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Grand Canyon Plans Plastic Water Bottle Sales Ban

Posted December 16th, 2011

Grand Canyon officials say they’ll follow through on talks to ban plastic water bottles sales

By FELICIA FONSECA
Dec. 16, 2011

Grand Canyon

Grand Canyon (itsnature.com)

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — Disposable plastic water bottles in shops, vending machines, hotels and grocery stores at Grand Canyon National Park will disappear early next year under a plan by park officials to ban the sale of them.

But first they’ll have to demonstrate they’ve met guidelines issued late Wednesday by the National Park Service that require a review of water availability, visitor health and safety, cost and benefits, and get the approval of the regional director. Grand Canyon spokeswoman Shannan Marcak said Thursday that the park believes it already is positioned to comply with the guidelines.

“We need to fully review it, and it takes a little time to figure out if we have all those things covered,” she said.

Park Service director Jon Jarvis nixed a bottle ban at Grand Canyon late last year just weeks before it was to be implemented and said the agency would develop a national policy. Former Grand Canyon Superintendent Steve Martin raised suspicions that the action was due to influence from the Coca-Cola Co. — a major water bottle distributor — but the Park Service and Coca-Cola denied that.

plastic water bottles

Plastic Water Bottles

“While superintendents need some discretion to tailor implementation to local situations, it is not the purview of any one park to set policy,” Jarvis wrote Wednesday in memo to regional directors.

Marcak said Grand Canyon has been encouraging visitors to ditch disposable bottles in favor of reusable ones and to fill them at one of nearly a dozen water stations on the north and south rims that were installed at a cost of more than $300,000. She said the park hadn’t yet gathered data to show whether the year-long effort resulted in a decrease in park waste, 30 percent of which is made up of disposable plastic water bottles.

Chris Lane, vice president of environmental affairs for Grand Canyon concessionaire Xanterra Parks and Resorts, said reducing sales of the bottles is a hit to revenue, but it’s a direction the company has been moving for years. It has set up hydration stations at the Grand Canyon and pushed visitors to use reusable containers while looking for biodegradable alternatives to plastic.

“We’re not perfect at education; we’ve got competing interests,” he said. “Obviously we want to make a profit, but we also want people to do the right thing.”

Nearly 100,000 people had signed a petition organized by 5 Gyres, which researches the impact of plastic pollution in waterways, and Change.org urging Jarvis to ban the bottles from parks nationwide. Stiv Wilson, a spokesman for 5 Gyres, said the groups mobilized against what they saw as a backroom deal in which the beverage industry denied sustainability efforts in public parks.

“I put my faith in the superintendents of the parks because they are the people on the ground dealing with pollution firsthand,” he said. “People get into that position because they love the space they’re working in. Giving the power back to those people is a very positive development.”

Zion and Hawaii Volcanoes national parks have instituted bans similar to the one proposed at the Grand Canyon, which gets 4.5 million visitors a year. The Park Service said those parks also would have to show in writing that the new guidelines are met and evaluate the bans annually.

Governor Vows to Prepare California for Climate Change

Posted December 16th, 2011

Gov. Jerry Brown

Gov. Jerry Brown speaks at conference Dec 15

By JASON DEAREN
Dec. 16, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The United Nations’ top climate official joined California Gov. Jerry Brown on Thursday to call for renewed efforts in the state to more quickly adapt to the risks that extreme weather and a rising sea pose to agriculture and the coastline.

Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, joined Brown, scientists, former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and billionaire Sir Richard Branson at a conference at the California Academy of Sciences in Golden Gate Park.

Richard Branson

Richard Branson at global warming conference (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

Brown organized the conference, he said, to urge people to “wake up” to extreme weather patterns caused by manmade global warming that he said are already causing damage, and to start thinking about what California ought to do to prepare for worse threats.

He said the state needs to gird itself against floods caused by the faster snowmelts that are already happening, putting pressure on aging levees and threatening the state’s agriculture industry.

Global Warming Conference in San Francisco
Richard Branson, Rajendra Pachauri, Gov. Jerry Brown

Warming climate also means longer and more intense wildfire seasons that will threaten homes and infrastructure such as power lines, and affect air quality.

“The greatest obstacle we face is a deep sense of complacency, a sense that things were this way yesterday and were OK and will continue,” Brown said.

“It’s difficult to see what’s not completely obvious … the buildup of greenhouse gases and climate change, we see it, it’s pretty clear,” he said.

Brown lumped together global-warming skeptics, including GOP lawmakers and the Cato Institute, calling them a well-funded “cult” that disagrees with the vast majority of published, peer-reviewed climate science.

“The main thing we have to deal with in climate change is the skepticism, the denial and the cult-like behavior of the political lemmings that would take us over the cliff,” Brown said.

“The Cato Institute has speakers that say environmentalism is a greater threat to capitalism than Marxism itself,” he said, evoking laugher from the audience.

Patrick J. Michaels, a senior fellow in environmental studies at Cato, said the institute has never denied climate change but disputes temperature projections by the UN, saying the sensitivity of temperature to changes in carbon dioxide levels have been overestimated.

“Gov. Brown clearly has not read anything that the Cato Institute has published on global warming. Rather than deny it, we believe that indeed the surface temperature of the planet is about one degree Celsius warmer than it was 120 years ago and that increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide has contributed to this,” Michaels said in a statement to The Associated Press.

“On the other hand, it is also clear that the rate of observed warming is falling beneath the midrange projections from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.”

Pachauri said UN studies show that 95 percent of human deaths associated with extreme weather events happen in developing countries.

Yet he said the world’s large economies, such as California, can make great strides toward helping reduce global greenhouse gas emissions, especially through the simple task of retrofitting existing buildings.

“If one could retrofit buildings to make them more efficient, and if new buildings could be built to current standards, it’s really a win-win situation,” Pachauri said. “Overall, the building sector has the largest potential for the reduction of emissions.”

In a rare public appearance since leaving office, Schwarzenegger, a Republican, attributed the success California has had in passing its landmark climate change laws to bipartisan cooperation.

While in office, the former governor frequently promoted California’s landmark 2006 global warming law, called AB32, which paved the way for the state’s cap-and-trade system for controlling greenhouse gas emissions by the worst polluters.

He called the debate over bankrupt solar panel maker Solyndra “narrow minded” in a world moving ever faster toward renewable energy.

“At the same time (as Solyndra) there were restaurants that failed, manufacturers that failed … all kinds of businesses that failed and no one talks about that,” Schwarzenegger said during a short interview.

“They did the best that they could and they made mistakes. That’s what happens in business — if you make mistakes you fail.”

Not everybody watching Thursday’s conference agreed that California was on the right path.

Dorothy Rothrock of the AB32 Implementation Group said the state has isolated itself by adopting stringent regulations that come at too high a cost.

“As we discuss the risks of climate change and California’s future, it is appropriate to consider whether our greenhouse gas emissions reduction strategies will have an impact on climate change,” Rothrock said in a statement.

“California has failed to design a cap-and-trade market that will be adopted by other states and jurisdictions in the near future and our efforts alone will not make a difference in global emissions.”

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Associated Press Writer Juliet Williams contributed to this story.