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by Bill Sweet
Bet on Adoption of a U.S. Climate Policy
Four years ago, six months before the last presidential election, I
expressed skepticism about whether the United States would adopt a
cap-and-trade reduction plan, even though both candidates Obama and
McCain had explicitly favored such a system. This year, though neither
President Obama nor challenger Romney has uttered the words “climate
change” during the campaign, my prediction is that the United States
will soon adopt some kind of carbon plan, regardless of who wins.
Because of dramatically extreme climate events seen in the last few
years, most recently the drought that afflicted U.S. farm states last
summer, most Americans have come to quietly accept that global warming
is real and dangerous. Accordingly, in the immediate aftermath of the
storm that devastated New York City last week, both Mayor Michael
Bloomberg and Governor Andrew Cuomo prominently mentioned climate
change: Without blaming climate, they said the city would have to expect
more disastrous flooding as the world continues to warm.
Two days later, in a move that took all political pundits by
surprise, Bloomberg endorsed Obama for reelection, basing his decision
almost entirely on what he said was the president’s superior position on
climate change. Why would Bloomberg, who first ran for mayor as a
Republican and now styles himself an independent, endorse a Democrat who
has not talked publicly about climate change in the four years he has
been president?
Read more.http://spectrum.ieee.org/energywise/energy/environment/bet-on-adoption-of-a-us-climate-policy |
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