US To Serve Up Status Quo at Bali Climate Conference
There's lots of new buzz around December's UN climate change conference in Bali. Will the US, recently left stranded by Australia as the stand-alone crusader against Kyoto, buckle under pressure and sign America up for climate leadership with the rest of the developed world?
Don't bet on it. And more evidence just rolled in. The US has announced the delegation it's sending to Bali, and it looks like a whole lot of status quo. Under-Secretary of State for Democracy and Global Affairs Dr. Paula Dobriansky is leading the team. Again.
You may recall that during the UN climate change conference in Montreal, Dr. Dobriansky was the one who lied announced to the international community that carbon emissions in the US had dropped as a result of Bush miraculously doing absolutely nothing working to solve climate. Senators Henry Waxman and John Kerry were quick to call her out for making such an egregious "mistake," faulting her for selective data mining. They pointed out that emissions in the US increased by 3.5% under Bush's watch, and hit a record high in 2004.
The Bush administration is also sending Chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality James L. Connaughton "in recognition of the importance the United States attaches to this conference."
Ah, Connaughton. Bush's climate change brain. The former hatchet man for GE and ARCO. The architect behind the Bush climate denial machine. The man who made the following declaration at the last UN climate change meeting in September 2007 that Bush skipped out on:
“It’s our philosophy that each nation has the sovereign capacity to decide for itself what its own portfolio of policies should be.”
So what's the Bush delegation after in Bali? Dr. Dobriansky said she wants a "Bali roadmap" to advance negotiations for a Kyoto replacement. Expect more road blocks than anything else.
But not to fret. For one, Bush is on his way out, and the American public, governors, mayors, and big money investors, among others, are shifting rapidly away from US indifference on climate change toward fast and hard solutions and global leadership.
And two, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who's climate action plan for NYC is one of the most exhaustive the world's ever seen, is going to Bali, leading his own delegation of sorts. The globe-trotting (and carbon tax-supporting) mayor will be speaking before attendees on behalf of the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group.
So what? We'll let Thomas Friedman explain. As quoted in Newseek:
At an elegant dinner for Conservation International last Thursday in Washington, Tom Friedman of The New York Times introduced Bloomberg, saying, "The only thing a lot of us would like to change about Michael is his job title, but I won't go there …" He did not need to; the audience cheered on cue.
We won't go there either. Not yet.











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