EJToday is SEJ's selection of new and outstanding stories on environmental topics in print and on the air, updated every weekday. SEJ also offers a free e-mailed digest of the day's EJToday postings, called SEJ-beat. SEJ members are subscribed automatically, but may opt out here. Non-members may subscribe here. EJToday is also available via RSS feed. Please see Editorial Guidelines for EJToday content.
"EPW Dems End-Run Boycotting GOP, Vote 11-1 for Climate Bill"
Greenwire, 11/06/2009"Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Democrats quashed a three-day-long Republican boycott and passed global warming legislation today using a procedural move that could undermine support from moderate senators if the bill reaches the floor."
"It's Official: No Climate Bill This Year"
Mother Jones, 11/05/2009"It's official: climate legislation has zero chance of passing before the big summit in Copenhagen this December." That seems to be the inevitable consequence of an announcement by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.
"Study Finds Vital Peatlands Neglected"
Reuters, 11/05/2009"Draining and burning of the world's peat bogs accounts for about 5.5 percent of global carbon emissions but are currently excluded from governments' climate targets and U.N. talks, a study found on Wednesday."
"Angela Merkel Presses U.S. on Climate in Speech To Congress"
Reuters, 11/04/2009"German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged the United States Tuesday to agree to binding climate goals, telling U.S. lawmakers in a speech to Congress there was 'no time to lose' in the fight against global warming."
"Senate Panel's Climate Markup in Holding Pattern"
Greenwire, 11/04/2009"A partisan standoff over Senate global warming legislation clouded the start of the Environment and Public Works Committee's markup of the sweeping proposal today with just one Republican in attendance."
"Mt. Kilimanjaro Ice Cap Continues Rapid Retreat"
NYTimes, 11/04/2009"Researchers cannot agree whether the melting is attributable mainly to humanity’s role in global warming."
"Boxer: Climate Bill Markup Will Go Forward Tuesday, With or Without GOP"
Wash Post, 11/03/2009"Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chairman Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) will go ahead and mark up climate legislation in her committee Tuesday, she announced Monday morning, even if the Republicans try to block her."
"Boxer, Republicans Spar Over Climate Bill Timing, Economic Studies"
Greenwire, 10/30/2009"Senate Democrats are still aiming for a committee markup on global warming legislation next week despite Republican calls for a slower pace on the sweeping measure."
"Multiyear Arctic Ice Is Effectively Gone: Expert"
Reuters, 10/30/2009"The multiyear ice covering the Arctic Ocean has effectively vanished, a startling development that will make it easier to open up polar shipping routes, an Arctic expert said on Thursday."
"U.S. Climate Bill Spurs Low-Carbon Jobs Debate"
Reuters, 10/29/2009"Leaders at companies that develop low-carbon energy told a Senate panel that climate legislation would create millions of new jobs, but lawmakers from fossil-fuel dependent states said the bill would hit employment in the traditional energy economy."
N. Carolina Sea Levels Rising 3 Times Faster: Study
Science Daily, 10/29/2009"An international team of environmental scientists led by the University of Pennsylvania has shown that sea-level rise, at least in North Carolina, is accelerating. Researchers found 20th-century sea-level rise to be three times higher than the rate of sea-level rise during the last 500 years."
"White House Steps Up Climate Efforts"
NYTimes, 10/28/2009"The Obama administration and some Senate Democrats expressed fresh urgency on Tuesday about the need to address climate change and refashion the nation's energy economy."
"Obama's China Visit Unlikely To Produce Climate Deal"
NPR, 10/28/2009"President Obama's envoy for climate change has dashed hopes of a bilateral climate-change deal during next month's presidential trip to China. Todd Stern says a wide gap remains between Chinese and U.S. officials. China and the U.S. account for 40 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions."
"EPA Proposes Tougher Pollution Controls, Narrows Target Group"
Wash Post, 10/28/2009"Even as the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee took up its climate bill for the first time Tuesday, the Environment Protection Agency proposed requiring thousands of greenhouse gas emitters to install stricter pollution control technology."
"100 World Lawmakers Agree to Take Climate Action Now"
ENS, 10/27/2009"COPENHAGEN -- Legislators from 16 of the world's major economies and most major political parties have agreed on key guiding principles to enact climate change legislation in their home countries that will drive the move to a global low carbon economy. Meeting this weekend, the lawmakers agreed to act right now in their own legislative bodies, even before the key UN climate deal in Copenhagen, now just six weeks away."

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