Earlier today I posted an essay by Robert Socolow, a seasoned energy and climate analyst at Princeton University, in which he proposes a new approach to overcoming resistance to actions that could
limit emissions of greenhouse gases even as humanity's energy appetite grows in coming decades.
Not exact matches
Even die - hard Alaskan antienvironmentalists have begun to warm up to the idea
of imposing
limits on
greenhouse -
gas emissions, according to The Wall Street Journal, because homes on the coast there are already beginning to slip into rising seas.
I went through three or four completely different drafts and settled on a narrative starting with how I've come to deal with two immovable realities — my own mortality and the inevitability
of extensive climate change
even as humanity endeavors to expand energy access while
limiting greenhouse gas emissions.
The proposed agreement, echoing the architecture
of the Framework Convention and Kyoto Protocol, has a few main themes: finding ways that rich countries can help poor ones adapt to impending climate change; strengthening efforts to curb
emissions of heat - trapping
greenhouse gases from rich countries and the biggest poor ones; and committing rich countries to helping poor ones deploy energy technologies or forest policies that
limit their
emissions even as they try to prosper.
This movement is a campaign in the sense that it is a systematic response
of aggressive actions to defeat proposals to
limit greenhouse gas emissions even though no one organization is coordinating all other organizations or individuals that participate in responses.
Turner Construction
Even the chance that [global warming] is a real issue should motivate each and every one
of us to action,» 1 — Thomas Leppert, CEO; Goldman Sachs «We support the need for a national policy to
limit greenhouse gas emissions» - Environmental Policy Framework JPMorgan Chase «JPMorgan Chase advocates the reduction
of greenhouse gas emissions.»
Unfortunately, the current bill can not
limit the amount
of greenhouse gases that farmers can emit,
even though agriculture is responsible for 15 %
of our national
emissions.