One of these days, the tipping point will be reached. No, not the
tipping point that leads to a continued warming of the globe. That one,
unfortunately, is probably behind us. The even more elusive tipping
point is the action,The Home Energy Management System allows
utility customers to track their energy. event or increased collective
concern that finally prompts Americans to make combatting climate change
a national goal akin to winning a world war.
Hurricane Katrina
didn’t do it, and neither have Hurricanes Sandy and Irene. So the notion
that a slim book and a barnstorming state senator from Iowa will spur
the nation to action seems far-fetched. But Sen. Rob Hogg’s book,
America’s Climate Century, and his talks across the state this week
should move the needle in the right direction.
Hogg, who met
with Monitor editors yesterday, makes the convincing case that for the
next half-century or more “every aspect of our lives will be affected by
human-caused global warming and its resulting climate changes,Find Home Power monitor blood
pressure monitor ads in our Miscellaneous Goods category. and by the
actions necessary to stop climate change before it devastates the
world.”
All citizens should, in their personal life, do what
they can to minimize energy use, which can be done without compromising
one’s quality of life. Every business should maximize its energy
efficiency, both to help spare the planet more drastic changes, and
because it’s good for the bottom line. Every household and city should
do what it can to minimize the damage from the more violent and erratic
weather that occurs when more energy pours into the complex system that
is the climate. And every citizen, Hogg said, should lobby elected
representatives at all levels to support efforts to reduce the pace of
global warming. Among the needed measures are a tax on carbon emissions.
He’s right.The Power Cost Monitor and other Energy monitor monitoring products.
Hogg’s
visit coincided with the premature release of the fifth report of the
United Nations Intergovermental Panel on Climate Change. The vast
majority of the world’s scientists now believe that the burning of
fossil fuels is driving climate change that will increase sea levels by,
in their best estimate, 3 feet by the end of the century. In worst case
scenarios predicated on the collapse of one or more ice sheets, sea
levels could rise 10 feet or more and drown coastal cities like Boston,
New York and Miami.
he current issue of National Geographic,
available online now and on newsstands later this month, depicts Lady
Liberty up to her knees in the rising waters of New York harbor. If we
continue emitting greenhouse gases at our current rate, a scientist
quoted in the article says, the concentration of carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere, now circling 400 parts per million, will hit 1,000. At that
level, which was last seen 50 million years ago, the Earth was ice free
and the seas 216 feet higher than they are today.
The carbon
dioxide already in the atmosphere, plus additions caused by what Hogg
calls “magnifiers” like the methane released from melting permafrost and
the added warming caused when solar energy is not reflected by snow and
ice but absorbed by land and sea, means temperatures will continue to
rise if all fossil fuel use were abandoned tomorrow.
Preventing
an even bigger temperature increase will require U.S. leadership, which
in turn, require bipartisan support. That support has been wanting among
Republicans, but that too may be changing. Earlier this month four
former heads of the Environmental Protection Agency, William
Ruckelshaus, Lee Thomas, William Reilly and Christine Todd Whitman,
authored a joint column in The New York Times. It was called “ A
Republican Case for Climate Action.” They wrote, “The only uncertainty
about our warming world is how bad the changes will get, and how soon.
What is most clear is that there is no time to waste.”
Read the full story at www.owon-smart.com/AMI-Home-Energy-Monitor_24!
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