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U.N. data show U.S. greener than EU
THE WASHINGTON TIMES ^ | February 23, 2007 | By Jennifer Harper

Posted on 02/26/2007 9:08:15 AM PST by .cnI redruM

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To: .cnI redruM
Biggest problem with Republicans is they don't toot their own horns.

All this progress has gained them zero political advantage.
41 posted on 02/26/2007 10:43:09 AM PST by ryan71 (You can hear it on the coconut telegraph...)
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To: .cnI redruM

"SUV-driving, energy-hogging Yankees may be bogus"
There's no doubt about it. That's me! But they should capitalize Bogus!


42 posted on 02/26/2007 11:05:58 AM PST by Dr. Bogus Pachysandra ("Don't touch that thing")
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To: GeorgefromGeorgia
I actually met some very nice people in Paris and had a generally good time. Germany is a great country and I love it there. German people are my kind of people. They have exceptional hospitality, especially along the banks of the Rhine. Cologne is one of my favorite cities and their cathedral is great! Rostock, Germany was the other side of the coin. When I was there it was very easy to see that just 11 years before this had been the great port of a communist nation. I hopped a ferry to Sweden and was glad to be there until I saw all the Swastikas inside the bus station. Nazi culture is still very prevalent in that area(Trelleborg, Sweden and Rostock, Ger.)
43 posted on 02/26/2007 11:06:30 AM PST by Albert Barr
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To: MPJackal
"As always, liberalism will generate the exact opposite of its stated intent."

That's because the true intent is to siphon funds from the wealthy states and redistribute them to the non-wealthy states (sinkholes). Socialism practiced among states (UN) isn't so different from socialism within them.

The irony that the process will likely do nothing to improve the environment - but it'll feel real good - is about the only enjoyment we should expect if anyone eventually signs up to these schemes.

44 posted on 02/26/2007 11:20:21 AM PST by norton
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To: Dr. Bogus Pachysandra

Never take personally what you read in the newspapers.


45 posted on 02/26/2007 11:54:27 AM PST by .cnI redruM (Liberals NEVER measure the consequences of their actions, only the personal political advantages.)
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To: .cnI redruM

But! But! People keep using my name in offensive ways!


46 posted on 02/26/2007 12:31:42 PM PST by Dr. Bogus Pachysandra ("Don't touch that thing")
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To: Stultis

Yep - let's give away our technology. Nice for the taxpaying public. It's just another form of taxation the rest of the world takes from us.


47 posted on 02/26/2007 12:34:12 PM PST by cinives (On some planets what I do is considered normal.)
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To: Albert Barr
I lived in Bavaria (Augsburg) from 87-91 and visited the former DDR and Eastern Germany after reunification. The East Germans seemed operate in slow motion like they were on drugs. The West Germans that we knew said that the ossies that came West didn't have that strong German work ethic. Communism can do that to people. Sometimes it takes a generation or more to change the culture. I remember going to Poland in 1989, and change was in the air. Our Polish guide was outspoken in his disdain of Communism. He had been to the Soviet Union. He said that if we thought Poland was bad (condition of its infrastructure, etc., that the SU was much worse).
I traveled to the Rhineland, and liked it there, but Bavaria is the really best part of Germany. The people there are very pro-American (At least they were then). My Step-Son is in the Army at Hanau and says that the Germans there are not as friendly to Americans as they were in the 80s-90s.
48 posted on 02/26/2007 12:41:55 PM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: DAC21

"Someone needs to have their bogus Oscar recalled"
I, Bogus, gave no one an Oscar!


49 posted on 02/26/2007 2:17:58 PM PST by Dr. Bogus Pachysandra ("Don't touch that thing")
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To: .cnI redruM
Five years ago I was driving across France.

I pumped my own gas, careful not to pump from the LEADED GAS nozzle ("avec plomb").

I drove on the AutoRoute at 90kmh, the speed limit. Everybody passed me like I was a roadside crepe stand. I started to edge my own speed up but came up on a police car, so I slowed again. Cars, motorcycles and trucks roared by at 135 klicks, flashing their lights to warn me to stay away from their lane. They passed my like a series of cyclones. They passed the cops. Who saw nothing odd.

I passed field after field aflame with their annual burning, sending huge clouds of white smoke into the sky.

Do the French care about the environmrnt? Not really.

50 posted on 02/26/2007 4:54:21 PM PST by cookcounty (How odd. Lee Hamilton now employed by Sandy Berger: stonebridge-international.com)
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To: Stultis

(just for the record)


http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/02/20020214.html
"Fact Sheet: President Bush Announces Clear Skies & Global Climate Change Initiatives



President Announces Clear Skies & Global Climate Change Initiatives
Clear Skies Policy Book
Global Climate Change Policy Book


Today's Presidential Action

Today the President will unveil the most aggressive initiative in American history to cut power plant emissions, as well as a bold new strategy for addressing global climate change.


The Clear Skies Initiative. Cuts power plant emissions of the three worst air pollutants -- nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, and mercury -- by 70 percent. The initiative will improve air quality using a proven, market-based approach.

Global Climate Change. Commits America to an aggressive strategy to cut greenhouse gas intensity by 18% over the next 10 years. The initiative also supports vital climate change research and ensures that America's workers and citizens of the developing world are not unfairly penalized.
The Clear Skies Initiative

Dramatically & Steadily Cuts Power Plant Emissions of Three of the Worst Air Pollutants:


Cuts sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions by 73 percent, from current emissions of 11 million tons to a cap of 4.5 million tons in 2010, and 3 million tons in 2018.

Cuts emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) by 67 percent, from current emissions of 5 million tons to a cap of 2.1 million tons in 2008, and to 1.7 million tons in 2018.

Cuts mercury emissions by 69 percent -- the first-ever national cap on mercury emissions. Emissions will be cut from current emissions of 48 tons to a cap of 26 tons in 2010, and 15 tons in 2018.
Uses a Proven Market-Based Approach:


Protects Americans from respiratory and cardiovascular diseases by dramatically reducing smog, acid rain, fine particles, regional haze, nitrogen and mercury deposition.

Protects our wildlife, habitats and ecosystem health.

Cuts pollution further, faster, cheaper, and with more certainty, using a 'cap-and trade' program, replacing a cycle of endless litigation with rapid and certain improvements in air quality.

Saves as much as $1 billion annually in compliance costs that are passed along to American consumers, and improves air quality and protects the reliability and affordability of electricity.

Uses the model of our most successful clean air law -- the 1990 Clean Air Act's acid rain program -- and encourages use of new and cleaner pollution control technologies.
A New Approach on Global Climate Change

The President has committed America to an aggressive new strategy to cut greenhouse gas intensity by 18% over the next 10 years. The initiative also supports vital climate change research and ensures that America's workers and citizens of the developing world are not unfairly penalized. The President's initiative puts America on a path to slow the growth of greenhouse gas emissions, and -- as the science justifies -- to stop, and then reverse that growth.


Cutting Greenhouse Gas Intensity by 18 Percent Over the Next 10 Years. Greenhouse gas intensity is the ratio of greenhouse gas emissions to economic output. The President's goal seeks to lower our rate of emissions from an estimated 183 metric tons per million dollars of GDP in 2002, to 151 metric tons per million dollars of GDP in 2012. By significantly slowing the growth of greenhouse gases, this policy will put America on a path toward stabilizing GHG concentration in the atmosphere in the long run, while sustaining the economic growth needed to finance our investments in a new, cleaner energy structure. America is already improving its GHG intensity; new policies and programs will accelerate that progress, avoiding more than 500 million metric tons of GHG emissions over the next ten years -- the equivalent of taking nearly one out of every three cars off the road. This goal is comparable to the average progress that nations participating in the Kyoto Protocol are required to achieve.

A New Tool to Measure and Credit Emissions Reductions. The U.S. will improve its GHG registry to enhance measurement accuracy, reliability and verifiability, working with and taking into account emerging domestic and international approaches. These improvements will give businesses incentives to invest in new, cleaner technology and voluntarily reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Protect and Provide Transferable Credit for Emission Reductions. The President will direct the Secretary of Energy to recommend reforms to: (1) ensure that businesses that register voluntary reductions are not penalized under a future climate policy, and (2) give credit to companies that can show real emissions reductions.

Reviewing Progress on Climate Change and Taking Additional Action if Necessary in 2012, which may include a broad, market-based program, as well as additional initiatives to accelerate technology. If, in 2012, we find that we are not on track toward meeting our goal, and sound science justifies further policy action, the United States will respond with additional measures that may include a broad, market-based program as well as additional incentives and voluntary measures designed to accelerate technology development and deployment.

Unprecedented Funding for Climate Change-Related Programs: The President's budget in FY 2003 provides $4.5 billion for global climate change-related activities -- a $700 million increase. This includes the first year of funding for a five-year, $4.6 billion commitment to tax credits for renewable energy sources.

A Comprehensive Range of New and Expanded Domestic and International Policies, including:

Expanded research and development of climate-related science and technology
Expanded use of renewable energy
Business sector challenges
Improvements in the transportation sector
Incentives for sequestration
Enhanced support for climate observation and mitigation in the developing world.
A Better Alternative to the Kyoto Protocol. Rather than making drastic reductions in greenhouse gas emissions that would put millions of Americans out of work and undermine our ability to make long-term investments in clean energy -- as the Kyoto Protocol would have required -- the President's growth-based approach will accelerate the development of new technologies and encourage partnerships on climate change issues with the developing world. "


51 posted on 02/27/2007 2:16:33 AM PST by YaYa123
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To: Stultis

The United States has spent more than any other country on research and technologies to reduce emissions
---<>---<>---<>---<>---<>---

I did not realize how useful this article would come in with my discussions with people about global warming when I first read it.


52 posted on 03/07/2007 4:57:20 PM PST by AFPhys ((.Praying for President Bush, our troops, their families, and all my American neighbors..))
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