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Muslims urged to tackle climate change

US Senators to unveil climate bill next week
Washington (AFP) April 13, 2010 - The US Senate's two principal authors of legislation to battle climate change said Tuesday they were putting the last touches on their bill and hoped to unveil it next week. "I feel very optimistic about the progress that we're making. I think that folks are coming together, but there are still some hurdles," said Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman John Kerry, a Democrat. Asked when he and Republican Senator Lindsey Graham would make the measure public, Kerry replied: "We hope next week." Graham said he and Kerry were reaching out to colleagues and major players in the climate change debate with an eye on introducing the legislation, which quite likely will not see major action by the Senate until June.

"We've got some more work to do, but hopefully next week," Republican Senator Lindsey Graham told reporters."We're locking down a few issues, but we're getting there." Introducing the measure would launch a months-long process that would see the legislation's cost and scope evaluated by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office and the Environmental Protection agency. It would also likely need to be taken up by key committees of jurisdiction, which could modify the bill before a final Senate vote. The US House of Representatives passed its version of the legislation last year, creating a "cap-and-trade" market for greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming -- a strategy vastly different from the one in the Senate. "Cap and trade as we know it is over, there'll be some limited trading in the utility area," said Graham, who declined to elaborate. The Senate and House of Representatives would have to pass identical legislation to send it to US President Barack Obama to sign into law.
by Staff Writers
Bogor, Indonesia (UPI) Apr 12, 2010
An international Muslim conference on climate change concluded Saturday with The Bogor Declaration, stressing the need to prevent climate change through education.

Approximately 150 people, including environmental experts, scientists, religious clerics and organization leaders, from 14 countries participated in the two-day conference in Bogor, Indonesia.

Participants suggested that sustainability messages could be delivered to followers through the mosques and called for the establishment of eco-friendly Islamic boarding schools, The Jakarta Post reports.

However, they failed to discuss the implementation of the environmentally friendly hajj proposed at the first Muslim climate conference in Kuwait City in 2008.

Groups of environmentalists from Islamic states were formed during the Indonesian conference, with the aim of being a voice for Muslims on climate change at the international level.

"It essentially must start with education … we need experts and scientists who can create a way to prevent the environmental impact," said conference Chairman Ismid Hadad in concluding remarks, Indonesia's state-run news agency Antara reports.

Sead Elgezawi of the World Islamic Call Society told those attending the conference that many verses in the Koran promoted an environmentally friendly lifestyle.

"The majority of Muslims are unaware or uninterested in environmental issues even though millions of them worldwide suffer every year from a lack of natural resources," said Elgezawi, the Post reports.

He suggested that Muslims -- whose worldwide population totals 1.4 billion -- participate in a "green" revolution to restore the world's nature, as well as educate people about the need to protect the environment.

He called for Muslims to get involved and work with countries in the West that had invested in considerable research on such issues.

"We have to join hands and work together for the sake of humanity such that we leave this world in better shape than we found it for the next generation. There is no alternative," Elgezawi said.

Emil Salim, adviser to Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on environmental and sustainable development, asked the group why many countries with a Muslim-majority population had poor environmental records. And he questioned why these countries were poor despite their wealth of oil reserves.

Salim said Muslim countries also needed to focus on environmental concerns in addition to boosting economic growth.

He warned that climate change was responsible for raising sea levels, resulting in frequent floods and eroding of coastlines. He pointed out that in Indonesia, the surface air temperature increased by 0.9 degrees Fahrenheit during the 20th century. He predicted another increase of 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit by 2070.



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