Corporate Climate Response Chicago

Posted by Brad Johnson Tue, 25 Sep 2007 04:00:00 GMT

Chicago, September 25-26 2007

This two-day event will bring together companies, regulators and other experts to discuss the best solutions for companies looking to mitigate their carbon footprints. Supporters of this event include the City of Chicago DoE, IBM, and MetaFore. Corporate Climate Response also coincides with Chicago’s ‘Cool Globes: Hot Ideas for a Cooler Planet’ festival.

This is our 5th Corporate Climate Response event and a number of top speakers are participating including representatives from Ford, Time, Anheuser-Busch, IBM, McDonald’s, United Technologies, Catepillar, BP America, Exelon, EPA, Energy Star, WRI and more.

This event includes sessions on carbon footprint and life-cycle analysis, energy efficiency, choosing green power sources, offsetting and emissions trading, climate adaptation, and engaging the public on global warming issues. Attendees will also learn about the latest update in national climate change policy and how upcoming state and federal actions will directly impact US corporations. It will attract over 200 delegates from across the US whose responsibility is to implement climate change solutions for their organizations.

The event is sponsored by Environmental Defense, The Alliance to Save Energy, MetaFore, and the Institute for Sustainable Communication.

_Speakers_
  • Mayor Richard M. Daley
  • Laura Flanigan, Director, Chicago Sustainable Business Alliance
  • Jonathan Lash, President, World Resources Institute
  • John Disharoon, Director of Sustainable Development, Caterpillar Inc.
  • Bill Gerwing, Director of Environmental Policy, BP America
  • Melissa Lavinson, Director for Federal, Governmental and Regulatory Relations, PG&E
  • Alice LeBlanc, Director of the Office of Environment and Climate Change, AIG
  • Doug Scott, Chair of Climate Change Advisory, Illinois EPA
  • Henry Henderson, National Resource Defense Council
  • Karen Hobbs, First Deputy Commissioner, City of Chicago’s Department of Environment
  • Michelle Manion, Climate & Energy Team Manager, NESCAUM
  • Jim Sullivan, Director, Climate Leaders Program, EPA
  • Vicki Arroyo, Director of Policy Analysis, Pew Center on Global Climate Change
  • Howard Learner, Director, Environmental Law and Policy Center
  • Anthony Janetos, Director, Joint Global Change Research Institute
  • John Viera, Director of Sustainable Business Strategies, Ford Motor Company
  • David Refkin, Director of Sustainability, Time Inc.
  • Audra Jones, Senior Director of Partnership Development, UN Foundation
  • Paul Vitello, Director of Environmental Programs, United Technologies
  • Gary Rancourt ,Business Development Executive, IBM Big Green Innovations
  • Steve DePalo, Energy Manager, McDonald’s USA
  • Kara Saul Rinaldi, Director of Government and Public Affairs, Owens Corning
  • Betsy Dutrow, Program Manager, Energy Star for Industry
  • Peter Garforth, Principal, Garforth International
  • Todd Brady, Corporate Environmental Manager, Intel Corporation
  • Tom Costantino, Asset Management and Resource Recovery Manager, PSEG
  • Jack Groh, Environmental Manager, NFL
  • Bob Accarino, Director of Global Environmental affairs, Abbott
  • Emily Barton, Corporate EHS Manager, Motorola and President, NAEM Lake Michigan Chapter
  • Steve Fine, Vice President, ICF International
  • Menno Enters, Manager of Utilities, Walgreens
  • Dean Pusch, Manager of Environmental Affairs, Anheuser-Busch
  • Jessica Bridges, Executive Director, USCHPA
  • Helen Howes, Vice President, Corporate Environment Health & Safety, Exelon
  • Rob Threlkeld, Manager of Supply Contracts and Green Initiatives, GM
  • Laura H. Kosloff, Senior Counsel, EcoSecurities
  • Michael Schlup, Director, The Gold Standard
  • Anne Hambleton, Managing Director, Native Energy
  • Jim Sullivan, Director, Climate Leaders Program, EPA
  • George Milner, SVP Energy/Environmental, Mohawk Fine Papers
  • Andrew Kruger, Vice President, Greenhouse Gas Markets, Evolution Markets
  • Thomas M. Cushing, Vice President, Chicago Climate Exchange
  • Rick Adcock, Senior Vice President of Environmental Markets, World Green Exchange
  • Michael Loreman, Vice President, DTE Energy
  • Ronald Meissen, Senior Director of Corporate Environment, Health and Safety, Baxter Healthcare Corporation
  • James Stanway, Director of Project Development, Wal-mart
  • Rich Wells, Vice President of Energy, Dow
  • Peter Knight, Managing Director, Context
  • Victoria Mills, Project Manager, Corporate Partnerships, Environmental Defense
  • Dick Marklein, Energy Services Director, Kimberly Clark
  • Matthew Banks, Senior Program Officer, Climate Change Program, WWF
  • Andrew J. Hoffman, Holcim (US) Professor of Sustainable Enterprise, The University of Michigan
  • Debra Shore, Commissioner, Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago
  • Brad Warren, Consultant, Sustainable Fisheries Partnership
  • Jeannette Oelschlaegel, IResearch Manager, AccountAbility
  • Wood Turner, Project Director, Climate Counts
  • Don Carli, Research Fellow, Institute for Sustainable Communication
  • Iciar Vaquero, Project Director, Carbon Footprinting and Labelling initiative, The Carbon Trust

Bloggers at UN Climate Change Event

Posted by Brad Johnson Mon, 24 Sep 2007 21:21:00 GMT

The UN brought a group of twelve bloggers to the event, most of whom are professional staffers; the UN Dispatch blog offers a jump-off point for the coverage.

The dozen bloggers include three from the Center for American Progress: Kate Sheppard and Ezra Klein from TAPPED and Kay Steiger from Campus Progress, as well as Gristmill’s Brian Beutler, the Atlantic.com’s Matthew Yglesias, Treehugger’s Jasmin Chua, Boing Boing Gadgets’ Joel Johnson, the Washington Note’s Sameer Lalwani, Global Voices Online’s Juliana “Tweets” Rotich, and Foreign Policy Passport’s Blake Hounshell.

Links to their posts are after the jump.

_Kate Sheppard at TAPPED_ Ezra Klein at TAPPED Matthew Yglesias at Atlantic.com Brian Beutler at Grist Joel Johnson at Boing Boing Gadgets Jasmin Malik Chua at Treehugger Sameer Lalwani at the Washington Note Juliana Rotich at Global Voices Online Blake Hounshell at Foreign Policy Passport

UN Climate Change Conference

Posted by Brad Johnson Mon, 24 Sep 2007 15:28:00 GMT

The UN climate change “high-level event”, “The Future In Our Hands, is ongoing, webcast online.

The New York Times has coverage, as does the BBC.

NYT quotes Gov. Schwarzenegger (R-Cal.):
California is moving the United States beyond debate and doubt to action. The time has come to stop looking back in blame or suspicion. The consequences of global climate change are so pressing that it doesn’t matter who was responsible for the past, what matters is who is answerable for the future.
Of course, Schwarzenegger isn’t above partisan politics when it comes to climate change either:
He sliced millions from Attorney General Jerry Brown’s budget, including $1 million to pursue climate change litigation on behalf of the state. Brown, a Democrat, enraged Republicans for challenging city and county land-use plans if they did not adequately address the effects of local growth on global warming.

The Future in Our Hands: Addressing the Leadership Challenge of Climate Change

Posted by Brad Johnson Mon, 24 Sep 2007 04:00:00 GMT

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced that he will convene an informal high-level event in New York on the margins of the General Assembly on 24 September to promote discussion on possible ways to move the international community toward negotiations on new global agreement on climate change at the upcoming United Nations climate change conference in Bali in December.

The Secretary-General hopes that world leaders will send a powerful political signal to the negotiations in Bali that “business as usual” will not do and that they are ready to work jointly with others towards a comprehensive multilateral framework for action on climate change for the period after 2012.

The Secretary-General informed Permanent Representatives and Permanent Observers to the United Nations of the event, which will be informal and will seek to reaffirm the importance of addressing climate change in a global forum and provide an opportunity to involve all countries in the multilateral process. The high-level event would not seek to engage Governments in negotiations on the outcomes in Bali nor seek a negotiated outcome.

The Secretary-General has repeatedly stated that climate change is a major global challenge and he intends to take a leadership role in helping the international community address the problem. As the only global forum, the United Nations is uniquely positioned to forge a common approach to combating climate change. He has stated that all countries are experiencing it, all countries are becoming more conscious of the need to address this issue and the time for action is now.

Earlier this year, the Secretary-General appointed three Special Envoys to assist him with consultations with Governments on how he might facilitate progress in the multilateral climate change negotiations within the UN, as well as their views on a possible high-level event later this year. The Special Envoys are: H.E. Mrs. Gro Harlem Brundtland, former Prime Minister of Norway and former Chair of the World Commission of Environment and Development, H.E. Mr. Han Seung-soo, former Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Korea and former President of the 56th session of the UN General Assembly; and H.E. Mr. Ricardo Lagos Escobar, former President of Chile.

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is among the leaders who plan to attend.

9:00 am – 9:45 am: Opening Plenary Meeting Opening by the Secretary-General, with the participation of the President of the 62nd session of the General Assembly and the Chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Morning session 10:00 am – 1:00 pm: Thematic Plenaries (taking place in parallel)
  • Thematic Plenary I — Adaptation “The challenge of adaptation — from vulnerability to resilience”
  • Thematic Plenary II — Mitigation “Reducing emissions and stabilizing the climate — safeguarding our common future”
  • Thematic Plenary III — Technology “Innovating a climate-friendly world— the role of technology and its dissemination”
  • Thematic Plenary IV — Financing “Financing the response to climate change — investing in tomorrow”

Afternoon session 1:15 pm – 2:45 pm: Side Event for Leaders “Global voices on climate change” Hosted by Kenya, Indonesia, Poland and Denmark

3:00 pm – 5:00 pm: Thematic Plenaries Continued from the morning sessions

Closing 5:30 pm – 6:15 pm: Closing Closing and presentation of Chair’s Summary by the Secretary-General

What Does the Stern Review Mean for the UN Climate Change Meeting in Bali? 1

Posted by Brad Johnson Fri, 21 Sep 2007 14:00:00 GMT

The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) invites you to a Congressional briefing with Sir Nicholas Stern a year after the release of the landmark “Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change.” The Stern Review represented a key milestone in our understanding of the urgent need to take action and the associated costs of tackling climate change. The headline message that the cost of action would be far less than the cost of inaction was a catalyst for many governments to increase their efforts in the fight against global warming.

In the run up to the next UN meeting on climate change in Bali (December 2007), there are a number of complementary processes taking place, including the UN Secretary-General’s meeting in New York on September 24 and the US Meeting of Major Economies on Energy Security and Climate Change in Washington on September 27-28. How will the findings of the Stern Review affect these meetings? Will the policy recommendations recommended by the Review be considered as part of the final deal?

Sir Nicholas Stern will speak about these issues, which will be followed by a Q&A session with the audience.

Briefing speaker:

The Stern Review was commissioned by Gordon Brown, formerly Chancellor of the Exchequer and now the British Prime Minister. The Stern Review’s principal conclusion was that tackling climate change is a pro-growth strategy. It found that the earlier effective action is taken, the less costly it will be. The Stern Review surprised many policymakers in terms of describing the relatively small cost of action versus the significant costs of inaction, i.e. stabilizing greenhouse gases in the atmosphere will cost about one per cent of annual global output by 2050. If no action is taken, climate change will reduce global consumption per head by between five and 20 percent. In addition, markets for low-carbon energy products are likely to be worth at least $505 billion per year by 2050.

This briefing is open to the public and no reservations are required. For more information, please contact Fred Beck at [email protected] or 202.662.1892.

Climate Week: Climate Change Takes Center Stage

Posted by Brad Johnson Fri, 21 Sep 2007 13:30:00 GMT

During the last week of September, three high-profile global meetings will address the challenge of climate change. On Monday, September 24, the United Nations will convene a unique High-Level Session of the General Assembly, at which dozens of heads of states will address this topic. Starting Wednesday, September 26, the Clinton Global Initiative will bring governments, business, NGOs and media together to catalyze concrete action to address climate change. Starting Thursday, September 27, the Bush administration will host representatives of leaders from 15 major economies for an unprecedented meeting on this topic.

To preview these events and assess their significance, Brookings will host a forum on Friday September 21. After the program, panelists will take audience questions.

Introduction:
  • Strobe Talbott, President, The Brookings Institution
Moderator:
  • Carlos Pascual, Vice President and Director, Foreign Policy Studies, The Brookings Institution
Panelists:
  • Yvo de Boer, Executive Director, United Nations, Framework Convention on Climate Change
  • David B. Sandalow, Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution, chair of the Energy & Climate Working Group at the Clinton Global Initiative

Ambassador Room Hilton Embassy Row 2015 Massachusetts Ave, NW

Forests and Climate Change

Posted by Brad Johnson Thu, 20 Sep 2007 22:00:00 GMT

Institute of Ecosystem Studies President Dr. William Schlesinger is going to be speaking at 6:00 pm this Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., about his recent work on the interaction between forests and climate—and its implications for how and whether carbon offsets should be allowed.

Glenn Hurwitz has more at Grist.

Before coming to IES, Dr. Schlesinger served in a dual capacity at Duke University, as both the James B. Duke Professor of Biogeochemistry and Dean of the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences.

255 11th Street SE (close to the Eastern Market metro stop)

RSVP with Glenn Hurwitz (glenn dot hurowitz at ecologyfund dot net)

Ecosystem Thresholds and Climate Tipping Points

Posted by Brad Johnson Thu, 20 Sep 2007 19:00:00 GMT

The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) invites you to learn about the impacts climate change is having on ecosystems, in particular those changes that are rapid, large, and potentially irreversible. We now have evidence that there may be thresholds that, once crossed, will present serious coping challenges to humans. This raises a major strategic challenge in the climate policy debate before this Congress: What concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere might lead to environmentally, socially and economically unacceptable impacts?

In response to this question, a project was developed jointly by the H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics, and the Environment, the Joint Global Change Research Institute, and The Nature Conservancy, entitled “Understanding the Consequences of Thresholds in Global Change and Their Implications for Decision-Making.” The project promotes understanding of the physical, natural, and social dynamics that underlie ecological thresholds in order to better inform ongoing adaptation measures and response options across scales of decision-making. Our panel will focus on the work of this important initiative and its draft report, which is based on the first of a series of meetings that took place in 2006. Case studies presented at the meeting included impacts on the critical ecosystems of the American Rockies and Alaska such as: drought in the Colorado River Basin; bark beetles in Western Canada; and forest die-off and die-back in the West. Our speaker panel includes Ecothresholds Project participants and other experts:

  • Dr. Anthony Janetos (Moderator), Director, Joint Global Change Research Institute, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory/University of Maryland
  • Dr. Ed Miles, Virginia and Prentice Bloedel Professor of Marine Studies and Public Affairs, University of Washington
  • Dr. Neil Cobb, Director, Merriam-Powell Center for Environmental Research, Northern Arizona University
  • Dr. Mark Eakin, Coordinator, NOAA Coral Reef Watch, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  • Dr. John Wiens, Lead Scientist, The Nature Conservancy
  • Michael Bradley, Canfor Pulp Limited Partnership

The Ecothresholds Project envisions workshops and conferences to engage resource managers and practitioners to explore responses to threshold effects that challenge the condition of ecosystem services and the foundation of a range of natural resource management practices. Creating a dialogue between this project and policymakers will help ensure that the major strategic questions being addressed by this project will be incorporated into the federal policy debate on climate change.

This briefing is open to the public and no reservations are required. For more information, contact Fred Beck at 202-662-1892 ([email protected])

U.S. PIRG: 100% Auction For All Cap and Trade 2

Posted by Brad Johnson Thu, 20 Sep 2007 17:41:00 GMT

U.S. PIRG today announced the release of “Cleaner, Cheaper, Smarter”, a report which makes the case that any greenhouse gas emissions cap-and-trade program have a full auction of emissions credits.

In a supporting statement, numerous environmental and progressive organizations and individuals state:
It is critical that any cap-and-trade program require the auctioning of pollution allowances, rather than giving those allowances away for free to polluters.

By auctioning pollution allowances, we affirm that no one has a “right” to pollute. Instead, we claim the atmosphere as a common resource, to be managed for the benefit of the public, which no polluter may foul without due compensation.

By auctioning pollution allowances, we reduce the societal cost of achieving emission reductions, enabling America to achieve its climate protection goals with less disruption to our economy and the lives of individual Americans.

And by auctioning pollution allowances, we prevent the accumulation of billions of dollars in windfall profits by polluters, and instead put those revenues to work on behalf of the public. Allowance revenues can support efforts to transform America into a clean energy economy and to provide a regular dividend or rebate to American consumers.

We call on state and federal lawmakers to limit global warming emissions to the levels demanded by the science and to auction all pollution allowances in any cap-and-trade program.

The list of signatories is after the jump.

  • Sierra Club
  • Consumer Federation of America
  • Oxfam America
  • Campaign for America’s Future
  • U.S.PIRG: Federation of State PIRGs
  • MoveOn.org
  • Clean Water Action
  • Environmental Law & Policy Center
  • Rainforest Action Network
  • Friends of the Earth
  • OMB Watch
  • Greenpeace
  • Institute for Local Self-Reliance
  • The Regeneration Project / Interfaith Power & Light
  • Ella Baker Center for Human Rights
  • Public Citizen
  • Step It Up 2007
  • Southern Alliance for Clean Energy
  • Conservation Law Foundation
  • Center for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Technologies
  • Center for Tax and Budget Accountability
  • Clean Air Watch
  • Clean Power Campaign
  • Community Environmental Council
  • E3 Network: Economics for Equity and the Environment
  • EcoEquity
  • Focus the Nation
  • Fresh Energy
  • Climate Solutions
  • Friends Committee on National Legislation
  • Citizens Utility Board of Wisconsin
  • Massachusetts Climate Action Network
  • Ohio Environmental Council
  • Planning and Conservation League
  • SUN DAY Campaign
  • Plains Justice
  • Valley Watch
  • Center for a New American Dream
  • Steven and Michele Kirsch Foundation
  • HKH Foundation
  • Climate Protection Campaign
  • Blanket the Globe
  • and local PIRG affiliates
INDIVIDUALS (affiliation for identification purposes only)
  • Robert Reich
  • James K. Boyce
  • George Lakoff
  • James Gustave Speth
  • William E. Spriggs, Ph.D.
  • Billy Parish
  • Martha Phillips
  • Peter Barnes
  • Allen L. White
  • Juliet Schor
  • Joe Nation
  • William R. Freudenburg
  • Pran R. Young
  • Dave Olsen
  • Jonathan Isham
  • Sara J. Weinheimer
  • Garrett Greuner
  • Dean Baker
  • Jonathan F P Rose
  • Robert Perkowitz,
  • William Bates
  • Joshua Skov, MA, LEED AP
  • Burns H Weston
  • Gary Flomenhoft
  • David Sassoon
  • Edward Skloot
  • Robin Hahnel, PhD
  • Peter Dorman
  • Juliette Anthony
  • Rafael Aguilera
  • Jonathan Isham
  • Tracy Bach
  • Rick Reed
  • Ildiko Polony
  • Lori A. Ehrlich

Urban Development and Climate Change

Posted by Brad Johnson Thu, 20 Sep 2007 14:00:00 GMT

The Urban Land Institute will hold a news conference to release a report titled “Growing Cooler: The Evidence” that will discuss the relationship between urban development and carbon dioxide emitted by vehicles.

Contact: Nicole Daigle at 202-715-1553

Urban Land Institute, 1025 Thomas Jefferson St. N.W., Suite 500 West

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