Former U.S. Sen. Gary Hart says the United States, China, India and other less developed nations will agree on climate change after a give-and-take. (Gary Hart/Facebook)

Hart: United, not divided, on climate change

Former U.S. Sen. Gary Hart calls on China, America to build a global warming accord

By By Alex Pearlman (Suffolk University) Student Correspondent Corps
Published: November 6, 2009 21:34 ET
Updated: November 9, 2009 11:23 ET

BOSTON — A box for energy. A box for foreign policy. A box for economics.

"Those boxes can’t be separated anymore," said former U.S. Sen. Gary Hart in an interview with GlobalPost last week. "Everything fits together now."

Hart said the United States needs to link those boxes, or issues together to create a substantial platform for 21st century solutions to climate change.

"All of that relates to our economy. I defy anyone to say, 'Well, let’s talk about the economy and forget about energy right now,' or 'Let’s talk about energy and forget about our military.'

"Can’t do it. "

Hart, long involved in the environment and energy debate, sees an opportunity for the United States to be a key player in the negotiations and take on a leadership position in December’s Copenhagen Climate Change Summit. An early proponent of solar energy who served on the Senate’s Environment and Public Works committee, Hart says that the U.S. needs to take a stand at Copenhagen.

“The world is waiting for the United States. We all need to be concerned about this and involved in it.”

The most important result of Copenhagen is for the United States and China to negotiate a treaty upon which all parties can agree and that will regulate emissions, promote cleaner energy technologies in all countries, and provide assistance to countries that cannot afford to enact change themselves.

Multiple drafts of global warming and climate change treaties are circulating, but two are competing: one backed by the United States and the other championed by China.

The latter document — essentially an update to the 1997 Kyoto Protocol agreement, which the U.S. did not ratify — would require industrialized countries to severely decrease carbon emissions, while transitioning countries like China and India, two of the biggest polluters, would be held to milder standards.

“India, China, the developing nations and economies are going to take their cue from us,” said Hart, who believes that the United States can resolve the debate.

“If we don’t go and take a very strong position, they won’t follow. It all depends on what position the United States takes and whether it provides a leadership position. We don’t yet know what the Obama administration’s policy is, in terms of what we’re doing here, domestically, but also what proposals we will put on the table in Copenhagen.”

In addition to the document that spawns from Copenhagen regarding carbon emissions, the former senator is concerned about global warming.

The objective “is to prevent the global climate from exceeding two more degrees,” he explained. “About 1.4 degrees of that is not changeable, and we have to achieve the objective of reducing those emissions in 30 or 40 years to prevent a tipping point that can’t be reversed.”

He said he remains optimistic.

This report comes from a journalist in our Student Correspondent Corps, a GlobalPost project training the next generation of foreign correspondents.

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Posted by claybarham on November 8, 2009 13:36 ET

2008 saw what NASA called the Sun’s “blankest year” where 266 of the year's 366 days, there were no sunspots. Sunspot counts for 2009 have been very low, too. This all begs the question: does solar activity have a long-term effect here on Earth? Times of depressed solar activity correspond with times of global cold. From 1645 to 1715, few if any sunspots were seen and Western Europe entered a virtual deep-freeze known as the Little Ice Age. Times of increased solar activity have corresponded with global warming. The 12th and 13th centuries, when the Sun was active, European climate was quite mild. Experts predict that the current solar cycle will peak in 2013 with a below-average number of sunspots. The Sun should remain calm for at least another year. Of course, all this disruption is caused by the lighter-than-air carbon dioxide America has produced in the past few decades. These light gases rise to the sun and disrupt the magnetic causes for sunspots, altering the averages of sunspot activity. The effects on the under developed world is extreme, causing wars, famines and revolutions which disturb the compassionate dictatorships and the order they provide. It must stop! America must be shut down by the Obama Administration, beginning with elimination of the middle class and all its outrageous demands for goods and services.

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