|
|
 |
 |
California
to sign on Earth Day a compact to help China cut emissions
|
From the Associated Press
Los Angeles Times
April 22, 2008
SACRAMENTO — California, which puts out more greenhouse
gases than any other state, is promising to share ideas and
research to help China cut back on its own emissions, which
rival those of the U.S. as the world's largest.
Despite its output, California is leading efforts to curb
emissions. The state's top environmental official is in
Beijing to sign an agreement with the United Nations to help
China's efforts.
According to the four-page agreement to be signed today on
Earth Day, the state also would mobilize public agencies and
encourage private entities in California to support climate
change projects in China.
"I think it will help show them they can indeed reach set
targets and move forward on environmental protection and
maintain a strong economy as California has," Linda
Adams, California's Environmental Protection Agency secretary,
said Monday in a telephone interview from Beijing.
President Bush called last week for a halt in the growth of
greenhouse gases by 2025, but his administration has refused
to sign international commitments to cut emissions, saying the
U.S. would be at a competitive disadvantage unless those
treaties also include China, India and other developing
nations.
But China and others have said their output is still less than
that of industrialized countries.
Beijing is one of the world's most polluted cities. A fog of
particulate matter, carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide and
nitrogen dioxide often blankets the city at levels five times
higher than safety standards set by the World Health
Organization.
The pollution has been a worry for some athletes hoping to
participate in this summer's Olympic Games. Although the
International Olympic Committee has said the pollution would
not endanger their health, several athletes have said they are
considering wearing masks during competition.
California's agreement with the development program, a
subsidiary of the U.N., follows several years of international
outreach by the state.
In 2005, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed an environmental
agreement with the Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection
Bureau to help improve air quality and water quality. The
agreement was amended in 2007 to further bolster California's
support of Beijing's air quality programs.
On Monday, Schwarzenegger said the state's agreement with
China recognizes that climate change requires a global
solution.
"America has to lead, and we are doing so with or without
Washington," Schwarzenegger said in a news release.
"California is not waiting for the federal government to
take action."
|
Copyright 1999-2008, California Coastal Coalition
Phone: (760) 944-3564
|
|
|
 |