I’m just going to sit back for a moment and savor this headline from the Washington Post
Nobel Physicist Chosen To Be Energy Secretary
President-elect Barack Obama has chosen Steven Chu, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist who heads the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, to be the next energy secretary…
How cool is that? Could you even imagine a scientist being appointed to anything in the Bush administration?
The appointments suggest that Obama plans to make a strong push for measures to combat global warming and programs to support energy innovation.
What a hopeful change for our country’s future and I think it gets better.
“Obama plans to name Carol M. Browner, Environmental Protection Agency administrator for eight years under President Bill Clinton, to fill a new White House post overseeing energy, environmental and climate policies” and he also has chosen “Lisa P. Jackson, recently appointed chief of staff to New Jersey Gov. Jon S. Corzine (D) and former head of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, to head the EPA. Nancy Sutley, a deputy mayor of Los Angeles for energy and environment, will chair the White House Council on Environmental Quality.”
The NY Times notes that Browner is “an acolyte of former Vice President Al Gore”. And Grist writes of the future EPA head, “Jackson went on to earn a master’s degree in chemical engineering from Princeton University in 1986, where she became inspired to use her engineering skills to prevent pollution… If confirmed, Jackson would be the first African American to head the EPA.”
The Dot Earth blog at NY Times reports Chu thinks greater technological advances are needed to move the world away from fossil fuels. “I think political will is absolutely necessary. But we need new technologies,” Chu said.
So far the reaction from Europe seems positive. The Guardian reports Obama’s new team raises hope for U.S. environment. Obama “has raised expectations of a strong drive to roll back George Bush’s policies on climate change and environmental protection. The choice of those with strong science and regulatory backgrounds was broadly welcomed in the environmental community.”
While Spiegel laments that now Europe puts hurdles in Obama’s climate path. “Just as the US gets a new president who promises to reverse years of climate change neglect, American environmental experts worry that Europe’s resolve on climate change is weakening. [Germany’s Angela] Merkel’s recent about-face is especially alarming.”
While European leaders are backing away from their climate commitments, The Guardian reports “Mexico has become one of the first developing countries to set a specific carbon reduction target, with a pledge to halve greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.” Go team North America!
Maybe Obama’s choices are a portent of positive changes to come. Even the Bush administration’s Effort to relax pollution limits is dropped, according to the NY Times. “The Bush administration said Wednesday that it was abandoning its pursuit of two proposed regulations relaxing air-pollution standards for power plants, surprising both industry and environmentalists by ending its pursuit of one of the last remaining goals set out by Vice President Dick Cheney’s Energy Task Force in 2001.”
I’ll believe it for real when Obama is sworn-in, but for now yay!