Friday, January 30, 2009

Liveblog | Closing Performance


If you weren't here you just missed an AMAZING end performance to WE ACT's Advancing Climate Justice Conference. The incredible artistic group Climbing Poetree graced everyone with an unforgettable performance. To get more information about the specific piece they performed at the event, called "Hurricane Season," go to http://www.hurricaneseasontour.com/. To get more general information about these two talented artists, Alixa + Naima, visit them at http://www.climbingpoetree.com/.

Pictures | Some snapshots from the day's workshops





[Photos: Sam Lewis]

GetACTIVE | Conference participants sign on to support America's Energy Security Trust Fund Act

Kiosk systems distributed throughout the main space at the conference hall put participants in touch with history. By allowing it's over 400 attendees to sign on to a letter primarily addressed to The Honorable Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, participants were able to getACTIVE by letting their numbers be heard. The letter asked that Speaker Pelosi support the reintroduced passage of H.R. 3416, America's Energy Security Trust Fund Act.

MediaBlast | TAPPED: The group blog of The American Prospect

The Advancing Climate Justice conference gets TAPPED... on the group blog of The American Prospect. Take a look at their posts and catch up with the reader comments:

MediaBlast | Massey Media controls the press

The team at Massey Media should get all of the credit they deserve as the press came out in force to cover this national Advancing Climate Justice conference. In attendance at the conference to manage all of the media needs were Sarah Massey (picture right), principal, and Lacy MacAuley, Project Manager (not pictured). Aside from traditional TV, radio and print media, Massey Media also helped to coordinate the efforts of volunteer and dedicated live-bloggers also at the event.

Liveblog | Workshop: Politics of Climate Change

MODERATOR: Charles Komanoff, The Carbon Tax Center

PRESENTERS: Dr. Daniel Faber, Northeastern University; Peter Goldmark, Environmental Defense Fund; Dr. Rachel Morello-Frosch, University of California – Berkeley; J. Timmons Roberts, The College of William and Mary; Dr. Nicky Sheats, Thomas Edison State College


[1:28p] Charles Komanoff, the workshop's moderator, opened the session with a "confession": As a proponent of the "carbon tax approach" to carbon emission mitigation, he was the "recipient of undeserved gifts" from the environmental justice community:
"Some of the points of support for a carbon tax could also apply to cap and trade; some of the points of support for cap and trade could also apply to carbon tax."
He advised the panel and audience to "move past simple pronouncements", and to have a "thoughtful" discussion about the "real consequences" of each approach.

[1:32p] Dr. Faber, the first speaker, noted the recent "mobilization of a sophisticated infrastructure" of "think-tanks and industry partners" with the goal of advancing policies designed to escape strict regulation of carbon and co-pollutant emissions. He listed his issues with the "cap and trade" approach:
  • "It has been demonstrated that cap and trade can impose higher electricity prices on the consumer."
  • "Cap and trade stifles innovation" by allowing companies to escape the requisite technological innovations by purchasing offset credits.
  • "Cap and trade" approaches are "fundamentally undemocratic" because of a lack of "transparency" and the consequent "strong incentive to manipulate numbers".
Dr. Faber's criticisms of a carbon tax approach were markedly fewer:
  • "A carbon tax does not necessarily prevent toxic hotspots from occurring"
[1:46p] Peter Goldmark opened his remarks with his (and EDF's) general position: "We are racing against a ticking clock", and therefore it was politically "unlikely" that a carbon tax could be effective enough in the short term. With respect to an issue raised about international equality, he posed a "challenge to the advocates" of a carbon tax approach: "Can you show me an example of an area where carbon tax has adequately addressed the needs of the poor?"

He went on to cite functional examples of a working cap and trade system: "The lesson of Europe is that cap and trade can produce sharp reductions" despite Europe's initial over-allocation of carbon credits, which Mr. Goldmark said was something "we could learn from".

Mr. Goldmark "respectfully" disagreed with Dr. Faber, pointing out the "pressing" need to pass carbon legislation "this year".

[1:55p] The next speaker, Dr. Nicky Sheats, listed desirable outcomes of hypothetical climate policy:
  • Emission reductions must be "in and near [environmental justice] neighborhoods".
  • "Whatever the market-based approach, we must pump revenues back into [environmental justice] neighborhoods."
  • Regulation attached to carbon legislation "must address co-pollutant issues", because fine particulate emissions "kills people of color" at "disproportionately high rates".
Responding to Mr. Goldmark's challenge, Dr. Sheats said "I don't know of an example of cap and trade that has benefited poor people", which elicited no clear response from Mr. Goldmark.

[2:05p] Dr. J. Timmons Roberts, the fourth speaker, further contributed to Mr. Goldmark's discussion about "international equality":
"The developing countries have been shafted; they've been asked to give up their agenda for development that they have been pursuing since the 1970's"
He argued for an "international tax" which be collected and distributed by a non-governmental entity. He cited the "experience of foreign aid" that showed that "nations don't always follow through on their promises. The injustice is so savage."

[2:19p] Dr. Rachel Morello-Frosch, the fifth and final speaker, talked about a "challenge between efficiency and equity approaches to GHG emissions", and suggested the conception of "climate opportunity zones" which would focus on "regionally based reduction". She provided analysis linking reductions in "GHG emissions" with projected "20% reductions in rates of cancers caused by air pollution".

Dr. Morello-Frosch suggested that regulations for regional reductions in carbon and co-pollutant emissions should be considered in tandem with broader approaches: "Whatever interventions we talk about, place does matter, co-pollutants do matter."

[2:28p] Moderator Charles Komanoff opened the panel to questions from the audience.
  • "Why advocate tradeable permits as opposed to non-tradeable permits?" Mr. Goldmark responded by citing the "dynamic" aspect of the trading process, which he said would spur innovation. He also said that the market aspect of the cap and trade system was what would drive prices down. He further pointed out that even though reductions in co-pollutant should be geographically-based, reductions in carbon emissions could happen anywhere.
  • A questioner took issue with Mr. Goldmark's assertion - that reductions in co-pollutants should be geographically-based, but reductions in carbon emissions could happen anywhere - citing her observation that in most cases, carbon and co-pollutant source points were identical (her examples: "oil refinery" and "cement factory"). Mr. Goldmark reiterated his statement, which was technically correct, but did not address the issue that was implicit in the questioners comment: How do you effectively separate the two?

Liveblog | EPA Admin. Lisa Jackson and the Morning Plenary

The Politics of Climate Change: Steps to Achieving Just Climate Change Solutions

MODERATOR: Deehon Ferris, Sustainable Community Development Group

PRESENTERS: David Doniger, Natural Resources Defense Council; Howard Learner, Environmental Law & Policy Center; Amy O’Donnell, Chief of Staff, Office of Rep. John B. Larson

[11:27a] Moderator Deeohn Ferris opened the plenary by framing the debate between "carbon tax" and "cap and trade" approaches to carbon mitigation, and she offered some observations about the national conversation to far: "There is heavy emphasis on 'market-based solutions', and a heavy dependence on rewarding the private sector."

[11:34a] The first presenter, David Doniger, spoke about the National Resource Defense Council's support for a "cap and trade" approach:
"The problem is so severe, the hour so late, that NRDC's position is that we need to enact legislation this year. We must build on the momentum of Obama's first year, not wait for the slowdown that inevitably occurs during congressional election years."
He went on to say that we need to "pass legislation with the congress we have, not the congress we want".

[11:40a] Mr. Doniger empathized with the environmental justice community's concern with offsets, but submitted that given the "political realities" in Washington, a pragmatic approach was the only way to get a bill passed: "We must be idealistic and realistic at the same time, and we must succeed this year."

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[11:43a] Moderator Deehon Ferris interrupted the scheduled roundtable discussion to introduce the afternoon's keynote speaker, the Honorable Lisa Jackson, who is President Obama's new EPA Administrator. She received a standing ovation.

[11:55a] Administrator Jackson highlighted some of the upcoming "difficulties" facing the EPA:
  • She first indicated the need to "unlock" the "experts in the agency", and said that their "voices are essential" to the development of an "honest" conversation about science.
  • The administrator noted that the EPA had a "backlog" of court and regulatory decisions that need to be "looked at very closely", and further cited the need for the EPA to begin compliance with rulings and laws already on the books.
  • She then outlined how the agency could "move toward regulation" by addressing whether the threats posed by climate change could be legally classified as "endangerment". She indicated that this classification could help "trigger new legislation".
[Editorial interpolation: Administrator Jackson's statements here could be reasonably classified as "breaking news".]


[12:03p] Administrator Jackson concluded her remarks and offered to take questions from the audience. The first questioner asked if the EPA could have a "honest discussion" about the "environmental impacts" of hurricane Katrina - "as soon as you get the chance, please come to New Orleans". The administrator responded by asking community organizations in New Orleans to "demand scientific information" from the agency. The administrator reiterated an earlier promise to visit New Orleans "soon".


[12:10p] The second questioner asked the Administrator Jackson to address the "environmental justice issue of predatory lending" that "throws us out on the street". The administrator responded by empathizing with the questioners concerns and stated that she hoped to "transition the EPA" into an institution that "truly serves".

The next questioner asked about "the future of young people" and "people of color" in the EPA. Administrator Jackson responded: "We clearly need to diversify the EPA's staff", which elicited jubilant applause from the audience. She said that she wanted to create an EPA that "looks like the people we serve", and to work to move "people of color into positions of management and decision-making".

The fourth and final questioner commented, negatively, on the "80% highway, 20% public transportation mix" of the new stimulus package. The administrator agreed with the comment, calling it an "extraordinarily important point", and said that it was "a personal goal of [her's]" to work on "changing that ratio".

[12:19p] The administrator thanked the audience and exited to uproarious applause and a standing ovation.

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[12:21p] The plenary moderator, Deehon Ferris, resumed the scheduled roundtable by introducing the next speaker, Howard Learner.

Mr. Learner repeatedly emphasized that "efficiency" was the "best way" to mitigate carbon and co-pollutant emissions, and he observed the numerous opportunities to do so: "Some of the fruit hangs so low, you would have to pick it up off the ground." He ended his remarks by reiterating that "opportunities for increased efficiency" are everywhere, pointing to the lights in the auditorium as an example. "I rest my case."


Liveblog | Plenary #1: Climate Justice Advocacy: National Leadership on Climate Justice

MODERATOR: Stephanie Tyree, WE ACT for Environmental Justice

PRESENTERS: Jose Bravo, Just Transition Alliance; Cecilia Martinez, Center for Earth, Energy and Democracy; Roger Kim, Asian Pacific Environmental Network

[10:47a] Moderator Stephanie Tyree introduces the speakers, who will each present some aspect of the Environmental Justice Leadership Forum on Climate Change's Principles of Climate Justice, which may be downloaded here via weact.org (.pdf 159 KB).

[10:55a] Cecilia Martinez presented principles 2, 7, and 10, and invoked Dr. Martin Luther King's apophthegm: "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly."

[11:02a] Roger Kim presents the EJLFCC's first principle: Carbon emissions must be reduced to 25% below 1990 levels by 2020, and that this must happen within the framework of a carbon tax. "Keep the cap, ditch the trade." He also presented on principles 3 and 5.

[11:14a] Jose Bravo, the final speaker, presented principles 4, 6, 8, and 9. When he spoke about principle 8, he reminded the audience to consider how "structural adjustments" during the transition from a "carbon-based" to "green" economy could "unfairly" affect low-income and Indigenous People:
"A friend said, 'Taking farmers in China that have been working their land for thousands of years and putting them into an industrial factory making solar panels for white people - this is not a green job.'"

Liveblog | Congressman Charles B. Rangel

[9:52a] Congressman Charles B. Rangel (15th Congressional District) is introduced; he takes the stage.

[10:00a] Congressman Rangel spoke about the importance of grassroots organization, particularly around the upcoming census:
"I will be organizing, in my district, every church, every mosque, every synagogue, every not-for-profit because I want them to know that now is the time that decisions are being made that will affect the poorest, the most vulnerable."
[10:05a] Congressman Rangel said he seeks to use part of the new stimulus package - "there is $10 billion for community organizations in there" - for energy-efficiency and pollution-education initiatives:
"Its the poorest people in the world that sometimes fail to realize that it is the environment that is affecting their health and their livelihoods."
[10:09a] The Congressman spoke about two broad categories of carbon and co-pollutant mitigation strategies, "cap and trade" and "carbon tax":
"No matter which one we choose, if we do say that we will use the free market, one thing is clear: We have no make certain that we keep an eye on what happens on Wall Street."
[10:14a] The Congressman ended his remarks and received a standing ovation. He agreed to take audience questions.

[10:18a] In response to a question about the effectiveness of community organization, the congressman spoke about the importance of mandate: "You can be more courageous in making political decisions when you know that people are supporting you."



[10:21a] An audience member commented on the census policy that counts incarcerated persons as residents of the location where they are incarcerated, as opposed to "the neighborhoods where they are forcibly removed from". The audience member asked Congressman Rangel to look into how this policy might be changed; he courteously agreed.

Liveblog | Breakfast Keynote

Dr. Robert D. Bullard - Environmental Justice Resource Center at Clark-Atlanta University

[9:18a] Opening remarks from Cecil D. Corbin-Mark (WeAct):
"Courage is not the absence of fear, but the triumph over it. The brave man is not he who does not feel afraid, but he who conquers that fear.” -Nelson Mandela
[9:24a] Dr. Bullard framed climate justice as an extension of "old struggles" for equality and civil rights:
"Its not about the facts" Bullard said, citing for example the well-documented connections between pollution point sources and childhood lead poisoning. "It's about political will. There has to be a political will if we are to really tackle environmental justice issues."
[9:38a] Dr. Bullard:
"Just because we have a president that happens to be an African-American; just because we have an EPA administrator that happens to be an African-American; just because we have an attorney general that happens to be an African-American; does not mean that we are in a post-racial, post-environmental justice era."
[9:43a] Dr. Bullard called for an interdisciplinary "policy incubator" to tackle issues of urban environmental justice. He said that "narrowly focused", "stovepipe" initiatives lose effectiveness by losing sight of the big picture: the diverse and complicated array of "pollution and co-pollution" problems in an urban setting.

[9:49a] "To what extent are these things going to be too green for us?" - Dr. Bullard linked urban "greening" initiatives with the "displacement of people of color".

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

On-Site Kiosk Systems Provide Access to Connect With Elected Officials

The Advancing Climate Change conference organizers will have three(3) kiosk systems in the lobby of the event location that will make it easy for conference attendees to sign on to a letter that will go out to both President Barack Obama, President of the United States of America and the new administration at the White House as well as to The Honorable Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. This letter will focus around legislation regarding Climate Change.

Advancing Climate Justice Conference


From January 29-30, 2009 the 20th Anniversary National Conference Hosted by WE ACT for Environmental Justice will be held at the Fordham University Lincoln Center Campus in New York City.

For more information about conference speakers, please click here.