'Emotional' Al Gore Testifies
on Climate Change
Since 03-22-07
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2007/3/21/110458.shtml?s=al&promo_code=2FF8-1
WASHINGTON -- Al Gore, a Democratic favorite for the presidency despite
pronouncements that he's not running, spoke out on his signature issue
Wednesday, warning of a "true planetary emergency" if Congress fails to act on
global warming.
In a return he described as emotional, Gore testified before House panels that
it is not too late to deal with climate change "and we have everything we need
to get started." By turns folksy and prescriptive, he urged the
Democratic-controlled Congress to adopt an immediate freeze on greenhouse gases
blamed for global warming.
Gore's return to Congress marked the first time he had been in the Capitol since
January 2001 when he was the defeated Democratic nominee still presiding over
the Senate in his role as vice president.
The former vice president, who 20 years ago held the first hearings in Congress
on global warming, appeared before a joint hearing by two House committees.
Later in the day, he was to testify before a Senate committee that included the
current Democratic front-runner for the nomination - Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Several public opinion polls show Gore among the top three in the presidential
race, although he has said he has no plans to seek the presidency again. In
2000, he won the popular vote but lost to George W. Bush when the Supreme Court
ruled for the Republican in the disputed election.
Polls consistently place Gore, the non-candidate, third behind Clinton and
Illinois Sen. Barack Obama - ahead of John Edwards and other declared candidates
- and indicate that much of his support comes from Democrats who would otherwise
back the New York senator.
Gore advised lawmakers to cut carbon dioxide and other warming gases 90 percent
by 2050 to avert a crisis. Doing that, he said, will require a ban on any new
coal-burning power plants - a major source of industrial carbon dioxide - that
lack state-of-the-art controls to capture the gases.
He said he foresees a revolution in small-scale electricity producers for
replacing coal, likening the development to what the Internet has done for the
exchange of information. He also advocated tougher fuel-economy standards for
cars and trucks.
"There is a sense of hope in this country that this United States Congress will
rise to the occasion and present meaningful solutions to this crisis," he said.
"Our world faces a true planetary emergency. I know the phrase sounds shrill,
and I know it's a challenge to the moral imagination."
Gore favors a "cap-and-trade" program for the U.S. economy, not just specific
sectors such as electricity or manufacturing, which would set an overall limit
on warming emissions but allow industry to meet the target by trading pollution
allowances.
"Trust the market, make it work for us," he said.
Gore gained international recognition with his Oscar-winning documentary, "An
Inconvenient Truth," as perhaps the leading spokesman on dealing with global
warming.
A former congressman and senator from Tennessee, Gore received a friendly
reception from Democrats in Congress. As he spoke, his wife, Tipper, sat behind
him, listening intently in a show of support for him and laughing occasionally
at lighter-hearted exchanges.
"Welcome back, welcome home," said Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., chairman of the
Energy and Commerce Committee.
But several Republicans sharply questioned Gore's recommendations.
"A lot of those recommendations are more regulations and more taxation," said
former House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., though he added that he agrees with
Gore that the scientific debate on climate change is over. "I think we can find
answers to use the coal energy, to use the natural gas we have."
Gore said the climate issue should not be a partisan or political issue. He said
he saw a limited role for nuclear power, which the Bush administration has
promoted, because the plants are expensive to build and "only come in one size:
extra large."
He rejected the contention by opponents of quick action on global warming that
the United States should only impose mandatory controls on greenhouse gases if
China, India and other rapidly developing nations agree to do the same.
"The best way and the only way to get China and India on board is for the U.S.
to demonstrate real leadership," Gore said. "As the world's largest economy and
the greatest superpower, we are uniquely situated to tackle a problem of this
magnitude," he said.
Congress has nearly a dozen bills before it that call for reductions in carbon
dioxide and other greenhouse gases.
Al Gore's Convenient Lie: The Global Warming Spin
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