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FW: - Climate Change Hearings and the roll(?) of nuclear power



I received this through another list server and thought some on this list

would find it of interest.  Regarding nuclear power, it sounds like the

"more study is needed" function key was activated . . .



"The discussion turned to nuclear power, with Card declaring that

it is difficult to be serious about a climate change strategy

without being serious about increasing the utilization of

nuclear power.  There needs, Card said, to be a large change

in the nation's energy mix."



-- John 

John Jacobus, MS

Certified Health Physicist 

3050 Traymore Lane

Bowie, MD  20715-2024



E-mail:  jenday1@email.msn.com (H)      



-----Original Message-----

From: AIP listserver [mailto:fyi@aip.org]

Sent: Friday, July 26, 2002 4:13 PM

To: fyi-mailing@aip.org

Subject: FYI #87 - Climate Change Hearings





FYI

The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Science Policy

News

Number 87: July 26, 2002



Hearings Highlight Differences on Bush Global Climate Change

Policy 

  

Hearings held two weeks ago by House and Senate committees

revealed both consensus and conflict surrounding the Bush

Administration's global climate change policy.  With rare

exception, almost all agreed that the world's climate had

warmed.  The causes of this warming trend and what should be

done to counteract it remain in contention.



The first hearing was before the House Science Committee. 

Chairman Sherwood Boehlert (R-NY) began by saying, "It's

extremely hard to figure out what the Administration is doing

in, or planning for, its climate change science and technology

programs.  We have had trouble getting answers to our

questions and we've heard contradictory descriptions of

programs from different agencies and even from different parts

of the White House."



Three Administration witnesses testified: OSTP Director John

Marburger, DOE Undersecretary Robert Card, and Commerce

Assistant Secretary James Mahoney.  Marburger defended the

Administration's program, explaining the need for a science-

based policy, that scientific uncertainties were real and

significant, and existing climate models limited in their

scope.  Mahoney, the director of the federal interagency

climate change program, called climate change the "capstone

issue of our generation." He feared advocates of an immediate

reduction in greenhouse gas emissions were employing a "ready-

fire-aim" strategy.  He admitted that "Yes, there is a

problem," but then added, "what specifically do we do about

the problem?"  Mahoney briefly described a major workshop in

early December that will lead to the development of a

comprehensive plan.  Card's testimony centered on two points:

first, the Administration's plan to reduce the "intensity" of

emissions (defined as the emissions per dollar of GDP) by 18%

over the next ten years, which he said would be both

"meaningful and difficult."  Second, he advocated the

development of nuclear, fusion, wind, hydro, and clean coal

technologies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.



There was considerable discussion about the Administration's

plan.  Marburger said "I believe that an intensity goal is an

appropriate goal for the state of knowledge that we have and

for the nature of the problem."  The alternative method for

the reduction of emissions, he said, would be the curtailment

or elimination of industrial operations.  Marburger admitted,

however, that he did "not expect to see" a reduction in the

absolute emissions during the ten year period.   The

discussion turned to nuclear power, with Card declaring that

it is difficult to be serious about a climate change strategy

without being serious about increasing the utilization of

nuclear power.  There needs, Card said, to be a large change

in the nation's energy mix.  Regarding climate models, 

Marburger contended that they "are not yet up to the point

where they can provide useful advice,"  calling for their

further refinement since "the empirical data always comes too

late" about such phenomenons.   



If the exchanges between the Administration witnesses and the

members of the House Science Committee were relatively low-

key, the hearing the next day before the Senate Commerce,

Science and Transportation Committee was anything but. 

Senator John Kerry (D-MA) charged that the Administration's

policy "appears to have taken several steps backwards," later

declaring "I believe the [Administration's] commitment remains

rhetorical."  "This issue has been talked and talked for too

long now," he said.  Joining Kerry in his criticism was

Senator John McCain (R-AZ), who cited the then-raging Arizona

wild fires as evidence for those predicting that climate

change would lead to increased fire hazards.  He was, he said,

disappointed with the "business as usual approach."   Declared

Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA),  "At this point, I think this is

a fight." 



The Chairman of the White House Council on Environmental

Quality, James Connaughton, seemed to be the point man for the

Administration at this hearing.  Also testifying were

Marburger, Mahoney, and R. Glenn Hubbard, Chairman of the

Council of Economic Advisers.  Connaughton and Hubbard

contended that an immediate reduction in greenhouse gases

would seriously damage the economy.  Using the intensity

approach to eventually reduce the level of emissions would be

less harmful, they claimed.  



Kerry pressed Hubbard on the warnings contained in the

Administration's "U.S. Climate Action Report" (see FYI #73).  

"These are projections based on scenarios," not predictions,

Hubbard replied.  The discussion returned to the intensity

approach, Kerry charging that it would allow emissions to

increase.  Boxer called the Administration's approach a

smokescreen, and said "It's baloney."  



The discussion went back and forth, with neither side on this

issue yielding little if any ground.  At the conclusion of the

hearing, Kerry and the Administration officials spoke of a

willingness to work toward a common approach.  Judging from

the tone of the Senate hearing, that consensus will not be

forthcoming in the near future.



###############

Richard M. Jones

Media and Government Relations Division

The American Institute of Physics

fyi@aip.org

(301) 209-3095

http://www.aip.org/gov

##END##########

















          

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