Bush Administration Again Rejects Treaty on Climate Change
By Tom Doggett and Chris Baltimore
Reuters
WASHINGTON (June 3) - The Bush administration acknowledged
for the first time in a new report that U.S. greenhouse gas emissions
will increase significantly over the next two decades due mostly to
human activities, but again rejected an international treaty to slow
global warming.
The report released by the Environmental Protection Agency
was a surprising endorsement of what many scientists and weather experts
have long argued -- that human activities such as oil refining, power
plants and automobile emissions are important causes of global warming.
The White House had previously said there was not enough
scientific evidence to blame industrial emissions for global warming.
"Greenhouse gases are accumulating in the Earth's
atmosphere as a result of human activities, causing global mean surface
air temperatures and subsurface ocean temperatures to rise," the
administration said in its report.
That position puts the Bush administration at odds with
its supporters in the U.S. auto, oil and electricity industries, which
contend that more research is needed to determine if the changes are
naturally occurring or caused by industry.
In the report sent Friday to the United Nations, the administration
forecast that total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions will increase 43 percent
between 2000 and 2020.
On the same day, all 15 European Union nations ratified
the Kyoto pact -- the only global framework for reducing emissions of
greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and soot.
The United States is the world's largest emitter of so-called
greenhouse gases, mostly from utilities and factories.
Last year, the Bush administration triggered international
outrage when it announced the United States would not participate in
the Kyoto Treaty, a U.N.-backed attempt to limit greenhouse gas emissions
by industrial countries.
At the time, President Bush said the Kyoto Treaty's goal
of reducing U.S. emissions by about 7 percent from 1990 levels during
2008-2012 would be too costly to the American economy.
Environmental groups said the new U.S. report was a major
reversal by Bush administration on the link between global warming and
human activity.
"(The report) undercuts everything the president
has said about global warming since he took office," said Philip
Clapp, president of the National Environmental Trust.
The Environmental Protection Agency posted the report
on its Webs site, but EPA officials refused to comment on its contents
and referred inquires to the State Department, which submitted the report
to the United Nations.
ALPINE MEADOWS, ISLANDS AT RISK
The administration warned that increased emissions and
rising temperatures will have a greater impact on certain regions of
the United States.
The report said average temperatures in the contiguous
United States will rise 5 degrees to 9 degrees Fahrenheit during this
century.
Some highly sensitive ecosystems, such as Rocky Mountain
meadows and coastal barrier islands, will likely disappear, the report
said.
Forest regions in the Southeastern United States could
see "major species shifts," or major changes in growth patterns.
The report also raises the possibility of drought conditions
and changing snowfall patterns in the West, Pacific Northwest and Alaska.
Average sea level rises of 19 inches from global warming
could threaten buildings, roads, power lines and other infrastructure
in climate-sensitive areas, the report said.
"With higher sea level, coastal regions could be
subject to increased wind and flood damage, even if tropical storms
do not change in intensity," it said.
Though not referenced in the report, the impacts spell
significant dangers for coastal cities like New York City and New Orleans,
Clapp said.
With sea level rises referenced in the report, Manhattan
would be underwater up to Wall Street and New Orleans would have to
undertake a major dike-building effort to hold back the waters, Clapp
said.
"The United States needs to take aggressive action
now to develop a program to reduce emissions," he said.
VOLUNTARY MEASURES
The administration repeated in the report that voluntary
measures to control emissions taken by polluting U.S. companies are
the best way to slow the growth of emissions that are believed to cause
the earth's atmosphere and oceans to warm.
A voluntary approach is "expected to achieve emission
reductions comparable to the average reductions prescribed by the Kyoto
agreement, but without the threats to economic growth that rigid national
emission limits would bring," the report said.
The White House reiterated its commitment to fighting
global warming and touted its plan to reduce the amount of emissions
per unit of U.S. gross domestic product by 18 percent over the next
decade through a combination of voluntary, incentive-based and mandatory
measures.
The administration also pointed out that the United States
had led the world in investment in climate change science and since
1990 has spent over $18 billion on such research.
A global summit in Johannesburg is planned for August
with 60,000 delegates and 100 heads of state to discuss sustainable
development, with climate change issues slated for discussion.
The United States is expected to face heavy criticism
at the meeting, especially from the European Union, for not doing more
to fight global warming.
06/03/02 12:55 ET
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