Climate Panel Seeks Obama’s Ear

President-elect Obama’s phone has been ringing off the hook. Democrat leaders call to congratulate, world leaders want to talk policy and special interest groups hope that Obama will pay better attention to their cause than the Bush administratio

President-elect Obama鈥檚 phone has been ringing off the hook. Democrat leaders call to congratulate, world leaders want to talk policy, and special interest groups hope that Obama will pay better attention to their cause than the Bush administration did. One group seeking Obama鈥檚 ear is the .

PCAP is a team of scientists, businesspeople, and politicians intent on jumpstarting Obama鈥檚 climate change policy by providing him with an outline that details exactly how to take the nation from an era powered by fossil fuels and an ethic of dominating nature to one powered by renewable resources that embraces stewardship.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 back away from problems like peak oil and climate change,鈥 says PCAP Executive Director Bill Becker, a former newspaperman who helped build the nation鈥檚 first 鈥渟olar village鈥 in Wisconsin. 鈥淭hese issues won鈥檛 wait for us to get our house in order.鈥

In , PCAP suggests the president take action like establishing goals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, setting up a carbon trading system and convening a panel of governors and mayors to coordinate a climate change response that involves all three levels of government. In the past few years, without federal leadership on climate change, state and local governments have picked up the slack. 鈥淭heir action has been a silver lining,鈥 said Becker.

PCAP鈥檚 advice runs beyond the bounds of what is typically advocated by climate change groups. The project calls for a weatherization assistance program to help low-income families insulate their homes better and lower energy bills and urges congress to support a which would aim to conserve species and habitats most impacted by climate change.

Other PCAP suggestions include directing federal agencies to inventory resources and ecosystem services, declaring the atmosphere a public commons owned by all and creating new federal institutions like an Earth Systems Sciences Agency or a Department of Oceans.

鈥淭he time for these notions has come,鈥 said Becker. 鈥淪pecies are disappearing, forests are disappearing and farmland and freshwater are being degraded. We can鈥檛 call this the tenth on a list of priorities; these are things we must do right now.鈥

And just how closely is Obama listening to PCAP?

鈥淧resident Obama will be philosophically quite different than the Bush administration,鈥 Becker said. 鈥淚 think there is a lot of promise that the federal government is finally going to get off their butts and tackle these problems.鈥