Where’s the action on climate change in the U.S.?

My reply to another comment on the post No Kyoto Protocol for the United States:

Most Americans are very concerned about climate change. It is a smaller percentage who are not. Even the United States is threatened by coastal inundation but the threats are largely ignored by the press and therefore not communicated to its citizens. Third Planet is making some progress on public awareness but we are a small organization and it is not enough.

For example my local newspaper, The Florida Times-Union, did publish the following letter I wrote them in November:

Protect the buffers

Although “Rising seas could soak taxpayers, study says” is a news story that no one wants to read, it is a subject we might ignore at our peril.

The prudent approach for government in their planning scenarios is to take a much harder look at the 100-year floodplain, existing wetlands and low-lying agricultural lands, and consider these as ground zero upon which all future development must be based.

Ultimately the reinsurance industry will have a much louder voice about which developments can be insured. It just plain makes sense to give tidal wetlands, and the valuable services they provide to humans, the room to retreat with the possible onset of rising sea levels.

In Louisiana, for example, coastal wetlands and the buffer they provide against hurricanes are being eroded at a rate of 1 acre every 30 to 40 minutes.

It is time we started applying the precautionary principle to the expensive development decisions we are making, particularly in light of the Reality Check development exercises that have been underway in Northeast Florida for the past six months. (Florida Times-Union letter)

We don’t know if our concerns will be considered by our local planning community in their development decisions, or not. We only know that while Florida is threatened it is not our survival that is at stake—for the time-being.

We can only hope that we all come to our senses on the global implications of climate change before it is far too late.

Third Planet makes recommendations to the Florida Energy Commission

News Release

St. Augustine, FL,  March 26, 2007 — At the recent Jacksonville meeting of the Florida Energy Commission’s Climate Change Advisory Group and again at the Orlando meeting of the full Florida Energy Commission, Robert Farmer, a St. Augustine-based energy engineer and climate change specialist, presented recommendations to establish official State public communications on the climate change issue. Mr. Farmer is president of Third Planet, a non-profit organization focusing climate change education and president of Concept Communiqués, Inc., a public relations and corporate communications agency with a particular focus on communications related to climate change.

Citing growing public awareness of the effects of climate change, Mr. Farmer pointed out the public is becoming increasingly concerned and feeling quite isolated and helpless because they have so few avenues for addressing the problem, “short of changing light bulbs.”

“This year the urgency has ramped up considerably with the release of the science report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in February, and I can confidently predict that it will rise several more notches with the IPCC report on Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability to be released in less than 3 weeks (April 2-5, Brussels). This report will have particular resonance for Florida. Continue reading