Letters: Energy, etc.
December 25th, 2007 by mariaSource: Sacramento Bee ()
A glimmer of hope for Earth
Re “Climate conference reduces issue to a few simple numbers,” Dec. 17: Finally, a ray of hope for the environment. With the constant fear of global warming looming over the heads of all of Earth’s inhabitants, this article provides comfort in the ecological renaissance that may lie ahead.
The 190 nations that participated in the Bali climate conference walked away with a new goal: to keep the globe’s swelling temperatures and global warming gas emissions at scientist-recommended figures.
Although the numbers that scientists declared must be followed as a strict guideline did not make the Bali conference’s final document, these numbers are making it very clear what we nations must to do in order for Earth to survive.
However, many underdeveloped countries such as China and India cannot vow to abide by the guidelines offered, and even the United States has turned its head because the cost of dropping gas emissions is just too costly for a nation as blinded by capital as the United States.
If a world superpower cannot manage to do its part to create a home for our grandchildren, how can we expect others to as well? While a glimmer of optimism is expressed by the diminutive reductions that we as humanity could make, it is undeniable that money comes first and environment second.
- Dayna M. Brown, Chico
They don’t hate all of us
I’ve been at the United Nations climate conference in Bali, and what I saw made me proud to be a Californian.
I’ve gone to many international meetings over the past 30 years for my work in environmental policy. Disputes are common at such meetings, but rarely expressed at a personal level. In the past few years, however, I’ve had to deal with face-to-face anti-Americanism as never before, due mainly to the Bush administration’s policy, including on climate change.
In that light, my Bali experience was refreshing. My conference badge prominently …