Global Warming: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Energy and Power of the Committee on Energy and Commerce, House of Representatives, One Hundred Third Congress, First Session, Part 3U.S. Government Printing Office, 1993 - 113 pages |
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Page 1
... believe this sort of vol- untary cooperative approach to solving this serious environmental problem is preferable to the command and control tradition . As everyone in this room knows , mandatory legislative controls take years for ...
... believe this sort of vol- untary cooperative approach to solving this serious environmental problem is preferable to the command and control tradition . As everyone in this room knows , mandatory legislative controls take years for ...
Page 2
... believe we shouldn't make further commitments until we see if other developed countries are truly trying to meet their own commitments or until some of their devel- oping countries are willing to make some additional commitments ...
... believe we shouldn't make further commitments until we see if other developed countries are truly trying to meet their own commitments or until some of their devel- oping countries are willing to make some additional commitments ...
Page 3
... believe can get the job done . Early last year when we were testifying on the plan , it was difficult for some to understand that the basis of the plan is in fact the Energy Policy Act . My colleagues , with a great deal of pride , want ...
... believe can get the job done . Early last year when we were testifying on the plan , it was difficult for some to understand that the basis of the plan is in fact the Energy Policy Act . My colleagues , with a great deal of pride , want ...
Page 5
... believe , very conservatively that the global climate initiative with the electric utilities can give us from 10 to 20 million metric tons . Let's take the most modest of that . That is 10 million metric tons , which gets us nearly ...
... believe , very conservatively that the global climate initiative with the electric utilities can give us from 10 to 20 million metric tons . Let's take the most modest of that . That is 10 million metric tons , which gets us nearly ...
Page 10
... believe that the Climate Challenge could become the model for environmental policy making -- the Government establishes the goals and accounts for reduction compliance while the private sector utilizes its ingenuity to find low cost ...
... believe that the Climate Challenge could become the model for environmental policy making -- the Government establishes the goals and accounts for reduction compliance while the private sector utilizes its ingenuity to find low cost ...
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achieve Administration aerosols agreement anthropogenic Assessment atmospheric concentrations believe BILIRAKIS billion metric tons budget carbon cycle carbon dioxide Chairman Change Action Plan Climate Action Climate Challenge Program Climate Change Action Climate Plan CO₂ CO2 emissions commitments companies cooperation Czech Republic Decin Department of Energy developing countries district heating economic efforts electric utility emission reductions energy efficiency Energy Policy Act Energy Star Framework Convention fuel funding gases gasses global emissions Global Warming Potentials goals going greenhouse gas emissions growth halocarbons HASTERT incentives increase industry investments IPCC issue joint implementation joint implementation pilot joint implementation projects meeting methane metric tons million natural gas negotiations OECD opportunity participants partnerships percent pilot program pipeline Pomerance ppbv ppmv radiative forcing reduce emissions reduce greenhouse gas renewable energy Secretary O'LEARY significant stabilization subcommittee sulfur dioxide technologies Thank United voluntary
Popular passages
Page 51 - States shares with many countries its ultimate objective: stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system.
Page 11 - Harris and members of the subcommittee, it is a great pleasure for me to appear before you today in support of the legislation which you are considerili);.
Page 31 - STATEMENT OF HON. J. DENNIS HASTERT, A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF ILLINOIS Thank you, Mr. Chairman for...
Page 72 - INTRODUCTION Thank you Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee. I am Daniel Lashof, a senior scientist with the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).
Page 36 - Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy in the Executive Office of the President and to serve as Science and Technology Adviser to the President.
Page 43 - GtC/yr including emissions from fossil fuel combustion, cement production and land-use change), they would lead to a nearly constant rate of increase in atmospheric concentrations for at least two centuries, reaching about 500 ppmv (approaching twice the pre-industrial concentration of 280 ppmv) by the end of the 21st century.
Page 72 - ... Security Council, the Domestic Policy Council and the National Economic Council. Our actions have been and will continue to be guided by the six principles that the President outlined last June: 1. Consistency with the long-term goal of stabilizing concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere at a level that will prevent dangerous interference with the climate system, recognizing that we currently do not know what that level is; 2.
Page 72 - Thank you Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee. I am Daniel Lashof, a senior scientist with the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC). Previously I was an Environmental Scientist at the Environmental Protection Agency, where I was the lead author of the Draft Report to Congress Policy Options for Stabilizing Global Climate.
Page 72 - Report to Congress Policy Options for Stabilizing Global Climate. I hold a doctorate in Energy and Resources from the University of California. Berkeley, where I specialized in the global carbon cycle. I appreciate the opportunity to appear at this important hearing.
Page 41 - ... though with an apparent increase in the growth rate in late 1993. * Climatic impact of Mi. Pinatubo - the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in June 1991 produced a large, transient increase of stratospheric aerosols which resulted in a surface cooling over about 2 years estimated from observations to be about 0.4 C, consistent with model simulations which predicted a global mean cooling of 0.4 to 0.6*C. * Global carbon budget - New estimates of terrestrial carbon uptake during the 1980s have better quantified...