Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Suite 300, Erb Memorial Union P.O. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 Email: editor@dailyemerald.com Online Edition: www.dailyemerald.com Tuesday, April 22,2003 -Oregon Daily Emerald — COMMEYKVRY Editor in Chief: Michael J. Kleckner Managing Editor Jessica Richelderfer Editorial Page Assistant* Salena De La Cruz Earth Day2003: White House fights environmental laws Guest commentary As we celebrate the 33 rd anniversary of Earth Day, Americans should be proud for many reasons. We live in the country that created the very idea of national parks as well as myriad environ mental protections to ensure our access to clean air, water and food. We cherish and find respite in the beauty of our vast land from coast to coast. Why, then, is the Bush administration sys tematically dismantling the laws designed to protect the health of the environment and of all Americans? How can this unraveling of rights occur in our country while the adminis tration claims to promote freedom and democracy abroad? It is this disconnect between President Bush’s rhetoric regarding the Middle East and his lack of efforts to protect our citizens at home that has created his greatest credibility gap. A quick review of recent policy changes points to the staggering — and dangerous — nature of the environmental rollbacks put in place by this administration. Take air pollution. Just as some of the na tion’s oldest and dirtiest power plants were about to be forced to reduce the amount of pol lutants they emit, the Bush administration let them off the hook with a deceiving piece of legalese called the Clear Skies Initiative. What about our pristine national forests? In the name of “healthy forests” and “fire preven tion,” the Forest Service has proposed nearly unlimited clear-cutting of forests. Long standing mandates for public input and en vironmental review would be eliminated. Isn’t clean water a necessity? Yet the Environmental Protection Agency has announced plans to reduce the number of wetlands and waterways protected by the Clean Water Act. This came on the heels of an earlier announcement that would essentially overlook the immense water pollution problems caused by mil lions of tons of untreated animal waste being poured into our waterways and drinking water from big factory farms. Even whales are at risk. The Bush ad ministration has proposed exemptions for the Department of Defense that will allow continued use of the Navy’s new low frequen cy sonar that can kill marine mammals by shattering their eardrums. And though there is plenty of talk about homeland security, the Bush administration has blocked efforts to require thousands of chemical and nuclear plants to become more secure. Furthermore, while President Bush openly worries about instability in the Middle East, all measures to make the U.S. less dependent on oil—for example through increased auto fuel efficiency or the Kyoto Protocol — have been stopped dead in their tracks. do wny aren t we an wen aware or this war being waged against the environment? Federal agencies with authority over envi ronmental programs are working in a coordi nated effort to help oil, coal, logging, mining, chemical and auto companies promote their short-term profits at the expense of our health and our public lands. The bitter irony of this administration is that the patriotic language it has used to wage war on another nation seems desperately out of place here at home. Our water, food, forests, air and oceans are at risk. In turn, so are the futures of our families, our livelihoods and our personal health. In its efforts to promote a brighter horizon for those suffering abroad, the Bush administration should take a look first in its own backyard. What better day than Earth Day. John Passacantando is the executive director of Greenpeace USA. More information is at www.greenpeaceusa.org. © 2003, Greenpeace USA. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Guest commentary From childhood we are told that the only cer tainties in life are death and taxes. Unfortunately, this list is incomplete: the other thing we can re ally count on with mathematical certainty are predictions of impending environmental disas ter, loudly proclaimed by activists at events marking Earth Day. This year’s April 22 com memoration will be no exception. Expect to read and hear what Danish statis tician Bjorn Lomborg, author of the best-sell ing “The Skeptical Environmentalist,” has called the “Litany.” By the Litany, Lomborg means the never ending predictions of environmental doom brought about by man’s insatiable appetite to devour the planet’s resources to the point of their depletion. But as Lomborg and other skeptics point out, those claims are not backed up by any available evidence. As the world’s leading economic power, the United States 5, over the last cen tury, Earth Day2003: U.S. benefits from technological advances transformed itself from a predominantly agricul tural society to an industrial powerhouse. Like Europe and Japan, it has made creative use of industrial chemicals to do such things as purify drinking water, develop life-sustaining pharmaceuticals and medical instruments, and protect crops from deadly infestation. Thanks to modem vaccines, diseases such as cholera, malaria, typhoid fever and smallpox, which reg ularly ravaged the generation of our grandpar ents, have all but disappeared from the United States and other industrialized nations. The most deplorable environmental condi tions — filthy air indoors and outdoors, dirty drinking water, dread diseases running rampant —are to be found in poverty-stricken developing countries, where people lack access to modem technology and affordable energy. Real pollution is rapidly disappearing from industrial societies, but it is commonplace in sub-Saharan Africa, the Indian subcontinent, and other places devoid of the fruits of modem technology. Meanwhile, according to figures released an nually by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the quality of the air, water and other natural resources in this country continues to make dramatic improvements, as new, cleaner technologies replace older ones. EPA and Environment Canada, for example, have announced that levels of the “most critical, persistent pollutants” around the Great Lakes continued to drop in 2002. The Duluth News-Tri bune recently reported that the declines contin ue a 15-year trend. On the U.S. side, mercury releases have declined 40 percent since 1990, hexachlorobenzene emissions have fallen by 75 percent, and dioxin releases are down 92 percent from the late 1980s. Are there flies in the environmental oint ment? Yes, and most of them come cour tesy of the environmental movement. En vironmental groups such as Greenpeace, the Natural Resources Defense Council, Health Care Without Harm, and the Envi ' ronmental Working Group regularly launch scare campaigns—conspicuous ly lacking in credible data — against in dustrial chemicals whose use has con tributed mightily to Americans living longer, healthier lives. Environmental activists demanding re ductions in man-made emissions of green house gases from the burning of fossil fuels because of their alleged effect on “global warming” threaten to deny Americans contin ued access to affordable energy. A good case can be made for sound environ mental policy, but don’t expect to hear it from the organizers of Earth Day. Bonner R. Cohen is a senior fellow at the Lexington Institute. He can be contacted at cohen@lexingtoninstitute.org. © 2003, Lexington Institute. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Earth Day2003: We should focus on world's clean water supply Guest commentary After spending $2 for a bottle of spring water at the local conven ience store, you may be surprised to learn that people living in Nairo bi, Kenya, pay up to five times more per liter of water than the typical American citizen. Glean, drinkable freshwater, though essential for life, is not easi ly accessible to everyone. Water de mand is increasing three times as fast as the world’s population. In less than 25 years, 30 percent of the world will face water shortages. On this year’s Earth Day, we should fo cus on freshwater. Although water makes up 70 per cent of the earth’s surface, less than 1 percent of the world’s freshwater is fit for consumption, according to the World Health Organization. Five mil lion people — equivalent to the en tire population of Maryland — die each year of diseases caused by con taminated water, such as cholera, ty phoid and chronic diarrhea. Global warming is adversely affect ing the world’s freshwater supply. Less snow in the mountains results in less water for our global faucets. Shortsighted water policies are also at fault, especially the move to ward privatizing water systems. In California, privatizing energy resulted in blackouts, skyrocketing bills and billions in lost public funds. What would happen if private com panies gained a greater part of our water supply? Against these alarming trends, there is a global movement working to turn the tide toward water conser vation and sustainability. Since my family foundation began awarding an international environmental prize more than 10 years ago, we’ve recog nized 87 grassroots activists from 55 nations who are taking courageous action to ensure that water — a ba sic human right — remains protect ed from the voracious interests of polluting industries and compro mised government officials. This year’s Goldman Prize winners are no exception. Julia Bonds, a coal miner’s daugh ter from West Virginia, is battling the coal industry’s practice of mountain top removal coal mining, which has buried 1,000 miles of Appalachian streams with tons of debris and poi soned watersheds with arsenic, mer cury and lead. Spanish economist Pedro Arrojo Agudo, another of this year’s prize winners, led 400,000 people in a march in Barcelona against the gov ernment’s #25 billion plan to build a series of dams along the Ebro River, the nation’s last free-flowing river. Arrojo is campaigning for alterna tives, including planting drought tolerant crops, repairing leaking pipes and implementing water recy cling programs. We can ensure fresh water for all if we continue to stabilize the Earth’s climate by reducing carbon emissions. We must move away from mega-dams toward technolo gies that use water most efficiently and agriculture systems that pre serve groundwater for our chil dren’s children. We must hold our governments re sponsible for drafting and enforcing sustainable and equitable water us age policies, and hold industry ac countable for abiding by them. And we must do our part as individuals to conserve water in our daily activities. As we celebrate Earth Day, let’s make it our goal to uphold the basic right to clean water. Richard N. Goldman is the president of the Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund and the Goldman Environmental Prize. He can be contacted at pmproj@progressive.org. © 2003, Richard N. Goldman. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.