Posts Tagged ‘Reducing’

EPA to Recognize St. Louis Cardinals for Reducing Food Waste at Busch Stadium on Monday, April 29 (MO)

 

Release Date: 04/26/2013
Contact Information: EPA Region 7 – Kris Lancaster, 913-551-7557, [email protected]; St. Louis Cardinals – Lindsey Weber, 314-345-9377, [email protected]

Environmental News

NEWS MEDIA ADVISORY

(Lenexa, Kan., April 26, 2013) – EPA Region 7 will recognize the St. Louis Cardinals baseball club for efforts to divert, donate and compost food waste around Busch Stadium, in an on-field ceremony prior to the Cardinals-Reds game on Monday, April 29.

The Cardinals are helping to recycle food waste and keep it out of landfills. Landfills are one of the largest contributors of methane gas, which affects climate change, including warmer temperatures, stronger storms and more droughts.

The Cardinals are members of EPA’s Food Recovery Challenge program. The Cardinals and their organization’s concessionaire, Delaware North Companies, have diverted more than 27 tons of unused food from concession stands in Busch Stadium to Operation Food Search to feed the area’s poor and hungry.

The Food Recovery Challenge encourages organizations to find better alternatives to throwing food away. It helps organizations learn to practice leaner purchasing and divert surplus food away from landfills to hunger-relief organizations and onto the tables of those in need in the community. It also diverts food scraps, suitable for composting or animal consumption, to composting or animal feed.

A tour of Busch Stadium’s recycling operations will be held for news media from 5:30 p.m. to 5:50 p.m. on Monday, April 29. An on-field recognition ceremony will take place from 6:30 p.m. to 6:50 p.m.

WHAT: Tour and On-field Recognition Ceremony

WHEN: 5:30 p.m. to 5:50 p.m., tour of stadium recycling operations; 6:30 p.m. to 6:50 p.m., on-field recognition ceremony, Monday, April 29, 2013

WHERE: Busch Stadium, 700 Clark Street, St. Louis, Mo., 63102

WHO: EPA Region 7 Administrator Karl Brooks and St. Louis Cardinals Vice President of Stadium Operations Joe Abernathy

Visuals – Tour of stadium recycling operations, honorary pitch, on-field ceremony and presentation of EPA certificates.

Background – Since 2008, the St. Louis Cardinals have diverted approximately 2,000 tons of solid waste from local landfills. The organization has reduced its energy use by 20 percent and its water use by 10 percent since the new Busch Stadium opened in 2006. On average, four tons of trash are recycled at the stadium each game. There are approximately 550 recycling bins throughout the stadium. The Cardinals are members of the Green Sports Alliance, which includes more than 160 sports teams and venues.

The Food Recovery Challenge asks participants to reduce as much of their food waste as possible – saving money, helping communities, and protecting the environment.


U.S. EPA News

Green-Powered Northwest Colleges and Businesses are Reducing Pollution and Fighting Climate Change (OR, WA)

 

Release Date: 04/17/2013
Contact Information: Skadowski, EPA Region 10, 206-553-6689, [email protected]

(April 17, 2013 – Seattle) –– Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced the Green Power Partnership Top 50 Green-Powered organizations using electricity from clean, renewable sources such as solar and wind energy. Several businesses and colleges in the Pacific Northwest are among the best in the nation in increasing renewable energy use.

Microsoft Corporation moved into 2nd place in the Top 50 nationwide by increasing its green power use to nearly 2 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh) annually. Starbucks Company owned stores moved up to 8th place by increasing their green power use to nearly 1 billion kWh annually.

Nine northwest colleges in the College & University Green Power Challenge are among the nation’s highest in green power use: University of Washington, Oregon State University, Western Washington University, Gonzaga University, Evergreen State College, Southern Oregon University, Lewis & Clark College, Pacific Lutheran University, and Whitman College.

“We applaud the leadership demonstrated by organizations that are helping reduce carbon pollution and spur the growth of clean, American-made energy sources by increasing their use of renewable energy,” said EPA Acting Administrator Bob Perciasepe. “As President Obama has made clear, clean energy is critical to our health, our economy, our security, and our ability to effectively address climate change.”

Green power includes electricity produced from solar, wind, geothermal, biogas, eligible biomass, and low-impact small hydroelectric sources. Green power represents the renewable energy resources and technologies that provide the highest environmental benefit.

As part of EPA’s Green Power Partnership, more than 1,400 organizations are purchasing more than 27 billion kWh of green power annually, avoiding carbon pollution equal to that created by the electricity use of more than 2.8 million American homes. The partnership provides quarterly updated lists of partners using green power including K-12 schools, local government, and technology and telecommunications industries.

U.S. Top 50 Green-Powered Organizations: www.epa.gov/greenpower/toplists

College & University Green Power Champions: www.epa.gov/greenpower/initiatives/cu_challenge.htm

EPA Green Power Partnership: www.epa.gov/greenpower

Follow EPA on Twitter: https://twitter.com/EPAgov

U.S. EPA News

Reducing Air Pollution, Chemical Coolants Can Quickly Cut Sea-Level Rise

Washington, DC – Sea-level rise—a growing threat that washes away beaches, attacks costal development, and raises the platform for launching ever more damaging and deadly storm surges—can be cut significantly by reducing local air pollution from black carbon, methane, and tropospheric ozone, along with factory-made coolants called HFCs.


This is the conclusion of a multi-year research effort led by Professor V. Ramanathan at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, to be published online 14 April by Nature Climate Change.  The study calculated that the annual rate of sea-level rise could be reduced up to 24% by 2100 by controlling these four climate pollutants, and that cumulative sea-level rise could be reduced by 22%.


‘It is still not too late to avoid disastrous climate changes,” stated study-lead, Dr. Ramanathan. “If we stabilize CO2 concentrations below 450 ppm by 2100 and simultaneously reduce SLCPs, we can limit the end-of-century warming by 50% and keep below the 2°C (3.6°F) safety guardrail, from the projected 4°C (7.2°F).”


These four climate pollutants are collectively known as “short-lived climate pollutants” because they clear out of the atmosphere in a matter of days to a decade and a half.  Previous research by Dr. Ramanathan and a follow-on study by the United Nations Environment Programme & the World Meteorological Organization showed that cutting SLCPs, using existing technologies and institutions in most cases, can cut the rate of climate change by half or more by mid-century.


The current study calculates the significant additional benefits that SLCP mitigation can provide by the end of the century—a critical 1.1°C reduction in future warming.  This is the same avoided warming aggressive carbon dioxide mitigation can produce in this period.  Cutting both SLCPs and CO2 can avoid 2.3°C of warming and keep the Planet under the 2°C guardrail according to the study, and reduce the rate of sea-level rise by up to 50%, with SLCP’s providing two-thirds of the reductions.


“Combined mitigation will reduce the cumulative sea level rise by about 30% (from the projected 0.5 m to 2 m/ 1.5 ft to 6.2 ft),” added Dr. Ramanathan. “It is encouraging that SLCPs contribute about half of the warming reduction and about two-thirds of the sea level rise reduction, since we have technologies to reduce them. Without CO2 stabilization below 450 ppm, however, both the warming and sea level can rise to dangerous levels beyond 2100.”


The damage from rising seas and higher storm surges is one of the most visible and costly effects of climate change.  Populations and infrastructure of coastal cities will become more vulnerable to flooding and storm surges, which are also expected to become more frequent and stronger as global temperatures rise. Indirect impacts can include impacts on job markets and tax revenue, and changes in population and migration.  According to a 2010 OECD study, a rise in sea-levels of only three feet (1 meter) by 2070 puts at risk 150 million people and $ 35 trillion in assets in just 20 of the world’s most vulnerable and fastest growing port cities, more than half of which are in developing Asian countries.


“This ground-breaking study provides the blueprint for climate justice this century,” stated Durwood Zaelke, President of the Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development. “Cutting these air pollutants and chemical coolants can cut warming in half for many decades, and is essential for protecting vulnerable people and places this century,” he added. “Failure to cut SLCPs will halt the impressive gains in poverty reduction of the past few decades,” Zaelke said, “and drive millions more into extreme poverty.”


Because three SLCPs are potent air pollutants, cutting them can save millions of lives every year, while significantly increasing crop yields, making this important for promoting sustainable development. In South Asia, for example, air pollution is the leading preventable cause of disease, according to a recent report by the World Health Organization.


“We need an all of the above approach to controlling greenhouse gases. Cutting carbon emissions is critical, but we also need to take advantage of the very substantial short term gains that can be achieved by cutting emissions of non-carbon climate pollutants,” stated study co-author Claudia Tebaldi of Climate Central. “Readily achievable reductions of non-carbon dioxide pollutants would do far more to slow sea level rise this century than actions to reduce carbon emissions alone, protecting millions of people and billions of dollars of real estate from rising seas,” she added.


Based upon data from the U.S. Geological Survey and NOAA, without engineering protection, five feet of sea-level rise could permanently flood 94% of Miami beach, 88% of New Orleans, 7% of New York City, 63% of Atlantic City, 20% of Jersey City, 68% of Galveston TX, 6% of San Francisco, and 4% of Seattle.  Approximately 2.6 million homes and 5 million people reside on land less than four feet above high tide in the U.S.; approximately 50% of those people are in the state of Florida.


The study found that delaying mitigation of SLCPs by 25 years will decrease the impact of CO2 and SLCP mitigation, and will make it difficult if not impossible to keep warming below 2°C by the end of the century.  Delayed action on SLCPs could increase sea-level rise by up to 11%.


The Climate and Clean Air Coalition to Reduce Short-Lived Climate Pollutants (CCAC) is the first-ever global effort specifically dedicated to reducing emissions of SLCPs, and has already undertaken seven fast-action initiatives designed to mobilize resources and accelerate global action on SLCPs.


The sea-level report drew heavily from the data collected by Project ABC, a United Nations sponsored study of pollution masses known as atmospheric brown clouds, which are especially prevalent in South Asia.  SLCPs are the main component of brown clouds emitted primarily from biomass burning, diesel emissions, and methane from landfills.


The study co-authors include: Aixue Hu and Warren M. Washington of the US National Center for Atmospheric Research, and Yangyang Xu of Scripps Institution of Oceanography.



A summary of the study is here.


A background note on damage from sea-level rise is here.


The CCAC website is here.


IGSD’s Primer on Short-Lived Climate Pollutants is here.


Contact Info: Erin Tulley, (202) 338-1300, [email protected]

Website : Institute of Governance & Sustainable Development

ENN Network News – ENN

Reducing red tape within the agriculture industry in Wales

Working Smarter will build on the work already done on reducing red tape within the agriculture industry in Wales. The independent Working Smarter report, produced by Gareth Williams, focused on seven key areas and maked 74 recommendations, with an emphasis on how those recommendations should be delivered, aimed at:

  • Improving communication with the farming community
  • Improving the Single Payment application process and customer experience
  • Reducing the overall number of farm inspections while adequately addressing risk
  • Safeguarding animal health and welfare while establishing flexibility of livestock movement
  • Reducing and simplifying farm records, including those covering livestock identification and movements, and medicine purchase and usage
  • Improving understanding of, and compliance with, environmental regulations
  • Making it easier for farmers to diversify their farm businesses

Mr Davies said:

“I asked Gareth to undertake this review to seek his independent opinion on progress and to ensure transparency in the ongoing developments to working smarter within the farming industry.

“If there was ever any doubt about the need for regulation then recent weeks have proved that need. The ongoing horsemeat contamination investigation has reminded everyone about the importance of consumer confidence in the food chain – and the potential fragility of that confidence which will only be maintained through appropriate regulation and controls.

“Gareth Williams set the Government a challenging target last year which required all 74 recommendations to be delivered before the next Assembly elections and 20 of those were to be completed before July 2012.  29 recommendations are already complete and almost all of the remainder are already being progressed.  Gareth has now refined the timeline to include specific delivery deadlines for individual recommendations so that farmers will understand what needs to change and by when.

“Under Working Smarter we could take the easy route, a route that is fairly limited in scope and ambition to specific regulatory changes. Alternatively, we could grasp the opportunity that Working Smarter has gifted us and deliver beneficial, far reaching changes; changes that will serve the farming industry very well indeed and long into the future.”

Environment and countryside

Reducing Black Carbon, HFCs, Methane Key to Protecting Arctic in Near-Term, Say Arctic Ministers Sea ice loss and permafrost melt are self-amplifying feedbacks causing further warming Arctic Ministers urge “urgent action” to avoid irreversible global impacts

Washington, DC. – Arctic Environment Ministers are calling for “urgent action” to reduce black carbon, methane, and HFCs in order to help protect the Arctic and reduce the risk of setting off self-amplifying feedback mechanisms that accelerate warming and lead to irreversible impacts.  The Ministers’ call to action is presented in the Chair’s conclusions released today at the end of the two-day meeting in Jukkasjärvi, Sweden.


The Arctic Ministers acknowledged “the worrying scientific findings identifying large-scale tipping points in the Arctic, such as collapse of the Arctic summer sea-ice, accelerating melting of the Greenland ice sheet, releases of methane from melting permafrost, all of which, if crossed, may have substantial global effects.”  If the Greenland ice sheet were to disintegrate, it could lead to up to seven meters (23 feet) of sea level rise.


Ministers concluded that “decisive action” on black carbon, methane, and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) is needed, and “encouraged coordination and support for international and global efforts to address emissions.” The Ministers also encouraged the Arctic Council to consider a new “instrument or other arrangements to enhance efforts to reduce emissions of black carbon from the Arctic States” for decision at the 2015 Arctic Ministerial meeting.


“Reducing black carbon and the other short-lived climate pollutants can cut the rate of Arctic warming by two-thirds. We need a crash course that starts today with black carbon, which is responsible for half of the Arctic warming,” added Zaelke. “We need to reduce HFCs under the Montreal Protocol, as this is the single biggest, fastest, and cheapest climate mitigation available to the world today, avoiding the equivalent of 100 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide.”


International efforts to limit global climate increase to 2°C above pre-Industrial level would still have “major and irreversible impacts on the environment and on the livelihood in the Arctic”, according to Arctic Environmental Ministers. The Ministers also “emphasized that substantial cuts in global emissions of carbon dioxide and other long-lived greenhouse gases are the backbone of any meaningful global climate change mitigation efforts.”


The “Discussion note” for the Arctic Environment Ministers Meeting is here.


Contact Info: Durwood Zaelke, (202) 338-1300, [email protected]

Erin Tulley, [email protected]

Website : Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development

ENN Network News – ENN

Growing Enthusiasm for Reducing Short-Lived Climate Pollutant for Fast Climate Mitigation Ministers meet in Doha on margins of UN climate talks

Washington, DC – 25 Ministers met today in a high-level assembly in a small room on the side of the UNFCCC negotiations in Doha, and along with representatives from UNEP the World Bank, and several NGOs, pledged to increase their scale of action to reduce short-lived climate pollutants (SLCPs). Success in reducing SLCPs including black carbon, methane, tropospheric ozone, and HFCs at the global level can cut the rate of global warming in half for the next 40 years and by two-thirds in the Arctic.


The Coalition pledged to keep the spirit and enthusiasm of the founding group, and the speed of action that has been achieved during the first ten months. The Coalition also welcomed six new country partners. Chile, the Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, the Maldives, the Netherlands and the Republic of Korea bring the number of partners in the CCAC to almost 50. The Coalition was originally founded by six countries in February 2012.


“The Coalition’s success will help overcome some the disappointment and despair many here are feeling at the pace of climate protection–despair that we do not have the collective wisdom nor the skill to protect our climate,” said Durwood Zaelke, President of  the Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development (IGSD).


Fast-action strategies to reduce SLCPs combined with necessary reductions in carbon dioxide are essential for slowing already accelerating extreme weather events in the near-term, such as the current record-breaking droughts in the South Central United States, while maintaining global temperature at or below 2°C above preindustrial levels through the end of the century.  Beyond the 2°C threshold, global temperature increases present the risk of major and perhaps catastrophic climate impacts, including devastating sea-level rise and punishing storm surges, as well as even more severe and frequent droughts, floods, and other extreme weather events. Fast action on black carbon and methane have the potential to slow a global temperature rise by up to 0.5°C by 2050, reduce air pollution-related deaths by as much as 2.4 million and crop losses by around 30 million tonnes annually.


“Reducing these climate pollutants not only harmonizes development and climate concerns but it is also critical for protecting the world’s most vulnerable regions and people, particularly women and children, from the worst impacts of climate change,” stated Romina Picolotti, former Secretary of Environment and Sustainable Development for Argentina and first NGO representative to the CCAC Steering Committee.


“The Coalition’s success will create more success; success truly breeds success” Zaelke added. “Those gathered in the small room in Doha are creating the sense of urgent optimism the world needs to solve all of climate change, including the CO2 part, which all recognize is the largest cause of climate change and essential to aggressively address.”


The UNEP Press Release is here.


IGSD’s Primer on Short-Lived Climate Pollutants is here.


Former President Bill Clinton addresses SLCPs in video remarks at the C40 event at Rio+20 here.


Contact Info: Nathan Borgord-Parnell +1.202.338.1300, [email protected]

Website : Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development

ENN Network News – ENN

Floridian Scientists, Officials Call on Presidential Candidates to Debate Sea-Level Rise Threatening 40% of U.S. Population; Reducing short-lived climate pollutants can provide fast mitigation

From: Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development
Published October 11, 2012 04:04 PM

Washington, DC 11 October 2012 – Today more than a hundred scientists and government officials in Florida called on the Presidential candidates to address the danger of sea level rise at the third and final presidential debate in Boca Raton on October 22.  Sea levels have already risen by nearly 8 inches on Florida’s coasts and could cost the state billions to repair and reinforce drainage, water supply systems, roads and other infrastructure to cope with the rising water. At current rates, sea level rise will increase by 50% by 2060, a conservative estimate according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

 “Because Florida is so densely populated, it is estimated 40 percent of the population and housing units at risk from sea level rise in the nation are here, in the state of Florida,” according to the letter.

“Florida is ground zero for sea level rise and many other damaging climate impacts, including hurricanes and devastating storm surges,” said Durwood Zaelke, President of the Institute for Governance and Sustainable Development. “The human and economic impacts of climate change are already being felt today and politicians can no longer afford to ignore climate change.  We need fast action to limit the current impacts and prevent even worse impacts in the future.”

“Taking fast action to reduce short-lived climate pollutants (SLCPs) such as black carbon, tropospheric ozone, methane, and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) has the potential to cut the rate of global warming in half over the next thirty to forty years,” said Zaelke, “and significantly slow the rate of sea-level rise.”  He added, “Cutting SLCPs can also reduce the rate of warming in the vulnerable Arctic by even more – up to two-thirds.”  This is critical because warming in the Arctic has the potential to set off dangerous feedback loops that cause warming to accelerate in the region, triggering further melting of the Greenland Ice Sheet, which scientists predict could contribute to up to a 6 foot rise in sea level by the end of the century.

The Obama Administration launched the Climate & Clean Air Coalition to Reduce Short-lived Climate Pollutants earlier this year.  The Coalition is undertaking fast-action mitigation projects to reduce SLCPs.  It now has 19 partners from developing and developed countries, along with the World Bank, UNEP, and the European Commission.  IGSD represents NGOs on the Steering Committee.   Zaelke stated, “Success with these fast-action mitigation projects will help slow sea-level rise and other climate impacts, if the Coalition can quickly reach sufficient scale.”

The Florida letter is here.

The Climate & Clean Air Coalition to Reduce Short-lived Climate Pollutants is here.

A description of strategies to reduce short-lived climate pollutants is here.

Contact Info: Erin Tulley: +1.202.338.1300, [email protected]

Website : Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development

ENN Network News – ENN

World’s Most Successful Environmental Treaty Turns 25 Montreal Protocol saves ozone layer while reducing major climate threat

From: Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development
Published September 17, 2012 11:16 AM

Washington, DC 14 September 2012 – The world’s most successful environmental treaty turns 25 this week on September 16th.  The treaty is the Montreal Protocol and its success has avoided one of the most severe global environmental threats the world has ever faced—the destruction of the stratospheric ozone by chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs).

“The Montreal Protocol has phased out nearly 100 kinds of CFCs and related fluorinated gases by 98%, an astonishing record by any measure,” stated Durwood Zaelke, President of the Institute for Governance and Sustainable Development.  “The treaty’s success has put the ozone layer on the path to recovery by 2065 or later, and has avoided millions of deaths from skin cancer and trillions of dollars in health costs.”

At the same time, because the CFCs and other chemicals that destroy the ozone layer also cause global warming, the Montreal Protocol has provided nearly 20 times more in climate mitigation than the Kyoto Protocol climate treaty has done in its first commitment period.

“Including the earlier consumer boycotts of CFC-filled spray cans and the early national laws in the US and Europe to cut these chemicals, the combined efforts to address CFCs and related chemicals has solved a part of the climate problem that otherwise would be as big as the part caused by carbon dioxide today.  (Carbon dioxide causes more than half of the warming.)  Put another way, the global temperature above pre-Industrial average would be 50% again as high as it is today.”

“The Montreal Protocol is successful because it has universal membership of all UN countries.  And it has universal membership because all countries consider the treaty to be fair,” Zaelke noted.  “They consider it fair because it fully implements the principle of ‘common but differentiated responsibility,’ by providing that the developed countries that first used CFCs start their phase outs first, followed by a grace period of ten years, before the developing countries have to start.”

Developed countries also provide a dedicated funding mechanism to pay the full, agreed incremental costs to the developing countries for making the transition out of the banned chemicals.  There also is funding to pay for national ozone officers in all 147 developing countries, and to provide for regular training.  “These boots on the ground have made a tremendous contribution to the treaty’s success,” added Zaelke.

Today a coalition of developing and developed countries are proposing to amend the treaty to phase down hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) that have high global warming potential.  A group of 108 countries are now supporting this, although India and China are not yet on board.

“The reluctance of these two countries is blocking the world’s single biggest and fastest bite out of the climate problem,” added Zaelke.  “Both China and India have always joined the Montreal Protocol consensus over the past 25 years, and we fully expect that they will join the consensus to phase down HFCs as well.  They don’t want to be blamed for increasing the near-term climate impacts that the Montreal Protocol can avoid.”

“Phasing down HFCs now is especially important,” Zaelke continued, “because the climate treaty is on a deliberate schedule, aiming for an agreement by 2015 on new mandatory commitments in a treaty that would go into effect by 2020.  This is too late to avoid the catastrophic impacts that are getting closer each day.”

Contact Info: Nathan Borgford-Parnell: +1.202.338.1300, [email protected]

Website : Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development

ENN Network News – ENN

Arctic Sea Ice Levels Hit Record Low Reducing black carbon and other short-lived climate pollutants key to slowing Arctic warming

From: Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development
Published August 28, 2012 02:39 PM

Washington, DC 28 August 2012 – Arctic sea ice has hit record lows with weeks still to go in the melt season, an indication of accelerating global warming.  Arctic sea ice has reached the lowest level ever observed in the three decades since polar cap observations began, according to scientists from NASA and the National Snow and Ice Data Center.

“The Arctic is already warming at twice the global average, and the loss of sea ice and its ability to reflect heat back to space is now starting to melt the permafrost, which is releasing still more climate-warming gases,”, said Durwood Zaelke, President of the Institute for Governance and Sustainable Development.  “This feedback loop is pushing us closer to one of the first tipping points that could cause irreversible climate damage.”

Zaelke added, “Reducing black carbon soot and other short-lived climate pollutants can cut the rate of Arctic warming by two-thirds. We need a crash course that starts today with black carbon, which is responsible for half of the Arctic warming, or about 1.0C.”  Other short-lived climate pollutants include methane, which is being released from the thawing permafrost, and hydrofluorocarbons or HFCs.

Scientists last year predicted that the Artic could be free of summer sea ice in the next thirty to forty years and sea-levels could rise up to 5 feet by the end of the century with melting snow and ice in the Arctic making a significant contribution.

“In addition to a crash course to cut black carbon in the Arctic,” Zaelke said that “we also need to phase down HFCs through the Montreal Protocol, which is one of the biggest and fastest and cheapest ways to mitigate climate change.”

Other efforts to reduce short-lived climate pollutants are underway in new Climate and Clean Air Coalition to Reduce Short-Lived Climate Pollutants, launched by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton earlier this year.  There are now 27 members of the Coalition.  IGSD sits on the Steering Committee of the Coalition as the representative of nongovernmental organizations.

According to a recent UNEP/WMO report, full implementation of a package of sixteen emission reduction measures targeting black carbon and ozone precursors, including methane, can cut the rate of warming in the Arctic by two-thirds and the rate of global warming by half for the next 30 to 60 years.

IGSD Press Release “Dramatic Sea Level Rise Expected From Faster Melting of Arctic Snow and Ice” (6 May 2011) is here.

Contact Info: Nathan Borgford-Parnell: +1.202.338.1300, [email protected]

Website : Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development

ENN Network News – ENN