Existing Emissions Laws Could Cut U.S. Footprint Without Climate Bill

A day after the Senate pulled the plug on a comprehensive climate bill, a new report shows the U.S. could reduce greenhouse gas emissions 14 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 by aggressively using existing state and federal policies.

A 14 percent reduction, however, falls short of President Barack Obama’s Copenhagen commitment, as well the emissions reduction targets put forth in the most recent climate legislation that was put forth and failed over the last year. It also pales in comparison to the cuts most scientists say is needed to avoid the worst effects of climate change.

“The study highlights both the need to pass climate legislation and the importance of preserving existing authorities,” Jonathan Lash, president of the World Resources Institute, which wrote the report, said in a statement. “The study’s findings make it very clear that current efforts by Congress to curb U.S. EPA authority will undermine U.S. competitiveness in a clean energy world economy, block control of dangerous pollutants, and put the U.S. at odds with its allies.”

As Lash alluded to, the 14 percent reduction calculated by WRI is far from assured, given recent attacks on the EPA and state laws. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), for example, tried and failed to rein in the EPA’s authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, while a push from Big Oil-funded organizations in California put the fate of the state’s aggressive climate change law on the November ballot. At the same time, some have backed off participation in regional emissions trading programs, such as Arizona, which distanced itself from the Western Climate Initiative because of the economic downturn.

The 14 percent reduction would require pushing existing laws and regulations to the fullest extent possible under a set of circumstances the World Resources Institute calls the “go-getter” scenario. The Obama administration and states would have to maintain “steadfast resolve” in order to achieve this upper range of emissions reductions.

The WRI study also evaluated the potential results from three other scenarios: a “lackluster” scenario with efforts in the lower range of what is technically possible; “middle-of-the-road,” based on the medium range of what is technically feasible, with moderate regulatory ambition; and a “business-as-usual” scenario.

It found that “lackluster” state and federal efforts would only push emissions to 6 percent below 2005 levels by 2020, while a “middle-of-the-road” approach would trim emissions 9 percent by 2020.

Keeping concentrations of carbon dioxide emissions below 450 parts per million, considered to be the upper range needed to avoid the worst impacts of climate change (but considered by some to still be too high) would require emissions reductions of 36 percent to 48 percent by 2020.

The most effective tools in the U.S. regulatory arsenal are the Clean Air Act’s mobile source and New Source Performance Standard provisions, its Title VI authority to reduce hydrofluorocarbons, and the Department of Transportation’s vehicle fuel efficiency authority.

Additional state level action would be needed to close the gap, as well as some regulatory policies not included the report, such as transportation planning and forest lands management. Existing tools will also need to be beefed up to meet long-term emissions reduction goals.

Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions in the United States Using Existing Federal Authorities and State Action

This report shows how the U.S. could reduce greenhouse gas emissions 14 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 by aggressively using existing state and federal policies.

A 14 percent reduction falls short of President Barack Obama’s Copenhagen commitment, as well the emissions reduction targets put forth in the most recent climate legislation that was put forth and failed over the last year. It also pales in comparison to the cuts most scientists say is needed to avoid the worst effects of climate change.

“The study highlights both the need to pass climate legislation and the importance of preserving existing authorities,” Jonathan Lash, president of the World Resources Institute, which wrote the report, said in a statement. “The study’s findings make it very clear that current efforts by Congress to curb U.S. EPA authority will undermine U.S. competitiveness in a clean energy world economy, block control of dangerous pollutants, and put the U.S. at odds with its allies.”

The 14 percent reduction would require pushing existing laws and regulations to the fullest extent possible under a set of circumstances the World Resources Institute calls the “go-getter” scenario. The Obama administration and states would have to maintain “steadfast resolve” in order to achieve this upper range of emissions reductions.

The WRI study also evaluated the potential results from three other scenarios: a “lackluster” scenario with efforts in the lower range of what is technically possible; “middle-of-the-road,” based on the medium range of what is technically feasible, with moderate regulatory ambition; and a “business-as-usual” scenario.

Zoellick says debt restructure could help in eurozone

June 9 (Reuters) – Europe must address a debt crisis and if a euro zone country is unable to repay its debts a managed restructuring could generate confidence in financial markets, the president of the World Bank said on Wednesday.

Global Markets

In a speech to German conservatives in Berlin, World Bank President Robert Zoellick noted that some people feared a restructuring for one country could set off a contagion that would make it harder for others to roll over debts.

“These are serious concerns. Yet investors’ lack of confidence in debtors could lead them to back away for good, leaving more and more of the debts to be assumed by other European governments or the ECB,” Zoellick said.

“The uncertainty about who will pay and how they will pay can exacerbate and spread fears — sweeping along other countries, or banks, that would otherwise be able to manage given discipline and time,” he added. “One needs to consider these issues carefully, case-by-case.”

“If it becomes clear that a particular debtor cannot pay back its borrowings, a managed restructuring, combined with financial support, can create confidence that growth can be restored,” he said in the text of remarks prepared for delivery.

Zoellick also said it was understandable that German citizens would object to bailing out other European countries that have been living beyond their means but he was confident Germany would make an integrated Europe work.

“Germany and Europe must address a debt crisis,” he said. (Writing by Paul Carrel)

Size, not foreplay, is what fulfils women’s sexual fantasies

Melbourne, September 15 (ANI): When it comes to female orgasms, it is the size of the penis, and not the duration of foreplay, that increases the likelihood of fulfilling women’s sexual fantasies, suggests a new study.

Lead researcher Stuart Brody, from the University of the West of Scotland, focused on the number of factors that contributed to the regularity of vaginal orgasms.

The researchers described a vaginal orgasm as an “orgasm produced simply from movements of the penis in [the] vagina without any additional stimulation.”

Boffins found that factors like the length of the penis, the duration of intercourse, and the ability to mentally focus on vaginal sensations, minus the duration of foreplay, increased the likelihood of orgasm.

“Given that the vagina [has a high nerve density] throughout… more thorough stimulation of the full length of the vagina… might result in a more fulfilling experience,” ABC Science quoted the paper’s authors as saying.

But some Australian researchers and practitioners have cast a shadow of doubt over the methodology and the political motivations behind the study.

Dr. Gemma O’Brien, a reproductive physiologist from the University of New England in Armidale, said: “Self reporting needs to be done very carefully. These things come down to perceptions and that introduces a weakness in the study.”

Dr. Vivienne Cass, an adjunct professor at Curtin University of Technology in Perth and author of The Elusive Orgasm, also questioned the motivations of research that accorded vaginal orgasms greater significance over clitoral ones.

Associate Professor Rosemary Coates, also of Curtin University of Technology and president of the World Association for Sexual Health, also said “some form of clitoral stimulation is almost always required to trigger orgasm.”

The results appear in an upcoming issue of The Journal of Sexual Medicine. (ANI)

McNamara Dead – McNamara Died – Robert McNamara Dead at 93 – Architect of Vietnam War – Robert S. McNamara – former Secretary of Defense – John Kennedy – Lyndon Johnson – McNamara – McNamara served as President of the World Bank – Medal of Freedom – Distinguished Service Medal for his efforts – McNamara married Margaret Craig

McNamara Dead – McNamara Died – Robert McNamara Dead at 93 – Architect of Vietnam War – Robert S. McNamara – former Secretary of Defense – John Kennedy – Lyndon Johnson – McNamara – McNamara served as President of the World Bank – Medal of Freedom – Distinguished Service Medal for his efforts – McNamara married Margaret Craig

Robert S. McNamara, 93,  former Secretary of Defense, died in his sleep early morning on Monday Washington D.C. .who served John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson during the Vietnam War from 1961-1968.

During his tenure as a Republican in two Democrat administrations, he was awarded both the Medal of Freedom and the Distinguished Service Medal for his efforts.

He also served as President of the World Bank from 1968 until 1981.

McNamara married Margaret Craig, in 1940, had two daughters and a son. She died of cancer in 1981.