Between the Lines Interview with Ross Gelbspan
Between The Lines
http://www.btlonline.org
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Between the Lines Q&A
A weekly column featuring progressive viewpoints
on national and international issues
under-reported in mainstream media
for release June 12, 2007
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Distributed by Squeaky Wheel Productions
http://www.squeakywheel.net
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Critics: Bush Proposal
on Global Warming Designed to
Undercut United Nations
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Interview with Ross Gelbspan - journalist and author
Conducted by Melinda TuhusListen in RealAudio:
http://www.btlonline.org/gelbspan061507.ram
On May 31, President George Bush proposed for the first time during his administration setting "a long-term global goal" for reducing carbon emissions, after six years of ignoring the problem or calling for more studies. The president's proposal calls for a set of international talks to discuss voluntary, not mandatory, compliance, focusing on reducing emissions 50 years and more into the future, rather than on what can be done right now.
The timing of his announcement was tied to the G-8 summit meeting of leading industrial nations in Germany, from June 6-8. But the president's climate change proposal was met mostly with criticism from other world leaders and environmentalists.
Between The Lines' Melinda Tuhus spoke with Ross Gelbspan, author of "The Heat is On" and "Boiling Point," two books that detail the problems associated with global climate change and propose a way forward. He discusses the relationship between the developed and developing nations regarding carbon emissions, and finds hope in an unlikely sector of American society.
ROSS GELBSPAN: Basically, I think what the president has done is, he has come out with a proposal that is extremely vague and has no targets and timetables, to gather 15 countries the worlds largest emitters, most of which are developing countries, including India and China and so forth, but also Australia, which is the worlds largest coal producer into some kind of a separate agreement theyre going to work out in the next couple years. What I see this as is a very, very direct attempt to sabotage the United Nations. The UN is really the body that has sort of mediated and moved forward on this issue. The Kyoto Protocol is under an agency that is essentially under the guidance of the UN. So what I see the president doing is trying to undermine the UN, which he has done in lots of other arenas as well. Therefore, I think its not only not helpful, I think its very destructive in terms of the international communities trying to find some kind of consensus on this.
BETWEEN THE LINES: The developing nations were exempt from having to meet any timetables or reach any specific reductions under the first Kyoto Protocol that expires in 2012. What role should they be encouraged or required to play going forward, since this group of nations, including India and China, will soon overtake the developed nations in their release of carbon emissions?
ROSS
GELBSPAN: Well, the Kyoto Protocol, the way it was written,
it exempted developing countries from the first round of
cuts. And in fact the first President Bush, who oversaw the
Rio treaty under which Kyoto was developed, approved of
that. And the reasoning was very simple: We in the North
have created the problem; we in the North have the resources
to begin to address it; we in the North need to take the
first steps and the rest of the world will come along. So,
that was essentially a deliberate and universally approved
exemption of the developing countries from the first round
of carbon cuts. I must tell you that the developing
countries would like nothing more than to make this
transition. Its developing countries that are hit first and
hardest by climate impacts, because they don’t have the
infrastructure to buffer the impacts of intense rainfall and
droughts and severe storms and so on. Moreover, the most
air-polluted cities in the world are in China and Bangkok,
Thailand
and Santiago, Chile and M
BETWEEN THE LINES: Do you see that happening at any point? What would it take, besides a new administration, to realize that vision?
ROSS GELBSPAN: I guess one major hope I see comes from the military in the U.S. There was a report issued by a number of four-star admirals and generals a couple of months ago that basically said climate change is the overriding security threat to the U.S. and to world stability even more so than international terrorism. And the military is taking this stuff very, very seriously. In particular, theyre aware of what will happen when we have crop failures in developing countries; increased water scarcity that well see; and a lot of chaotic kind of migration as peoples move away from areas that suffer severe climate impacts and begin to create lots of problems in countries into which theyre migrating.
BETWEEN THE LINES: Thats interesting, because just last week on Between the Lines I interviewed Michael Klare about the tremendous negative impact the military has in generating greenhouse gases, in general, but disastrously during wartime.
ROSS GELBSPAN: I think they are in an R&D phase, and I think they are looking at a lot of other options of non-carbon energy use and so forth, but its clearly not here yet, it hasnt been properly developed, but I do know its on their minds for sure.
Ross Gelbspan had a 30-year career as a journalist before turning to writing books on global warming. For more information, visit his website at www.heatisonline.org
Related links:
Bill McKibben's Step It Up campaign website can be found
at http://www.stepitup07.org
Melinda Tuhus is a
producer of Between The Lines, which can be heard on more
than 40 radio stations and in RealAudio and MP3 on our
website at http://www.btlonline.org . This
interview excerpt was featured on the award-winning,
syndicated weekly radio newsmagazine, Between The Lines for
the week ending June 15, 2007. This Between The Lines Q&A
was compiled by Melinda Tuhus and Anna Manzo. Listen to the
rest of this week's Between The Lines news program at http://www.btlonline.org/btl061507.htm
l.
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