ノアの箱舟を創ろう Let us Create the Super Ocean-Floating-Structures such as the Noah's ark.

ノアの箱舟を創ろう Let us Create the Super Ocean - Floating - Structures such as the Noah's ark.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Comparing Countries' Copenhagen Commitments, State vs. Federal Climate Policies, more:Harvard Project

 From  Harvard Project : climate@harvard.edu; 


Comparing Countries' Copenhagen Commitments, State vs. Federal Climate Policies, more



Change.
read more ››



The Latest from the Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements


  July 22, 2010

  Comparing Climate Commitments: A Model-Based Analysis of the Copenhagen Accord

  By Warwick McKibbin, Adele Morris, Peter Wilcoxen

The authors compare the targets and actions to which countries have committed under the Copenhagen Accord. They show how various formulations of these commitments make them appear quite different in stringency. The authors estimate and compare both environmental and economic performance, and they analyze the spillover effects of emissions reductions efforts on countries that did not adopt economy-wide emissions targets at Copenhagen.
read more ››
AP Photo



  Interactions between State and Federal Climate Change Policies

  By Lawrence Goulder and Robert N. Stavins

The authors examine the interconnections between federal and state climate change policy in the United States. They conclude that state-level policy in the presence of a federal policy can be beneficial or problematic, depending on the nature of the overlap between the two systems, the relative stringency of the efforts, and the types of policy instruments engaged.
read more ››
AP Photo



  Linking Policies When Tastes Differ: Global Climate Policy in a Heterogeneous World

  By Gilbert E. Metcalf and David Weisbach

The authors discuss linkage of various types of trading systems. Their goal is to identify opportunities for constructive linkage and policy choices that might limit or hinder linkage. They argue that the basic approach of existing emission-reduction-credit systems, especially the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), can be extended to create linkage opportunities among diverse emission control systems while eliminating some of the problems in the CDM. Moreover, while emission-reduction-credit systems are designed to work with cap and trade, the authors describe how they might complement tax and certain regulatory systems, as well.
read more ››
AP Photo



  Options for the Institutional Venue for International Climate Negotiations

  By Robert N. Stavins

The Fifteenth Conference of the Parties reinforced doubts about whether the UNFCCC should continue to be the primary institutional venue for global climate change negotiations. This issue brief assesses some other institutions that might serve to supplement or partially replace the UNFCCC, including the Major Economies Forum, the G-20, and bilateral and multilateral approaches.
read more ››
AP Photo



  Robert Stavins Conducts Seminar at International Peace Institute in New York

  By Robert C. Stowe

Harvard Project Director Robert Stavins conducted a seminar at the International Peace Institute in New York City titled "Climate Change Policy after Copenhagen." The June talk addressed the outcomes of COP-15 in Copenhagen, the institutional context of international climate policy, and prospects for U.S. domestic climate policy. There were about 75 participants--primarily representatives of permanent missions to the UN. Read a transcript of his talk.
read more ››
Photo by Don Pollard



  Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements Conducts Research Workshop in Venice, Italy

  By Robert C. Stowe

The Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements convened the International Research Workshop on Institutions for Global Governance--at which leading scholars examined the institutional context of international climate change policy. The May workshop was hosted by and jointly organized with the International Center for Climate Governance, Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei (FEEM), and the Euro-Mediterranean Centre for Climate Change.
read more ››
Photo by Ughetta Molin Fop



  Harvard Kennedy School's Robert Stavins Named a Coordinating Lead Author for IPCC's New Report

  By Sasha Talcott

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has named Robert N. Stavins, director of the Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements, a coordinating lead author for the next report's chapter on international cooperation and agreements. Stavins, along with Professor Zou Ji of China's Renmin Univeristy, will lead the chapter's other authors in building consensus on the topic, titled "International Cooperation: Agreements and Instruments."
read more ››
AP Photo


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【私へのメール】:

  Barack Obama : info@barackobama.com;   2010/7/22

Change

matuoka --

When you and I set out on this journey three years ago, we knew that ours would be a lengthy struggle to build a new foundation for this country -- one that would require squaring off against the special interests who had spent decades stacking the deck in their favor.

Today, it is clear that you have shifted the odds.


This morning, I signed into law a bill that represents the most sweeping reforms of Wall Street since the Great Depression, and the toughest consumer financial protections this nation has ever seen. I know that I am able to do so only because the tens of thousands of volunteers who make up the backbone of this movement overcame the most potent attack ads and the most powerful lobbying the special interests could put forward.

Our special-interest opponents and their Republican allies have now set their sights on the elections in November as their best chance to overturn the historic progress we've made together.

Organizing for America counts entirely on supporters like you to fight back -- no special interests, no corporate PACs. To keep making change and to defend the change we have already won,
we need you -- and at least 14 other people in your area -- to contribute so we have the resources necessary going into the election.

Please donate $5 today and help Organizing for America lay the groundwork for the fights ahead.
Because of Wall Street reform, we will ensure that Americans applying for a credit card, a mortgage, or a student loan will never again be asked to sign their name under pages of confusing fine print. We will crack down on abusive lending practices and make sure that lenders don't cheat the system -- and create a new watchdog to enforce these consumer protections.

And we will put an end to taxpayer-funded bailouts, giving us the ability to wind down any large financial institution if it should ever fail.

The passage of Wall Street reform is at the forefront of the change we seek, and it will provide a foundation for a stronger and safer economy.

It is a foundation built upon the progress of the Recovery Act, which has turned 22 months of job losses into six consecutive months of private-sector job growth. And it is a foundation reinforced by the historic health reform we passed this spring, which is already giving new benefits to more than 100 million Americans, ushering another 1 million Americans into coverage by next year.

But today's victory is not where our fight ends.

Organizing for America and I will move forward in the months ahead on the tough fights we have yet to finish -- even if cynics say we should wait until after the fall elections. This movement has never catered to the conventional wisdom of Washington. And we have fought to ensure that our progress is never held hostage by our politics.

You and I did not build this movement to win one election. We did not come together to pass one single piece of legislation. We are fighting for nothing less than a new foundation for our country -- and that work is not complete. As we face the challenges ahead, I am relying on you to stand with me.

Please donate $5 or more today:

https://donate.barackobama.com/WallStreetReformed


Thank you for helping us get here,

President Barack Obama




Paid for by Organizing for America, a project of the Democratic National Committee -- 430 South Capitol Street SE, Washington, D.C. 20003. This communication is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.

Contributions or gifts to the Democratic National Committee are not deductible as charitable contributions for income tax purposes.
This email was sent to: abc1248@na.commufa.jp

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Google News:Top Stories: 2010.7.21

【出展リンク】: http://news.google.co.jp/nwshp?hl=ja&tab=wn



Top Stories

Obama's intelligence nominee says he won't be a 'hood ornament'

Washington Post - Ellen NakashimaWilliam Branigin - ‎7 hours ago‎
James R. Clapper Jr. disputed criticism of redundancy in programs. (Melina Mara/the Washington Post) By Ellen Nakashima and William Branigin President Obama's nominee to lead the nation's intelligence community vowed Tuesday to "push the envelope" in ...
Reuters - Boston Globe - New York Daily News - KWCH

Monday, July 19, 2010

We've all been working hard for months to send a strong Wall Street reform bill to President Obama's desk.

【出展:私へのメール】:

  Mitch Stewart  : info@barackobama.com;        2010/7/19

matuoka, we won


Organizing for America


matuoka --

We've all been working hard for months to send a strong Wall Street reform bill to President Obama's desk.

Now we're only days away.

The final vote could be decided by a razor-thin margin. I've seen reports that we might have enough support, including that of a few Republicans, to pass the bill. But we won't know for sure until the votes are cast. So we're ramping up the pressure now to make sure the Senate passes reform.

David Plouffe recorded a message to let you know what's at stake and how you can help make sure we get Wall Street reform over the finish line.

Watch the video -- and help us spread the word on reform.

Watch David Plouffe's video on what's at stake

This movement has the chance to make history again in the coming days. Wall Street reform doesn't just represent the strongest consumer protections ever proposed -- it's the largest overhaul of our financial regulations since the Great Depression.

As we near the final vote, we need to get the word out about what reform means for everyday Americans. As always, supporters like you are the most effective messenger. When we needed to get out our message of change during the campaign, we turned to you. When we needed to stamp out the lies spreading about health reform, we turned to you.

Now we're turning to you again to help us get over the final hurdle on Wall Street reform.

After you've watched David's message, download our helpful "Benefits of Wall Street reform" handout. Print it out and post it in your community -- at your local coffee shops or grocery stores. Take it with you if you're going to door-to-door. Or just email it around to friends and family, and help us get the message out.

Watch the video -- and spread the word:

http://my.barackobama.com/WallStreetReformNow

Thanks,

Mitch

Mitch Stewart
Director
Organizing for America






Paid for by Organizing for America, a project of the Democratic National Committee -- 430 South Capitol Street SE, Washington, D.C. 20003. This communication is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.
This email was sent to: abc1248@na.commufa.jp

When you hear about the new health reform law these days, too much talk is focused on the political.

【私へのメール】:

Michelle Obama :  info@barackobama.com;      2010/7/19


Prevention

matuoka --

When you hear about the new health reform law these days, too much talk is focused on the political.
What I've found is that most Americans just want to know how this new law helps their families stay healthy -- and how it reduces their costs.

The first thing I tell people who ask about the Affordable Care Act is that, for moms like me, it makes our lives easier. It gives families control over their own care. And it gives us the comfort of knowing that our insurance will be there when we need it most -- especially if we get sick. Then I tell them that it gets better, but there's a lot to know. To help, this administration has set up HealthCare.gov, where folks can see customized information about how care will improve for their families.

So much of what makes this law great is its emphasis on preventive care -- right now, too many people aren't getting the check-ups or the screenings they need to stay healthy. Twelve percent of kids haven't seen a doctor in the past year. And 59 million adults -- and 11 million children -- depend on an insurance plan that does not cover basic immunizations.

Health reform is changing that. Under this new law, all new private plans will provide basic preventive services -- things like childhood immunizations and checkups, mammograms, colonoscopies, cervical screenings, and treatment for high blood pressure -- absolutely free of charge. No copay. No deductible. No co-insurance needed.

And, on HealthCare.gov, you can not only learn what preventive steps will help keep your family healthy, but also what insurance coverage options are available based on your needs.

A focus on prevention will help us to combat diabetes, heart disease, and high blood pressure -- chronic illnesses that right now lead to seven of ten deaths in the United States and 75 percent of our national health care costs.

And it will help us tackle an issue that is dear to my heart -- childhood obesity. As some of you know one of my top priorities as First Lady is the Let's Move! campaign, where we have made it our goal to put a stop to the challenge of childhood obesity within a generation, so children who are born today grow up at a healthy weight.

Each of us needs to take responsibility for our own health and the health of our families, and the new health reform law can help. That's why I'm writing today -- to make sure you and Americans across the country know how their health plans are getting better day by day under reform.

Please visit HealthCare.gov and find out more about your care:

www.healthcare.gov

Thank you,

Michelle Obama



Paid for by Organizing for America, a project of the Democratic National Committee -- 430 South Capitol Street SE, Washington, D.C. 20003. This communication is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.
This email was sent to: abc1248@na.commufa.jp

The Senate just passed Wall Street reform. The bill will become law the moment President Obama signs it.

【私へのメール】:

: info@barackobama.com;       2010/7/16

matuoka, we won

Organizing for America
matuoka --

The Senate just passed Wall Street reform. The bill will become law the moment President Obama signs it.

This reform represents the boldest financial regulations since the aftermath of the Great Depression -- and the strongest consumer protections in history.

Every door you knocked in Iowa, every phone call you made in Ohio, every dollar you dug deep to give -- it's all for this. The Recovery Act, health reform, and now Wall Street reform, on top of everything else. In a year and a half, this administration has made bigger, bolder progress than any president's in decades.

We have a president who fights for all of us, every day. We have you, the best organizers this country has ever seen, who flooded Congress with calls and letters, had millions of conversations with friends and neighbors, went toe-to-toe with the country's most powerful special interests -- and won.

And we have members of Congress who bravely stood with the President, even as right-wing groups have pledged $200 million to defeat them in November's elections.

First, take a moment to celebrate. This is an achievement that will make American lives better and protect our economy for generations to come, and it absolutely wouldn't have happened without you.

Then, take a moment to thank the members of Congress who stood with us and supported these landmark reforms. In the coming days, they'll be taking a lot of heat for defying Wall Street -- and they need to know they have our gratitude.

Organizing for America supporters are signing a note of thanks to Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, and all of the allies in Congress who stood up for reform.

Will you add your name?

http://my.barackobama.com/WSRVictory

We'll deliver these signatures to leaders in Congress who supported reform, after the President signs this into law.

Thanks for all you did to get us here. I'm so grateful to be making history with you, and I know the President is as well.

Mitch

Mitch Stewart
Director
Organizing for America



Paid for by Organizing for America, a project of the Democratic National Committee -- 430 South Capitol Street SE, Washington, D.C. 20003. This communication is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.
This email was sent to: abc1248@na.commufa.jp
【私へのメール】:

Mitch Stewart  : info@barackobama.com;    2010/7/14

Video: What's at stake


Organizing for America
matuoka --

We've all been working hard for months to send a strong Wall Street reform bill to President Obama's desk.

Now we're only days away.

The final vote could be decided by a razor-thin margin. I've seen reports that we might have enough support, including that of a few Republicans, to pass the bill. But we won't know for sure until the votes are cast. So we're ramping up the pressure now to make sure the Senate passes reform.

David Plouffe recorded a message to let you know what's at stake and how you can help make sure we get Wall Street reform over the finish line.

Watch the video -- and help us spread the word on reform.

Watch David Plouffe's video on what's at stake

This movement has the chance to make history again in the coming days. Wall Street reform doesn't just represent the strongest consumer protections ever proposed -- it's the largest overhaul of our financial regulations since the Great Depression.

As we near the final vote, we need to get the word out about what reform means for everyday Americans. As always, supporters like you are the most effective messenger. When we needed to get out our message of change during the campaign, we turned to you. When we needed to stamp out the lies spreading about health reform, we turned to you.

Now we're turning to you again to help us get over the final hurdle on Wall Street reform.

After you've watched David's message, download our helpful "Benefits of Wall Street reform" handout. Print it out and post it in your community -- at your local coffee shops or grocery stores. Take it with you if you're going to door-to-door. Or just email it around to friends and family, and help us get the message out.

Watch the video -- and spread the word:

http://my.barackobama.com/WallStreetReformNow

Thanks,

Mitch

Mitch Stewart
Director
Organizing for America



Paid for by Organizing for America, a project of the Democratic National Committee -- 430 South Capitol Street SE, Washington, D.C. 20003. This communication is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.
This email was sent to: abc1248@na.commufa.jp

Friday, July 16, 2010

Oil Spill Capped for a Second Day, Offering Some Hope :The New York Times

【出展リンク】:

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/17/us/17spill.html


Oil Spill Capped for a Second Day, Offering Some Hope




NEW ORLEANS — The hemorrhaging well that has spilled millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico remained capped for a second day Friday, providing some hope of a long-term solution to the environmental disaster.
BP, via Associated Press
A video image Thursday afternoon showed no oil flowing.
Green
Green
Blog posts about the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Live video from the seabed Friday morning showed that all was quiet around the top of the well, suggesting the test assessing the integrity of the well was continuing. Earlier in the week, Kent Wells, a senior vice president for BP, had said that the longer the test continued the better, because it would indicate that the pressure inside the well was holding.
The oil stopped flowing around 2:25 p.m. Thursday when the last of several valves was closed on a cap at the top of the well, Mr. Wells said.
The announcement that the oil had stopped flowing into the Gulf came after a series of failed attempts to cap or contain the runaway well that tested the nation’s patience. Mr. Wells emphasized that pressure tests were being conducted to determine the status of the well, which is now sealed like a soda bottle. BP and the government could decide to allow the oil to flow again and try to collect all of it; they could allow the oil to flow and, if tests show the well can withstand the pressure from the cap, close the well during hurricanes; or they could leave the well closed permanently.
The last option seems unlikely, but whatever the decision, the cap is an interim measure until a relief well can plug the leak for good.
“I am very pleased that there’s no oil going into the Gulf of Mexico,” Mr. Wells said, “but we just started the test and I don’t want to create a false sense of excitement.”
That was not much of a risk along the Gulf Coast, where countless livelihoods have been put in jeopardy and fishermen frequently and gloomily remark that Prince William Sound has never been the same since the Exxon Valdez disaster.
“It’s like putting a Band-Aid on a dead man in my opinion,” said Jeff Ussury, 48, who considers his days as a crabber over for good. He doubted the news of the capping was even true.
“I started out kind of believing in them,” he said, “but I don’t believe in them at all anymore.”
Whether it was just the eye of the hurricane or the morning after the storm, the moment was a time to take stock of just how much damage had already been done since the deadly explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig on the night of April 20.
For weeks, the BP spill camera — which along with terms like “top kill,” “containment dome” and “junk shot” made up a growing list of phrases that many people wish they had never learned — had shown a horrible chocolate plume of oil pouring upward from the broken blowout preventer, a symbol of government and corporate impotence. The plume has been a constant presence in the corner of TV screens, mocking reassurances from officials on the news programs who describe the latest attempt to stop the gushing.
But the view on Thursday afternoon was eerily tranquil, just the slate blue of the deep interspersed with small white particles floating across the screen. Though the exact amount of the oil that has poured out of the well may never be known, it was suddenly and for the first time a fixed amount. The disaster was, for a little while at least, finite.
At the White House, President Obama called the development a “positive sign,” though he cautioned that the operation was still in the testing phase.
In statements, Louisiana officials, including Gov. Bobby Jindal, said they were “cautiously optimistic.”
Officials at all levels played down expectations. Thad W. Allen, the retired Coast Guard admiral who is coordinating the spill response, told reporters on Thursday that the cap was primarily meant to be used to shut the well during extreme weather.
“The intention of the capping stack was never to close in the well per se,” he said. “It creates the opportunity if we have the right pressure readings to shut in the well. It allows us to abandon the site if there is a hurricane.”
He said that after the test, the cap would be used to capture oil through surface ships — two that are on the site now and two more that will be in operation in a week or two. With all four collection ships in place, BP could capture all of the oil, estimated at 35,000 to 60,000 barrels per day.
Mr. Wells cautioned that the test could take 48 hours or more, as scientists study pressure readings from the cap. If pressure rises and holds, that would be a sign that the casing — the 13,000-foot string of pipe that lines the well bore — is undamaged.
But if the pressure stays low or falls, that would suggest the well is damaged. In that case, Mr. Wells said, the test probably would be stopped well ahead of schedule, valves would be reopened and collection systems that had been shut down for the test would start again.
“Depending on what the test shows us, we may need to open this well back up,” he said.
The test had been delayed by about two days, first when the government ordered a last-minute review of the procedure out of concern that, by allowing the buildup of pressure, the test itself might harm the well. A particular fear, experts said, was that it might cause a shallow blowout — damaging the well lining close to the seabed, which could allow oil and gas to escape into the gulf outside the well, making the spill worse.
By Wednesday afternoon, those concerns had been allayed and preparations were made to begin the test. But late that night, a hydraulic leak was discovered in part of the choke valve equipment, and the test was scrubbed.
Thursday afternoon the test began again, first with the shutting down of pipes that funneled oil and gas to two surface ships.
In even the most optimistic case, the BP oil spill is far, far from over.
There are still millions of barrels of oil out in the gulf and months of work missing for fishermen and shrimpers; inestimable harm is still being inflicted on wildlife throughout the food chain; and anger still seethes along the Gulf coast.
“What’s to celebrate?” asked Kindra Arnesen, the wife of a shrimper from Plaquemines Parish, La., who has become a recognizable voice of outrage over the past two and a half months.
“My way of life’s over, they’ve destroyed everything I know and love,” she said, before going on to explain, in detail, why she believes the pressure tests are likely to fail.

Liz Robbins contributed reporting from New York.









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