverses Solar Ban on Public Lands
Under increasing public pressure over its decision to temporarily halt all new solar development on public land, the Bureau of Land Management said Wednesday that it was lifting the freeze, barely a month after it was put into effect.
New Intelligence Assessment Cites Security Implications of Climate Change
U.S. intelligence experts believe fallout from global climate change over the next 20 years will boost global instability and may place new burdens on U.S. military forces.
Energy Demand to Rise by 50 percent by 2030: IEA
World energy use is expected to surge 50% from 2005 to 2030, largely due to an expanding population and rapid economic growth, according to a government report.
European Experience Raises Deep Doubts about Carbon Trading
In Europe, which created the world's largest carbon-trading market three years ago, early evidence suggests the whole approach could fail.
Cheney: Drill to the last drop!
Vice President Cheney called for a substantial increase in domestic drilling for oil and other natural resources, including in environmentally sensitive areas, saying that only increased production -- and not new technology -- will satisfy the nation's demand for energy.
IEA: World Needs a Rapid Global Energy Revolution
The world must spend about one percent of its total income every year to halve greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, the IEA said Friday, calling for an "energy technology revolution" to curb global warming.
Island Nation "Doomed" By Climate Change: President
The president of the low-lying Pacific atoll nation of Kiribati said his country may already be doomed because of climate change. President Anote Tong said communities had already been resettled and crops destroyed by sea water in some parts of the country, made up of 33 coral atolls straddling the equator.
US Climate Chief Affirms America's "Can't Do" Spirit
The United States will tell a July meeting of the Group of Eight rich nations that it cannot meet big cuts in emissions of planet-warming gases by 2020, its chief climate negotiator Harlan Watson said. "It's frankly not do-able for us," he told Reuters, referring to a goal for rich countries to curb greenhouse gases by 25-40 percent by 2020 compared to 1990 levels.
Corporate Abuse of CDM Is Wasting Billions
Billions of pounds are being wasted in paying industries in developing countries to reduce climate change emissions, according to two analyses of the UN's carbon offsetting programme.
US Inaction Could Cost $3.8 Trillion A Year -- Study
If the U.S.doesn't do something soon to dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it could cost the country $3.8 trillion annually from higher energy and water costs, real estate losses from hurricanes, rising sea levels and other problems, a studypredicted.
McCain Proposes Cap-and-Trade Regime to Curtail Warming
Republican John McCain pledged to take the lead in combating global climate change if elected president in a speech that set him apart from the policies of President George W. Bush.The senator said he would seek international accords to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and would offer an incentive system to make businesses in the US cleaner.
Australia To Buy River Water from Farmers
Australia's government plans to spend about $2.9 billion to buy river water from farmers in a bid to address the country's worst drought in a century. "Climate change means most Australian cities and towns have less water and we can no longer rely on local rainfall to supply all our drinking water," said an Australian official.
UN Warns of 1 Billion Climate Refugees
As many as one billion people could lose their homes by 2050 because of the devastating impact of global warming, scientists and political leaders were warned today by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.
Russia Rejects Binding Emissions Cap
Russia will not accept binding caps on its greenhouse gas emissions under a new climate regime, currently being negotiated to succeed the Kyoto Protocol after 2012, top officials said.
Rockefellers Aim To Change Exxon Climate Policies
Members of the Rockefeller family, who founded ExxonMobil's corporate predecessor, announced they would seek a "major change" in the company's environmental policies.
Gallup: Americans' Concerns about Warming Unchanged in 19 Years
While 61% of Americans say the effects of global warming have already begun, just a little more than a third say they worry about it a great deal, a percentage that is roughly the same as the one Gallup measured 19 years ago.
Terrrorism Most Likely Outcome of US Climate Indifference
Climate change could spawn the next Osama bin Laden unless industrialized nations aggressively reduce emissions and help those suffering the brunt of weather catastrophes, a new international security report warns. From Bangladesh to Indonesia, sub-Saharan Africa to the Maldives, Muslim countries are in some of the most water-stressed regions of the world. As sea levels rise, the study from a top U.K. think tank predicts, so will tensions with the West.
Weather Extremes, Biofuel Craze Drive World Food Crisis
The effect of Australia's drought on rice has produced the greatest impact on the rest of the world, so far. It is one factor contributing to skyrocketing prices, and many scientists believe it is among the earliest signs that a warming planet is starting to affect food production.
Stern: "We Underestimated Climate Damage Costs"
The Stern report on climate change underestimated the risks of global warming, its author said on Wednesday, and should have presented a gloomier view of the future. "We underestimated the risks ... we underestimated the damage associated with temperature increases ... and we underestimated the probabilities of temperature increases," said Stern, former chief economist at the World Bank.
Drought Connects Australian Crop Failure to Food Riots in Haiti
The collapse of Australia's rice production is one of several factors contributing to a doubling of rice prices in the last three months -- increases that have led the world's largest exporters to restrict exports severely, spurred panicked hoarding in Hong Kong and the Philippines, and set off violent protests in countries including Cameroon, Egypt, Ethiopia, Haiti, Indonesia, Italy, Ivory Coast, Mauritania, the Philippines, Thailand, Uzbekistan and Yemen.
Bush Climate Plan Evokes Global Yawn
The world needs tougher action to combat global warming than a plan by President George W. Bush to halt a rise in U.S. greenhouse gas emissions only by 2025, delegates at a climate conference in Paris said on Thursday.
Indigenous RIghts Threatened by Climate Solutions
Large-scale solutions to help slow global warming often threaten the very indigenous peoples who are among those hardest hit by a changing climate, the UN University said. Biofuel plantations, construction of hydropower dams and measures to protect forests, where trees soak up heat-trapping carbon dioxide gas as they grow, can create conflicts with the ancestral lands of indigenous peoples.
Food Shortages Herald a New 'Politics of Scarcity'
Food prices are soaring, a wealthier Asia is demanding better food and farmers can't keep up. In short, the world faces a food crisis and in some places it is already boiling over. Around the globe, people are protesting and governments are responding with often counterproductive controls on prices and exports -- a new politics of scarcity in which ensuring food supplies is becoming a major challenge for the 21st century.
NRC Cites Infrastructure Risks from Climate Impacts
Flooded roads and subways, deformed railroad tracks and weakened bridges may be the wave of the future with continuing global warming, a new study says.
EU Warns of Conflict Threat over Arctic Resources
European Union leaders will receive a stark warning next week of potential conflict with Russia over energy resources at the North Pole as global warming melts the ice cap and aggravates international security threats.
Europeans: Bush Plan All Spin, No Substance
A senior European official has described America's latest offer on climate change as far too little, far too late.
UN: Food Prices, Driven by Warming, Create New "Face of Hunger"
The United Nations warned yesterday that it no longer has enough money to keep global malnutrition at bay this year in the face of a dramatic upward surge in world commodity prices, which have created a "new face of hunger".
Activists Blast Trading as Environmentally Unjust
Low-income community groups in five California cities launched a statewide campaign Tuesday to "fight at every turn" any global-warming regulation that allows industries to trade carbon emissions, saying it would amount to "gambling on public health." "Cap and trade is a charade to continue business as usual," said Angela Johnson Meszaros, director of the California Environmental Rights Alliance.
Climate Change Threatens Human Rights -- UN
Climate change threatens the human rights of millions of people who are at risk of losing access to housing, food and clean water unless governments intervene early to counter its effects, experts said.
BP Exec: Climate Can't Handle More Oil Exploration
Known oil, gas and coal reserves may already contain a quarter more carbon than mankind can emit and still avoid dangerous climate change, putting the value of new oil exploration in doubt, said a former oil major executive. The oil industry may be wasting $50 billion annually searching for new fields, said the former risk manager for BP.
Biofuels Seen As Net Carbon Source
Almost all biofuels used today cause more greenhouse gas emissions than conventional fuels if the pollution caused by producing these "green" fuels is taken into account, two studies published Thursday have concluded.
Exxon Profits Soar to Record $40.6 Billion in 2007
Exxon Mobil Corp. on Friday posted the largest annual profit by a U.S. company -- $40.6 billion -- as the world's largest publicly traded oil company benefited from historic crude prices at year's end.
Bush Climate Conference Produces Nothing
A meeting of delegates from the nations that emit the most pollutants ended without concrete targets for slashing greenhouse gas emissions, but participants praised what they saw as a new willingness by the United States to discuss possible solutions.
Most Businesses Ignore Coming Climate Impacts
Nearly nine in 10 businesses do not rate climate change as a priority. Nearly twice as many see climate change as imposing costs on their business as those who believe it presents an opportunity to make money. And the report's publishers believe that big business will concentrate even less on climate change as the world economy deteriorates.
Local Governments Accord Low Priority to Climate Change
Two-thirds of responding local governments consider climate change to be a low or very low priority, and 57% do not have a climate change program. Where climate data are incorporated into policy decisions, they are mostly used to set municipal greenhouse gas emissions reduction goals, for energy conservation, for water management, and for land use planning.
Local governments that identified potential vulnerabilities to climate change most often cited intensified storms (50%), compromised water quality (39%), infrastructure damage (25%), and loss of wetlands (22%).
Primary reasons for not having climate initiatives include skepticism about the accuracy of climate science and practical barriers, such as lack of funding, marginal support from elected officials, and lack of citizen involvement.
Drought Could Force Closing of Nuclear Plants
Nuclear reactors across the Southeast could be forced to throttle back or temporarily shut down later this year because drought is drying up the rivers and lakes that supply power plants with the awesome amounts of cooling water they need to operate.
Banks Criticized For Slow Response to Climate Change
A handful of the world's biggest banks are starting to look at the risk that climate change poses to their businesses, but investors and environmentalists say they need to do more.
Scientists: Earth has Entered the Anthropocene Era
We humans are having such a dramatic impact on our planet that some leading scientists think the current era needs a new name. We're no longer in the Holocene epoch, they say. We're now well into what they are calling the Anthropocene.
Bert Bolin, first IPCC Chair, Dies at 82
Bert Bolin, a pioneering Swedish climate scientist and co-founder of the U.N.'s Nobel award-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, has died, his colleague Henning Rodhe said Wednesday. He was 82.
Weather-Related Insurance Losses Doubled in 2007
Losses to insurers from natural disasters nearly doubled this year to just below $30 billion globally after an unusually quiet 2006, a leading reinsurer said, from winter storms in Europe, flooding in Britain and wildfires in the U.S.
Japan Risks Methane Hydrate Extraction
Fifty-five million years ago the world's climate was catastrophically changed when volcanoes melted natural gas frozen in the seabed. Now Japan plans to drill for the same icy crystals to end its reliance on imported energy. Billions of tons of methane hydrate buried in sediment some 3,000 feet under the Pacific Ocean floor, may help Japan win energy independence from the Middle East and Indonesia.
EPA Vetoes California Auto Standards
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Stephen L. Johnson yesterday denied California's petition to limit greenhouse gas emissions from cars and trucks, overruling the unanimous recommendation of the agency's legal and technical staffs.
German Party Calls for Carbon-based Sanctions on US Exports
Germany's ruling Social Democratic party is calling for sanctions on energy-intensive US export products if the Bush administration continues to obstruct international agreements on climate protection.
Warming, Biofuel Craze Threatens World Food Supplies
In what was described as an "unforeseen and unprecedented" shift, the world food supply is dwindling rapidly and food prices are soaring to historic levels, the top food and agriculture official of the United Nations warned yesterday. The looming shortages are due to the early effects of global warming, which has decreased crop yields in some crucial places, and a shift away from farming for human consumption toward crops for biofuels and cattle feed.
COP-13 Ends as COPout
A U.N. climate conference adopted a plan Saturday to negotiate a new global warming pact. European and U.S. envoys dueled into the final hours of the two-week meeting over the European Union's proposal that the Bali mandate suggest an ambitious goal for cutting industrial nations' emissions -- by 25 to 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020. That guideline's specific numbers were eliminated from the text, but an indirect reference was inserted instead.
EU Threatens To Boycott US-led Climate Talks
European nations will boycott U.S.-led climate talks next month unless Washington accepts a range of numbers for negotiating deep reductions of global-warming emissions, Germany's environment minister said Thursday.
US to World: No Greenhouse Cuts
The US delegation at a UN climate change summit said Thursday they would not commit to deep greenhouse gas emissions cuts at the key meeting in Indonesia, despite growing pressure. Harlan Watson, head of the US delegation, said that neither a recent US Senate committee move to limit greenhouse gas emissions or the decision by Australia to ratify the Kyoto Protocol would influence their stance.
Germany Ups Goal to 40 Percent Cuts by 2020
Germany unveiled 14 new laws and decrees to allow it to meet its goal of cutting greenhouse gases by 40 percent by 2020.
Bangladesh Refugees Create Conflict Zone in India
A clear climate threat is a mass migration that is sparking renewed conflict in the Indian Northeast among between residents and swarms of refugees from neigbhoring Bangladesh.
US Again Rejects Kyoto
The United States said on Monday it would seek a new global deal to fight climate change after Australia's move to ratify the Kyoto Protocol isolated it as the only developed nation outside the current U.N. pact.
Australian Prime Minister Ratifies Kyoto Protocol
Labor Party leader Kevin Rudd became Australia's 26th prime minister Monday and immediately began dismantling the former government's policies by ratifying the Kyoto Protocol on climate change.
UNDP Warns Poor Countries Face "Adaptation Apartheid"
A new UN report warns that progress toward prosperity in the world's poorest regions will be reversed unless rich countries promptly begin curbing emissions linked to global warming while also helping poorer ones leapfrog to energy sources that pollute less than coal and oil. The world's poorest regions will also need much more help to avoid what one commentator called "adaptation apartheid."
150 Multinationals Call for Mandatory Cuts
A sizable fraction of the international business community launched an effort to press for mandatory cuts in greenhouse gas emissions yesterday, on the eve of a major round of climate negotiations set to begin Monday in Bali.
UNDP Calls for Rapid Carbon Cuts
Unless the international community agrees to cut carbon emissions by half over the next generation, climate change is like to cause large-scale ecological catastrophes, a United Nations report says.The UN Human Development report issued one of the strongest warnings yet of the lasting impacts of climate change on living standards and a strong call for urgent collective action.
Natural Disasters Quadrupled in 20 Years: Oxfam
More than four times the number of natural disasters are occurring now than did two decades ago, British charity Oxfam said in a study that largely blamed global warming.
US Stands Alone Against Kyoto As Australia's Howard Falls
Newly elected leader Kevin Rudd moved quickly to bring Australia into international talks on fighting global warming, and to head off potentially thorny relations with the United States and key Asian neighbors.
UK's Brown Calls for 80 percent Cuts by 2050
Britain's prime minister hopes to push the nation to the forefront of global efforts to tackle climate change, calling Monday for an 80 percent cut in emissions by 2050.
Six Midwestern States Form Carbon-Cutting Pact
Six Midwestern governors and the premier of Manitoba will sign an accord in Milwaukee today that will commit those states to working together to slash emissions linked to global warming over the coming decades.
Scientists Wrestle With Geoengineering Prospects
There is now "no doubt" that some of the effects of human-induced climate change could be offset with engineering fixes, according to David Keith, of at the University of Calgary. But what action should be taken, based on this knowledge? That was one of the knotty questions he and other experts wrestled with at a two-day conference.
Democratic Presidential Candidates Unite Around Large Carbon Cuts
All of the leading Democratic contenders for the presidency are committed to a set of cuts in greenhouse gas emissions that would change the way Americans light their homes, fuel their automobiles and do their jobs, costing billions of dollars in the short term but potentially, the candidates say, saving even more in the decades to follow.
IEA Urges Urgent Energy Cutbacks
In unusually urgent tones, the International Energy Agency, which provides policy advice to industrial nations, urged advanced economies to work with China and India to cut overall growth in energy consumption. Otherwise, carbon dioxide emissions will increase by 57 percent over the next 25 years, the agency said.
Survey: People Will Pay to Fight Warming
Millions of people around the world are willing to make personal sacrifices, including paying higher bills, to help redress climate change, according to a global survey.
The Price of Crops for Fuel In a Hungry World
Empty shelves in Caracas. Food riots in West Bengal and Mexico. Warnings of hunger in Jamaica, Nepal, the Philippines and sub-Saharan Africa. Soaring prices for basic foods are beginning to lead to political instability. Add to that the push for biofuels and the competition between grain for fuel and grain for food could well emerge as a major source of conflict.
New Study Underscores Security Threats from Climate Change
Climate change could be one of the greatest national security challenges ever faced by U.S. policy makers, according to a new joint study by two U.S. think tanks. The report raises the threat of dramatic population migrations, wars over water and resources, and a realignment of power among nations.
Bloomberg Calls for National Carbon Tax
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg plans today to announce his support for a national carbon tax. The mayor will argue that directly taxing emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change will slow global warming, promote economic growth and stimulate technological innovation even if it results in higher gasoline prices in the short term.
Climate Impacts Brings Scientists, Evangelicals Together in Alaska
A group of scientists from the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School, along with a group of the country's leading Evangelical leaders, visited Alaska this summer to witness first-hand the effects of climate change on local populations and on the land, ocean, plants and wildlife of our northernmost state.
US Air Force Eyes Carbon Neutral Future
The U.S. air force is seeking to wean itself from foreign oil and nearly zero out its carbon dioxide output as part of a sweeping alternative energy drive, a senior Pentagon official said.
Sarkozy Calls for Carbon Tax, Sanctions Against Kyoto Resisters
French President Nicolas Sarkozy called for a national "carbon tax" on global-warming pollutants and a European levy on imports from countries outside the Kyoto Protocol. Any such levy is bound to be targeted at imports from the United States and Australia, the only advanced economies that remain outside the UN's landmark pact on greenhouse-gas emissions.
Oil Peaked in 2006: Study
World oil production has already peaked and will fall by half as soon as 2030, according to a report which also warns that extreme shortages of fossil fuels will lead to wars and social breakdown. A study by the German-based Energy Watch Group says that global oil production peaked in 2006 - much earlier than most experts had expected.
US Insurers Withdraw Extreme Weather Coverage from Northeastern States
Public officials in Southern states from Florida to Texas have been fighting insurance carriers for years over rising rates and withdrawal of services, but officials in the Northeast have only recently joined the fray. Companies including Allstate, State Farm and Liberty Mutual have "nonrenewed" policies not only in hurricane-battered places like Florida and Louisiana, but in New York and other Northern states that have not seen hurricanes in years.
Gore, IPCC Share 2007 Nobel Peace Prize
Former Vice President Al Gore, who emerged from the 2000 presidential election debacle to devote himself to his passion as an environmental crusader, was awarded the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize on Friday, along with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United Nations network of scientists.
Bush Non-Plan Infuriates Allies
US President George W. Bush infuriated his critics by professing world leadership on climate change at his meeting of the top 16 world economies - while offering no new substantive policy and implicitly rejecting binding emissions controls.
Wheat Crisis Threatens Australian Beef Industry
Record high grain prices have thrown Australia's $4 billion beef cattle industry into disarray, emptying feedlots, cutting cattle saleyard prices and triggering price rises for domestic and exported beef. Parts of Australia's beef industry have begun to shut down after feed grain prices doubled since June because of the decimation of crops by drought.
Poll: 62 Percent of Americans Want Drastic Climate Action
Sixty-two percent of respondents to a national survey believe that life on earth will continue without major disruptions only if society takes immediate and drastic action to reduce global warming. Further, 68 percent of Americans support a new international treaty requiring the United States to cut its emissions of carbon dioxide 90 percent by the year 2050 according to the survey.
UN Chief Optimistic About Bali Meeting
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said a one-day high-level meeting on climate change on Monday was a turning point in the battle against global warming. "What I heard today is a major political commitment for a breakthrough in climate change in Bali," Ban said, despite the lack of United States' attendance at the meeting.
Rice Calls For Global Energy Revolution
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Monday the world needs a revolution on energy that transcends oil, gas and coal to prevent problems from climate change.
UN Chief Sees Global "Commitment" To Curb Warming
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said a one-day high-level meeting on climate change on Monday was a turning point in the battle against global warming. "What I heard today is a major political commitment for a breakthrough in climate change in Bali," Ban said. A meeting scheduled in Bali, Indonesia, for December is aimed at jump-starting talks to find a successor to the Kyoto Protocol.
Australian Drought Drives Up Wheat Prices in US, Europe
US and European wheat prices rallied on Tuesday as Australia slashed the size of its drought-hit crop by a staggering 31 percent.
EU Likely to Overshoot Climate Goal
The European Union's goal of keeping the global temperature rise to 2C is unlikely to be met, a leading climate researcher has warned.
Professor Martin Parry told BBC News that millions, if not tens of millions, would be at increased risk to their lives from a rise above 2C (3.6F).
US Leads Way To A Nuclear Future
Sixteen nations signed a U.S.-initiated pact on Sunday to help meet soaring world energy demand over coming decades by developing nuclear technology less prone to diversion into atomic bomb-making.
Bush Aide: The Warming is Man-Made
The US chief scientist has told the BBC that climate change is now a fact. John Marburger, who advises President Bush, said it was more than 90% certain that greenhouse gas emissions from mankind
are to blame.
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