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The Climate Ship Has Sailed

By earthsmart, $article.credit

July 10, 2009

Whether or not you believe the large and growing body of scientific evidence that humans are causing climate change, it has become a political and economic reality that every responsible person and organization must prepare for. Just ask big coal.

I have just returned from an international climate change solutions conference, held in Bismarck, ND no less. Why an international conference in a state with just 640,000 people? Because North Dakota is at the heart of big ag and coal country where folks are understandably nervous about any new law that would place limits on greenhouse gases, such as the so-called Waxman-Markey bill that has passed the U.S. House and is moving to the Senate for likely action this Fall.

Now, in full disclosure, my colleagues at the Great Plains Institute helped organize this international conference, but both the speakers and the attendees were decidedly not the usual suspects, and the speakers all delivered the same basic message: It is time for the U.S. to step up and join the rest of the international community to take aggressive action against climate change. Here’s a taste of what some of the speakers had to say:




The G-8 leaders meeting in Italy this week have just confirmed that the most developed nations are committed to tackling climate change, agreeing to cut emissions of greenhouse gases that cause warming by 50 percent worldwide and by 80 percent among industrialized nations by 2050. If you are still fighting this, you are only putting yourself at a competitive disadvantage. It’s like sticking with the horse and buggy in the face of the automobile.

The climate ship is leaving the harbor. And it’s time for everybody to get aboard and help make the voyage work for everyone.

Guest blogger, Rolf Nordstrom is Executive Director of the Great Plains Institute, a non-partisan, non-profit corporation based in Minneapolis: www.gpisd.net.