CLIMATE; THE CONVERSATION (www.ctc.com)
MISSION STATEMENT
As conversations of weather occurrences and suggested anomalies become
more frequent and mainstream in the scientific community, as well as at
the grass-roots-level, the need to embrace and index substantive
information into an authoritative conduit to encourage more research and
development~~~IS IMPERATIVE.
Pertinent themes as Global Warming, Climate Change, and Melting Ice Caps
has stimulated discussions, seeded forums, and spawned additional
research, all to foster consensus, and recommend courses-of-action.
The intent of CLIMATE; THE CONVERSATION, is to be The Bulletin Board,
The Platform, The Podium, and The Credible Source & Bibliography
for such astute, sincere, and scholarly considerations.
Sincerely;
Administrators:
Andrew M. Marconi
Lou Marconi
Aug 30, 2006:
California Senate passes Global Warming Solutions Act
On
this day in 2006, the California State Senate passes Assembly Bill (AB)
32, otherwise known as the Global Warming Solutions Act. The law made
California the first state in America to place caps on carbon dioxide
and other greenhouse gases, including those found in automobile
emissions.
The
Global Warming Solutions Act became law thanks to an alliance between
the state's Republican governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and its
Democratic-controlled legislature. The bill's passage solidified
California's role as a leader in enacting legislation aimed at combating
global warming, or the gradual increase in the overall temperature of
the earth's atmosphere due to the so-called "greenhouse effect" caused
by increased levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.
California--which represents 10 percent of the nation's automobile
market and is known for its struggles with air pollution--took the lead
early in setting stricter fuel emissions standards than the federal
government's.
Despite
his professed enthusiasm for the Hummer, a sport utility vehicle (SUV)
known for its prodigious size (and prodigious emission of greenhouse
gases), Schwarzenegger sought to uphold his state's pioneering
legislation regarding automobile emissions, passed during the tenure of
his predecessor, Gray Davis. That law, AB 1493, required the California
Air Resources Board (CARB) to regulate greenhouse gases under the
state's motor vehicle program and gave automakers until the 2009 model
year to produce cars and light trucks that would collectively emit 22
percent fewer greenhouse gases by 2012 and 30 percent fewer by 2016.
The
Global Warming Solutions Act went even further, calling for an overall
25 percent reduction in carbon dioxide emissions (or to 1990 levels) by
2025, a timetable that would bring California close to full compliance
with the Kyoto Protocol, an international climate-change treaty signed
in that Japanese city in 1997. Even after Schwarzenegger signed AB 32
into law in September 2006, California faced an uphill battle to enact
these new standards against the resistance of the automotive industry,
backed by the administration of President George W. Bush. Automakers had
historically resisted increases in fuel-economy standards, as stricter
standards usually require an overhaul of their production methods to
make cleaner and more fuel-efficient vehicles. The tides turned,
however, with the presidential election of 2008, and in 2009 President
Barack Obama announced new nationwide rules on auto emissions standards,
bringing them into line with those mandated by California.
Another example of how a singular initiative, once effected and given the time and place to demonstrate its cause-and-effect intentions in a positive way, can influence implementation on a larger scale. Its impact on the economy, pollution, and the focus on Climate; The Conversation---makes this worthy of continued enthusiasm.
Lou Marconi
Saturday, August 30, 2014
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