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    Tuesday, April 16, 2024

    Kerry's climate creds

    The following editorial appeared recently in the Los Angeles Times.

    Sen. John Kerry, President Obama's nominee for secretary of state, may not be able to bring peace to the Middle East, end enduring trade and currency disputes with China or mend fences with all the anti-American leaders in Latin America. But he may be capable of redirecting the debate over an issue of equal or greater importance: climate change.

    Sen. Kerry is among the most forward-thinking members of the U.S. Senate when it comes to understanding both the threats of and the practical responses to global warming. Sen. Kerry's new post should give him expanded opportunities to lead.

    Sen. Kerry can make a difference when it comes to bilateral efforts by the United States and other countries. The United States has entered multiple such partnerships, including with India and China, whose rapid development threatens the entire globe. These deals, which include research partnerships on clean energy and stepped-up loans for renewable energy from the Export-Import Bank, will make only a small dent in the problem, but they should be strengthened and aggressively pursued by Sen. Kerry. He should also focus on building environmental "coalitions of the willing" - such as the Climate and Clean Air Coalition in which this country, Canada, Mexico, Sweden, Bangladesh and Ghana have teamed up to limit key pollutants.

    The United States has a curious blind spot when it comes to climate change. Although every continent has seen an increase in weather-related disasters over the last 30 years, none surpasses our own, which has seen a fivefold increase in such phenomena since 1980. Yet despite an estimated $1 trillion in damage from these disasters, Americans have so far been unwilling to take the needed steps to head off an even worse future.

    Sen. Kerry won't change that by himself. But he can be a catalyst for wisdom and reform.

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