Friday, February 22, 2013

Taunting Mother Nature and Mr. Market



    A week before Obama’s second inauguration, Thomas Friedman wrote an article for the NewYork Times titled “The Market and Mother Nature” which outlined his proposal on tackling what he considers to be the United States two biggest domestic issues: national debt and climate change Friedman, a three time Pulitzer Prize recipient, previous chief economic correspondent for the Washington bureau, and a White House correspondent, argues that both financial and carbon debt are reaching a point of no return.  On the status of the United States emissions Friedman comments, “For thousands of years up to the dawn of the industrial age 200 years ago, the Earth’s atmosphere contained 280 parts per million of the heat-trapping greenhouse gas carbon dioxide. Today, that number is nearly 400 p.p.m., with 450 p.p.m. routinely cited as the tipping point where we create the conditions for out-of-control acceleration.” Friedman cites the melting of Earth’s icecaps in Alaska, Canada, and Siberia, which causes the release of frozen methane. Methane as a greenhouse gas is more hazardous than CO2 and therefore causes sea levels to rise at a much quicker pace. As for the status of the United States financial debt he says, “We’re on a similar trajectory with our debt. Mounting deficits have driven America’s debt-to-G.D.P. ratio from 36.2 percent in 2007 to 72.8 percent today. In their widely hailed book on credit crises, “This Time Is Different,” the economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff argue that countries that allow their debt-to-G.D.P. ratios to exceed 90 percent experience slower growth and greater instability — much like hitting a climate tipping point.” 
   Friedman offers a solution to solve both simultaneously, saying that we can slow the progression of climate change and help lower the U.S. Financial debt by implementing small carbon taxes. He backs up his argument with a study conducted by the Congressional Research Service that states “a small carbon tax of $20 per ton — escalating by 5.6 percent annually — could cut the projected 10-year deficit by roughly 50 percent (from $2.3 trillion down to $1.1 trillion).” Friedman ends his article asking his NewYork Times audience, generally those who would be categorized as the educated upper-middle class, “what would [they] rather do to help solve our fiscal problem: Give up [their] home mortgage deduction and wait two more years for Social Security and Medicare, or pay a little extra for gasoline and electricity?” 
    Personally, I find Friedman’s solution of implementing a carbon tax a step in the right direction, and I also love that he has chosen not only to highlight the economic issues we are facing but the environmental problems as well. Many of today’s pundits are fixated on solving the economic problems and seemingly refuse to believe that environmental issues hold the same weight. Friedman has a strong voice and I’m glad that he’s chosen to use his platform to bring awareness to climate change. He makes his argument easy for the reader to understand, not only offering his educated opinions, but also supporting his opinions with facts on the status of our carbon and economic debt. By keeping his argument accessible and limiting the amount of jargon his readers have to wade through, Friedman ensures that the public has the tools to stay informed on these important issues.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Obama on Climate Control: you're hot then you're cold you're yes then you're no

Joel Pett cartoon for USA Today
      When then Senator Barak Obama first ran for president leading up to the '08 election, his platform held many environmental promises towards creating a sustainable future for America. Unfortunately, during Obama's first term he disappointed environmentalist when he did not address global climate change as vigorously as they had hoped. Environmentalist are once again looking for change during Obama's second term in office, and although there is still skepticism from his shortcomings last term, many are hopeful now that the president seems to be more prudent this time around. Salon reports that Obama's inaugural speech brought many environmentalists back on board. Citing Andrew Hoffman: "He finally had the courage to acknowledge the words 'climate change,'" as opposed to the past when the president seemed to beat around the bush with using terms such as "green jobs or clean energy to describe energy policy, instead of the more politically charged term." 
      Similarly, the article talks about Obama's decision on the Keystone XL pipeline, a pipeline purposed to run from Canada to Texas, and how crucial it is for environmentalists view of Obama. If he does reject the pipeline, environmentalists will believe that he is ready keep his promises from his inaugural speech and make global climate change a priority this time around. 
       I find the Salon article to be important because it raises awareness about climate change as an issue. This is important because striving for a more sustainable planet, which is still a taboo topic, should be something that the world is more informed on because as Obama states: "Some may still deny the overwhelming judgment of science, but none can avoid the devastating impact of raging fires, and crippling drought, and more powerful storms. The path towards sustainable energy sources will be long and sometimes difficult. But America cannot resist this transition; we must lead it."

For more information on our nation's environmental impact watch The Story of Stuff: