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Simple lifestyle tweaks key in climate change fight: study

Even seemingly minor steps like not speeding away from a stop sign when driving, regularly maintaining one's car, or turning down the heating at home in the winter to 68 degrees Fahrenheit (20 degrees Celsius), could save between four and eight million metric tons in carbon emissions by year 10.

UN chief urges compromise ahead of climate change summit
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon urged member nations Monday to reach a compromise ahead of a climate change summit scheduled for December in Copenhagen and called on the United States to stay engaged. "All agree that climate change is an existential threat to humankind," Ban wrote in an op-ed article published by The New York Times. "Yet agreement on what to do still eludes us." Ban said he was encouraged by the spirit of compromise shown in the bipartisan initiative announced last week by US Senators John Kerry and Lindsey Graham. Earlier this year, the US House of Representative passed sweeping legislation designed to control greenhouse gas effect, but the US Senate has not acted yet. The Kerry-Graham compromise is designed to secure progress on the issue. Ban said the world cannot afford another period where the United States stands on the sidelines of the climate change debate. "An engaged United States can lead the world to seal a deal to combat climate change in Copenhagen," the UN secretary general pointed out. "An indecisive or insufficiently engaged United States will cause unnecessary -- and ultimately unaffordable -- delay in concrete strategies and policies to beat this looming challenge."

Climate change protesters target British power station
Ten protesters were arrested Monday as environmental campaigners prepared to spend the night at a coal-fired power station in Britain as part of a climate change rally, police said. Protesters cut through security gates at the Didcot power station in Oxfordshire, southeast England, early Monday, and some climbed to the top of the emissions chimney, police said. Ten people who targeted a coal conveyor building at the station were later arrested. But nine others who scaled the chimney were preparing to stay there overnight, and it was unclear when they would leave. "We have been negotiating with these protesters but at present they can not be physically moved due to their location and safety issues," a Thames Valley police spokesman said. "A police presence will remain on the site until the protest is over." A spokeswoman for RWE npower, which operates the power station, said they had shut down the coal conveyor for safety reasons. "We have stopped using the coal conveyor to ensure the safety of the protesters. "However, we have coal stocks ready and other means of delivering coal to the boilers." Npower is a unit of German energy company, the RWE Group. Protesters said they had enough food to last at least a week. "We're preparing for the night ahead and have set a tent up on the roof of the chimney," said Amy Johnson, a 20-year-old student from Oxford. "The sunrise from up here will be outstanding." Climate change protesters earlier this month targeted one of Britain's biggest coal-fired power stations, near Nottingham, central England, owned by German energy giant E.ON.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 26, 2009
The United States could cut greenhouse gas emissions by the equivalent of France's total annual emissions by getting Americans to make simple lifestyle changes, like regularly maintaining their cars or insulating their attics, a study showed Monday.

If US households took 17 easy-to-implement actions -- like switching to a fuel-efficient vehicle, drying laundry on a clothesline instead of in a dryer, or turning down the thermostat -- carbon emissions could be cut by 123 metric tons a year by the 10th year, the study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found.

"This amounts to... 7.4 percent of total national emissions -- an amount slightly larger than the total national emissions of France," showed the study led by Thomas Dietz of Michigan State University's department of sociology and environmental science and policy.

"It is greater than reducing to zero all emissions in the United States from the petroleum-refining, iron and steel, and aluminum industries, each of which is among the largest emitters in the industrial sector," the study said.

But the lifestyle changes come with a much smaller price tag and no great change to the way Americans live.

At present, US direct household energy use accounts for 38 percent of the country's carbon emissions, or 626 million metric tons of carbon -- a whopping eight percent of global emissions "and larger than the emissions of any entire country except China."

To quickly bring down those numbers, the researchers suggested greater focus on consumer behavioral changes and less on efforts to develop new technologies and put in place so-called cap and trade regimes.

The researchers grouped 17 actions Americans could take to reduce carbon emissions into five groups: weatherization, switching to more efficient equipment, maintaining equipment, adjusting appliance setting -- such as the temperature on water heaters -- and modifying daily personal use.

The action with the greatest potential to reduce US carbon emissions was the switch to a fuel-efficient vehicle. That alone would, according to the study's model, reduce greenhouse gas emissions by just over five percent by year 10, or by more than 31 million metric tons.

Weatherizing homes by improving attic insulation, sealing or replacing drafty windows and doors, could cut carbon emissions by 21 million metric tons.

Installing energy-efficient appliances to replace those that have reached the end of their useful life would save nearly 12 million metric tons of carbon emissions.

Even seemingly minor steps like not speeding away from a stop sign when driving, regularly maintaining one's car, or turning down the heating at home in the winter to 68 degrees Fahrenheit (20 degrees Celsius), could save between four and eight million metric tons in carbon emissions by year 10.

The lifestyle tweaks and positive results don't have to be limited to the United States, either.

Similar percentage reductions are possible in Canada and Australia, which have carbon profiles comparable to that of the United States, while Europe and Japan could save around half of the US level in percentage terms by getting their citizens to make the same changes, the study said.

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Rich-poor divide could be Copenhagen climate 'deal-breaker'
Stockholm (AFP) Oct 24, 2009
World leaders could fail to reach a new climate deal at a UN summit in Copenhagen if rich countries refuse to financially help developing nations tackle climate change, government and NGO officials said at a development conference that wrapped up Saturday. With less than 50 days to go before it starts, the Copenhagen summit was a central topic of debate and discussion at the annual EU ... read more







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