View Single Post
  #4  
Old Monday, January 15, 2007
MUKHTIAR ALI's Avatar
MUKHTIAR ALI MUKHTIAR ALI is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: LARKANA
Posts: 123
Thanks: 5
Thanked 52 Times in 31 Posts
MUKHTIAR ALI is on a distinguished road
Red face Global Warming

CONSIDER the humble polar bear: Ursus maritimus to the scientists who admire it for its intelligence. Now consider President Bush, who might be classified as Executum obstreperum by the thousands of scientists who say his administration fails to appreciate the gravity of global warming. Is it possible that the polar bear can do what the scientists cannot?
What the polar bear could do, essentially, is force the administration to take steps to curb global warming. With its proposal, announced last week, to list polar bears as a threatened species, the US Fish and Wildlife Service for the first time acknowledged that global warming is the driving force behind an animal’s potential extinction.

If the polar bear is listed as endangered, then the US government would be bound by law to protect it — and protecting it may require regulations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

In the polar bear, the administration may have met its match. This isn’t just any animal — it is a creature at once majestic and cuddly, the star attraction at countless zoos and featured in so many TV commercials it practically qualifies for a SAG card.

If that’s not enough, the same type of habitat loss threatening the bears’ survival also endangers the penguin, which had a better year at the box office than all but a few humans.

Less popular is the administration’s stance on global warming. Bush has acknowledged the phenomenon, but he’s reluctant to require industry to cut greenhouse gas emissions. If the polar bear is listed as an endangered species, would the government have to crack down on the carbon emissions that are threatening its existence?

Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne passed the buck on that question, saying such regulations fall to other departments. That’s arguable; Fish and Wildlife is the lead agency charged with protecting species from the effects of pollution. If nothing else, a listing for the polar bear would expose Fish and Wildlife to lawsuits from environmentalists similar to the one against the Environmental Protection Agency that is now before the Supreme Court; a dozen states, including California, say the agency is ignoring its duty to protect public health by not regulating greenhouse gases.

—Los Angeles Times


PUBLISHED IN DAWN SAT.JAN2006
Reply With Quote