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Entries in Green Revolution (2)

Wednesday
Apr082009

Global warming creates opportunities

By Suzia van Swol-University of New Mexico, Talk Radio News Service

From Ph.D’s to GED’s, there are new jobs and new sectors that Van Jones, Special Advisor for Green Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation with the White House Council on Environmental Quality, says are available through the green movement.

The Obama administration anticipates a $645 billion revenue from a cap and trade system which is projected to be set in place by 2012. The plan puts a limit on the amount of greenhouse gas an oil or electric company can emit, and anything exceeding a set “cap” results in companies buying pollution allowances or credits from companies who have not exceeded their limits.

Republicans believe that the middle and lower class Americans will be the ones suffering from such a plan because of the raised prices in electric bills. Republicans also worry that it is important to heal the economy before tackling a green revolution.

The Energy Efficiency Conservation Block Grant is specifically designed to get money for energy efficiency in cities. Jones said that he will be working closely with the Office of Management and Budget to make sure that money intended for creating green jobs is actually put into the community. “All monies are to be distributed consistent with
equal opportunity and other policy objections of the administration,” said Jones.

Jones said that cities account for 75% of our green house gas emissions “which means that we cannot beat global warming without greening our cities.”

Fixing buildings that leak too much energy requires jobs because “buildings don’t weatherize and retrofit themselves,” Jones said, adding that

“Everything that is good in the fight against global warming is also a job or a contract, therefore it’s good for people.”
Wednesday
May142008

Global food prices up 43 percent 

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee held a hearing on “Responding to the Global Food Crisis,” focusing in particular on U.S. agricultural investment in foreign nations and how the development of corn-based ethanol and other biofuels have contributed to the rise in food prices.

Edward Lazear, chairman for the Council of Economic Advisors, said that global food inflation was 43 percent during the 12 months ending in March 2008. He emphasized that Americans spend less than 14 percent of total expenditures on food, while Africans spend about 43 percent and for the poorest populations in Sub-Saharan Africa subsisting on less than one dollar per day, this figure may be as high as 70 percent.

Lazear testified that wheat prices have increased 123 percent, soybeans 66 percent, corn 37 percent, and rice 36 percent. Emerging market consumption, he said, has increased by 45 percent from 2001 to 2007 compared to 1991 to 2000, and that this increase in demand accounts for about 18 percent of the rise in food prices. Other factors, he said, are adverse weather conditions that destroy crops and to a smaller degree, ethanol production. He said that the world’s ethanol production accounts for approximately 13 percent of this year’s 37 percent increase in corn prices, and since corn makes up a small fraction of the International Monetary Fund’s Global Food Index, it is responsible for only about 1.2 percent of the year’s 43 percent total global food price increase.

U.S. Agency for International Development Administrator Henrietta Fore testified that the world’s one billion poorest people are living on one U.S. dollar per day, and that while Africa and Asia suffer most from this kind of poverty, Haiti is also facing a crisis. She also said that three-quarters of the world’s poorest people living on less than 50 cents per day are located in Africa. She advocated changing trade policies that present barriers to food supply and said that U.S. agricultural investment would be “enormously positive.” She mentioned that “even short term hunger” can “unalterably” affect a child through increased risk for disease, cognitive and developmental malfunction, and early death.

Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN) said that people in nearly 40 countries face food shortages and potential civil unrest as a result. In 1980, he said, agricultural projects accounted for 30 percent of World Bank spending, whereas in 2007 that number was less than 13 percent. Along with Chairman Joe Biden (D-DE), he called for a “second Green Revolution” to increase agricultural research, development, and investment in order to augment yield per acre of crops by improving techniques. He said such an initiative would “benefit developed and developing countries alike,” as would removing trade barriers and tariffs. He also said that ethanol research cannot be curtailed because of its contribution to food price increases because it would put additional pressure on oil prices, which he emphasized is already at $120 per barrel.