
Remember the rationale for not signing on to the Kyoto Protocol at the very beginning of the Bush administration? Bush used the excuse that the U.S. economy would be ruined if U.S. polluters were forced to comply with stricter greenhouse gas emission standards.
History is repeating itself. China is using the same industrial-era philosophy, claiming that its economy must take precedence over protecting the environment.
China has wrecked its environment already in its quest to become the world's leading trade exporter, but is well behind the developed world per capita in power usage. The U.S. is the world's number one consumer of energy and creator of greenhouse gases, by far.
This is just one example of how the U.S. has had the opportunity to lead on a global scale and has totally botched it.
Companies and local governments have shown leadership on this issue in the absence of a national plan for curbing greenhouse gas emissions.
Al Gore worked for years as a leader in the global community on this subject and would have proudly signed the protocol if he had taken office. I wonder what his first move would be if he won the 2008 race?
By the way, China has stricter mile-per-gallon standards for new vehicles sold than the U.S. does. Yup.



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Can you please get your facts straight regarding the Kyoto Protocol? The Senate killed it during the Clinton-Gore administration. Bush didn't "reject" it - it had been rejected before he took office, by the Senate which, at the time, was controlled by Democrats.
On July 25, 1997, before the Kyoto Protocol was finalized (although it had been fully negotiated, and a penultimate draft was finished), the U.S. Senate unanimously passed by a 95–0 vote the Byrd-Hagel Resolution (S. Res. 98), which stated the sense of the Senate was that the United States should not be a signatory to any protocol that did not include binding targets and timetables for developing as well as industrialized nations or "would result in serious harm to the economy of the United States". On November 12, 1998, Vice President Al Gore symbolically signed the protocol. Both Gore and Senator Joseph Lieberman indicated that THE PROTOCOL WOULD NOT BE ACTED UPON IN THE SENATE UNTIL THERE WAS PARTICIPATION BY THE DEVELOPING NATIONS. The Clinton Administration never submitted the protocol to the Senate for ratification.
Gore's position on Kyoto then was no Senate ratification without participation by the developing nations.
That's the Bush position too.
The Clinton-Gore administration and a Democratic-led Senate shelved Kyoto.
Posted by: Bill Hobbs | June 6, 2007 10:36 AM | Permalink to Comment