"We come together today because we agree
that climate change is a real problem -- and that human
beings are contributing to it. The best science tells us
exactly this. Now, it is our responsibility as global leaders
to forge a new international consensus on how to address
climate change," Secretary Rice stated in her remarks at
the Major Economies Meeting on Energy and Climate Change
in Washington, September 27.
Following is transcript of Secretary Rice's
remarks:
(begin transcript)
U.S. Department of State
Washington, DC
September 27, 2007
Secretary Condoleezza Rice
Remarks at the Major Economies Meeting on Energy Security
and Climate Change
SECRETARY RICE: Thank you very much. Good
morning and thank you very much, Paula, for that kind introduction.
I want to thank all of you for joining us here for this
very important conference. I especially want to thank ministers
who have made the effort to come here, many who were in
New York with me. I also want to thank the representatives
of the delegations for joining us.
We come together today because we agree
that climate change is a real problem -- and that human
beings are contributing to it. The best science tells us
exactly this. Now, it is our responsibility as global leaders
to forge a new international consensus on how to address
climate change.
This test has much in common with the other
great challenges that are defining this young century --
from weapons proliferation, to the spread of disease, to
transnational terrorism. These are truly global problems,
and no one nation, no matter how much power or political
will it possesses, can succeed alone. We all need partners,
and we all need to work in concert.
I want to stress that the United States
takes climate change very seriously, for we are both a major
economy and a major emitter. Climate change is a global
problem and we are contributing to it, therefore, we are
prepared to expand our leadership to address the challenge.
That is why President Bush has convened this meeting.
The purpose of this gathering, and of those
to come, is to ensure that all of us are working pragmatically
toward a common purpose, to contribute to a new international
framework for addressing climate change beyond Kyoto and
to help all nations fulfill their responsibilities under
the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.
Here in this room, we have major global
players on climate change -- those who contribute most to
the problem, and those who are essential to reaching a solution.
We have representatives of major international institutions
and non-governmental organizations. We have members of private
industry. And we have governments from countries comprising
about two-thirds of the global population, four-fifths of
the global economy, and about four-fifths of global emissions.
We all represent many different interests and opinions,
but ultimately, we need to answer just one fundamental question:
What kind of world do we wish to inhabit and what kind of
world do we intend to pass on to future generations?
That question resonates profoundly with
every American. We have always found sanctuary and meaning
in the majesty of our environment. And we have always been
passionate about our duty to be good stewards of the natural
world. As one of our greatest conservationists, President
Teddy Roosevelt, said exactly one century ago: “There
must be a realization of the fact that to waste, to destroy,
our natural resources will result in undermining in the
days of our children the very prosperity which we ought
by right to hand down to them amplified and developed."
President Bush shares this conviction, and
he has echoed it himself: “Good stewardship of the
environment is not just a personal responsibility,”
he said. “It is a public value. Americans are united
in their belief that we must preserve our natural heritage
and safeguard the environment.”
And let me also just say, on a personal
level, that I'm a Californian and it is a state along the
shores of the Pacific Ocean and among the hills of Palo
Alto where I live, where conservation and protection of
the global environment is a cause that is cared about very,
very deeply.
At the same time, we recognize that climate
change is a complex matter and a difficult issue because
it cannot be dealt with effectively as an environmental
challenge alone. As our leaders agreed at this year’s
G-8 and APEC meetings, climate change requires an integrated
response –encompassing environmental stewardship,
economic growth, energy supply and security, and the development
and deployment of new clean energy technology. How we forge
this integrated response has major consequences -- not only
for our future, but also for our present.
Right now, more than half of the world's
people live on less than $2 a day. Many of these men, women,
and children have no access to energy -- and thus little
ability to do the basic things that we with more privilege
take for granted, like storing food, reading and studying
after sundown, cooling and heating our homes, or turning
on a computer and connecting to an ever more technologically
sophisticated world. Helping those on the margins of the
global economy to lift themselves out of dire poverty is
one of the greatest moral issues of our time. So we must
be committed to addressing climate change in a way that
does not starve economies of the energy they need to grow
and that does not widen the already significant income gap
between developed and developing nations.
It is our hope that we can make progress
toward that goal in this meeting and in those to come, and
that in doing so we will support and accelerate the broader
processes now underway in the UN Framework Convention. Like
many of you, I have just come from the UN General Assembly,
where I participated in the high-level event on climate
change. The United States supports the goals of that event.
And we want this year’s UN Climate Change Conference
in Indonesia to succeed. That is why we are asking the members
of this meeting to focus on three important tasks.
First, we should agree upon a long-term
goal for greenhouse gas reduction. Climate change is a generational
challenge, and it requires a serious long-term commitment
to reverse the growth in global emissions to the point where
we can stabilize greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere.
We should do this, as we agreed in the UN Framework Convention,
in a timeframe that allows the environment to adapt and
in a way that ensures continued global economic development.
Our second task is to establish mid-term
national targets and programs to reach our common broader
goal. Let me stress that this is not a one-size-fits-all
effort. Every country will make its own decisions, reflecting
its own needs and its own interests, its own sources of
energy and its own domestic politics. Though united by common
goals and collective responsibilities, all nations should
tackle climate change in the ways that they deem best.
Here in this country, for example, we had
a national debate on energy in 2005. It produced bi-partisan
agreement on new mandates for renewable fuels and appliance
efficiency, along with a multi-billion dollar authorization
to research and bring to market clean energy technology.
Many of our states are using more renewable power and increasing
building efficiency. President Bush is working to reduce
our gasoline consumption by up to 20 percent in ten years,
and to cut greenhouse gases through aggressive new mandatory
standards for alternative fuels and improved vehicle efficiency.
Steps like these are necessary to ensure
that our current economic and energy policies are both cost-effective
and environmentally effective. But ultimately, we realize
that the long-term challenge we face is daunting and requires
further advancement on technology and building substantially
on recent progress. Managing the status quo is simply not
an adequate response.
And it is not hard to see why. Across the
world today -- in places like Sao Paolo and Shanghai and
Mumbai and Mexico City and Jakarta and Johannesburg, and
still in many cities of the developed world -- millions
of people are striving for their place in an emerging global
middle class, and for all of the expectations that a modern
way of life will bring -- from well-paying jobs, to automobiles,
to decent homes. But the fact is, no matter how much we
improve our current approach to energy, economics, and the
environment, our current trajectory cannot accommodate these
people’s dreams.
If we stay on our present path, we face
an unacceptable choice: Either we sacrifice global economic
growth to secure the health of our planet or we sacrifice
the health of our planet to continue with fossil-fueled
growth. This is a choice that we must refuse to make. Instead,
we must cut the Gordian Knot of fossil fuels, carbon emissions,
and economic activity. This current system is no longer
sustainable, and we must transcend it entirely through a
revolution in energy technology. So our third task is to
work with private industry to develop and bring to market
new energy technologies that not only pose no risk to economic
growth, but can actually accelerate it.
In our vision of a more hopeful world, millions
of people now on the margins of a global economy would not
only be joining an ever expanding circle of prosperity;
they would be joining citizens of developed nations in sharing
new technologies that entirely transform the ways that we
human beings relate to our natural world, and to one another.
This would be a world of clean cars running on ethanol or
hydrogen fuel cells, a world filled with good jobs in green
office parks and skyscrapers, a world where power is available
to all -- at the flip of a switch or the turn of a key --
from alternative sources of energy like wind, or clean coal,
or civilian nuclear power.
In recent years, the United States has been
investing in new energy technologies that have the potential
to overcome the challenge of climate change and transform
our world. This has been the focus of our efforts here at
home and the goal of our international diplomacy, where
we have made a special effort to forge new partnerships
with developing countries.
With Brazil, we are working to tap the enormous
potential of biofuels -- both to meet our energy needs and
to help developing nations in the Americas to meet theirs.
Together, we are developing and sharing new technologies
that can enable consumers of fossil fuels to shift to homegrown
biofuels.
With India, we have negotiated an agreement
to open a path of cooperation on civil nuclear energy and
technology. Once finalized, this agreement will help one
of the world’s fastest growing energy consumers to
meet its people’s economic aspirations by launching
a second Green Revolution.
And in Asia, we helped to bring the two
largest developing countries, China and India, together
with other regional states to form the Asia-Pacific Partnership
on Clean Development and Climate. Working with major global
leaders of private industry, our governments are seeking
to share new energy technologies that can fuel economic
development and that is both sustainable and environmentally
sound.
Ladies and Gentlemen, because climate change
touches on so many areas of human endeavor -- from our energy
policies, to our economic activity, to our environmental
future -- the challenge may seem daunting. And indeed it
is. But this challenge can also be a catalyst for present
day progress. And that is the idea that I want to leave
you with this morning.
As we work together, in this meeting and
through the U.N. Framework Convention -- as we take steps
to reduce emissions and develop new technologies to move
us beyond fossil fuels -- let us approach climate change
not simply as a looming future threat, but as a present
opportunity to work together, a chance to design a better
and more sustainable approach to fuel human development,
a chance to lift millions of people out of poverty and into
the promise of the global economy and a chance to protect
and preserve our natural world -- not only for future generations,
but also for those of us who are now living.
I want to thank you very much for your presence
here today. As we have important challenges before us, it
is good to get together to talk about how to approach the
challenges. But it is also good to get together to talk
about how we might use the opportunities. And I look forward
to working with all of you. Thank you very much.
(end transcript)
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