Sign up to get e-mail alerts

Global Warming Solutions News

SearchRSS Feed

For Immediate Release:
2007-04-09
For More Information:
Ben Dunham, (202) 546-9707 ext. 323
Emily Figdor, 202-683-1250
Rob Sargent, 617-747-4317 Washington, D.C.

Thousands Ask U.S. to Protect Polar Bears from Global Warming

 

Environment America is the new home of U.S. PIRG’s environmental work.

Washington, DC—As a public comment period comes to a close on a proposed rule to list the polar bear as a threatened species, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is expected to announce the receipt of more than 500,000 electronic comments and hundreds of submissions from schoolchildren to environmental groups to industry groups.  If listed, the polar bear would be the first mammal to receive protected status under the Endangered Species Act because of the threat of global warming. 

“We’re way past the canary in the coalmine,” said U.S. PIRG staff attorney Ben Dunham.  “Global warming threatens the survival of powerful, majestic animals that have thrived for thousands of years in the harshest of environments,” he continued. 

In proposing the polar bear as threatened, the Fish and Wildlife Service cited observations and predictions of declining Arctic sea ice, which the bears use to hunt for prey.  “The ground beneath their paws is literally melting,” said Dunham.

In February, in the first volume of a major report on global warming, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) announced with at least 90% certainty that human activities are the primary cause of global warming.  On April 6th, the second volume from the IPCC found that human-caused global warming could cause the extinction of 30% of species.  Scientists from more than 120 countries, including the U.S., approved the IPCC report.

“It’s not just polar bears—every living being on this planet has a stake in this.  The good news is that we can harness American ingenuity to take advantage of the solutions at our fingertips,” Dunham said.  “Renewable energy and a more energy efficient economy will address global warming and also clean up our air, save money, and protect our pristine places from drilling and mining.  These are win-win solutions,” he continued.   

To avoid the worst consequences of global warming, scientists say the U.S. must stabilize global warming emissions within the next decade, begin reducing them soon thereafter, and cut emissions by 80% by the middle of this century.  Several bills in Congress would achieve those reductions, including the Safe Climate Act, led by Representative Henry Waxman, and the Global Warming Pollution Reduction Act, introduced in January by 12 senators, led by Senators Bernard Sanders and Environment and Public Works Committee Chair Barbara Boxer.

The final decision on listing the polar bear is expected in January 2008.

***

U.S. PIRG is the federation of state Public Interest Research Groups.  State PIRGs are non-profit, non-partisan public interest advocacy organizations.