By H. Josef Hebert, Associated Press WASHINGTON — The To the dismay of environmentalists, Interior Secretary The rule was aimed at heading off the possibility that the bear's survival could be cited by opponents of power plants and other facilities that produce carbon dioxide, a leading pollutant blamed for global warming. The Endangered Species Act requires that a threatened or endangered species must have its habitat protected. Environmentalists say that in the case of the polar bear, the biggest threat comes from pollution — mainly carbon dioxide from faraway power plants, factories and cars — that is warming the Salazar agreed that global warming was "the single greatest threat" to the bear's survival, but disagreed that the federal law protecting animals, plants and fish should be used to address climate change. "The Endangered Species Act is not the appropriate tool for us to deal with what is a global issue, and that is the issue of global warming," said Salazar, echoing much the same view of his Republican predecessor, Kempthorne at the same time issued the "special rule" that limited the scope of the bear's protection to actions within its Arctic home. The iconic polar bear — some 25,000 of the mammals can be found across the Environmentalists and some members of Congress had strongly urged Salazar to rescind the Bush regulation, arguing the bear is not being given the full protection required under the species law. Others, including most of the business community, argue that making the bear a reason for curtailing greenhouse gases thousands of miles from its home would cause economic chaos. Reaction to Salazar's decision Friday was sharply divided. Alaska Sen. But environmentalists and some of their leading advocates in Congress were disappointed. "The polar bear is threatened, and we need to act," said Sen. Andrew Wetzler, director of wildlife conservation at the "For Salazar to adopt Bush's polar bear extinction plan is confirming the worst fears of his tenure as secretary of interior," said Noah Greenwald, of the Center for Biological Diversity, which along with the NRDC and Salazar noted that he has overturned a string of Bush-era regulations, including last week restoring a requirement that agencies consult with the government's most knowledgeable biologists when taking actions that could harm species. "We must do all we can to protect the polar bear," he said, but that using the species protection law "is not the right way to go." The way to deal with climate change is a broad cap on greenhouse gases, he said. Congress is considering cap-and-trade legislation forcing a reduction on greenhouse gases, and, separately, the Environmental Protection Agency has begun working on a climate regulation under the Clean Air Act. Last month, the EPA declared carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels and other greenhouse gases a danger to public health. The last word is still to be heard on linking species protection and climate change. Earlier this week, the The American pika is no polar bear, but the arguments may be the same. |
Saturday, August 29, 2009
Global Warming
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