The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, September 23, 2008 -5 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, Septemher 23, 2008 -5 AP PHTOS Republican presidential candidate John McCain and his running mate Sarah Palin don't always agree, especiallyon the issue of global warming. While McCain has said humans in part drive global warming, Palin has consistently questioned this argument. On climate change, Pali and McCain diverge Unlike running mate, Paln questions human role in warming By JULIET EILPERIN The Washington Post WASHINGTON - No one, including Gov. Sarah Palin, ques- tions that Alaska's climate is chang- ing more rapidly than any other state's. But her skepticism about the causes and what needs to be done to address the consequences stands in sharp contrast to the views of her running mate, Sen. John McCain, and place her to the right of the Bush administration and several other Republican governors. Although Palinestablished a sub- cabinet to deal with climate change issues a year ago, she has focused on how to adapt to global warming rather than how to combat it, and she has publicly questioned scien- tists' near-consensus that human activity plays a role in the rising temperatures. She fought the administration's listing of polar bears as threatened with extinction because of shrink- ing sea ice. Palin sued to overturn the decision on the grounds that it will "have a significant adverse impact on Alaska because addition- al regulation of the species and its habitat ... will deter activities such as commercial fisheries, oil and gas exploration and development, transportation and tourism within and off-shore of Alaska." In his campaigning, McCain has regularly said that humans are driving global warming and declared that his efforts to cap greenhouse gas emissions dem- onstrate his ability to work with Democrats. But in selecting Palin and deciding to place her in charge of energy affairs should they win the White House, he has a running mate who has resisted this key tenet of his candidacy. Rick Steiner, a University of Alas- ka marine conservation professor who pressed Palin's administration to hand over documents related to its position on the polar bear listing, said the governor has not enacted policies that would help reverse cli- mate change even as it transforms the state's landscape. "She has said some of the right things in the last two years, but she's done absolutely nothing," Steiner said. But Larry Hartig, commissioner of Alaska's Department of Envi- ronmental Conservation, said Palin worked aggressively to address cli- mate threats by lobbying the leg- islature to provide $13 million to help remote villages facing coastal erosion. "Unlike the rest of the country, we are experiencing the threats of warming here, now," Hartig said, adding that while the Palin admin- istration has focused largely on adapting to the shifting climate, "I wouldn't interpret that as a lack of interest in mitigation, by any means." Different regions of the United States are responding in vary- ing ways to climate change, with drought in the Southwest and changing blooming patterns in the Northeast, but Alaska is feeling the effects the most. The state has warmed by 4 degrees Fahrenheit over the past 50 years - far outpac- ing the global and national temper- ature rise. Glaciers on its southeast coast have receded one to five miles over the past few decades, and the warmer, drier tempera- tures sparked a beetle infestation that devastated spruce trees on the Kenai Peninsula. Alaska has experienced "a dou- ble whammy," said John Walsh, a University of Alaska at Fairbanks climate change professor, because it has been affected by changing wind patterns as well as human- induced warming. Palin does not minimize the con- sequences. When she established her climate sub-cabinet last Sep- tember, she said in a news release that Alaskans "are already seeing the effects" of warming: "Coast- al erosion,. thawing permafrost, retreating sea ice and record forest fires affect our communities and our infrastructure." But when environmentalists urged the governor to include lan- guage attributing global warm- ing to humans and suggested that the state set a target for limiting greenhouse gas emissions, Palin hedged. Instead, she issued an executive order saying the state needed to develop a strategy that would "guide its efforts in evaluat- ing and addressing known or sus- pected causes of climate change. Alaska's climate change strategy must be built on sound science and the best available facts and must recognize Alaska's interest in eco- nomic growth and the develop- ment of its resources." Kate Troll, executive director of Alaska Conservation Voters and a member of a sub-cabinet advisory group, said she did not understand why Palin resisted the language environmentalists wanted until Newsmax magazine published an interview late last month in which the governor said: "A changing cli- mate will affect Alaska more than any other state, because of our location. I'm not one though who would attribute it to being man- made." "Now I know why" -the state doesn't have emissions reduction goals, Troll said. "It's very scary to have someone in the vice presi- dential seat who doesn't get the link to human activity, because if you don't get that, you don't get the connection to the rest of the story, of national security and global security." Palin played down her skepti- cism last week in an interview with ABC's Charles Gibson, say- ing: "Show me where I have ever said that there's absolute proof that nothing that man has ever conducted or engaged in has had any effect or no effect on climate change. I have not said that." By contrast, when a General Motors employee asked McCain on July 18 whether "the science of man-made global warming has really been proven," the candidate said it had. "I've been all over, and I believe that climate change is real, and that's the preponderance of scientific evidence," said McCa- in, who also believes polar bears are endangered. Hartig, the environmental com- missioner, said his discussions with Palin "didn't get into the sci- ence, how much is man-caused." He sees that question as irrele- vant, adding that the sub-cabinet is exploring how best to reduce greenhouse gases while looking at how to help Inuit communi- ties that face the most immediate effects of global warming. "We wouldn't be doing those things if we didn't think there's a point to it," he said, addingthat the state has taken an inventory of its greenhouse gas emissions. Palin has not voiced an opinion on whether the federal govern- ment should cap carbon emissions, a cause McCain has championed for years. But she did resist the federal government's move to list polar bears under the Endangered Species Act. Initially, Palin said her state's fish and wildlife department had conducted a review showing that the bears were not facing extinc- tion. But Steiner, the professor, obtained an e-mail exchange showing that state officials con- curred with federal scientists' pre- dictions that all of Alaska's polar bears would disappear by mid- century if trends in greenhouse gas emissions continued. Scott Schliebe, aretired U.S. Fish and Wildlife biologist who oversaw the scientific analysis for the polar bear listing, said Palin and her deputies "had some strong views that were different from ours, and we thoroughly reviewed them. We didn't find their views had merit from the mainstream consensus of scientific thinking, which was backed by data." Walsh, at the University of Alas- ka, said Palin has taken "a practi- cal perspective," and he praised her for "casting a wide net of infor- mation." But when asked whether her policies have reflected the sci- entific information he and other climate researchers have given her, Walsh responded, "I haven't seen it yet." Asian banks invest in Campaign promises are unchanged troubled U.S. assets amid national economic turmoil Japa will bill M( SHAN announci spend as percent Japan's just how compan own ecox But th Financia Asia's ci States tr confiden cial syste For y financed U.S. go consume their tray ernment With reserves, Asian ct withal ti into dist the com financia decade lending ment, to their U.S primed t ties. But W n's biggest bank row $700 billion to finance a banking system bailout could give spend about $8 foreign investors pause. The dollar plunged Monday, signaling some ion for stake in global investors' concerns, ana- lysts si. rgan Stanley lThe move by Tokyo-based Mit- subishi UFJ appears to be part of By DON LEE a previously announced strategy Los Angeles Times to expand in the U.S. Last month, it agreed to pay $3.5 billion for vGHAI, China -- In the 35 percent of UnionBanCal ing plans yesterday to Corp., parent of San Francisco- much as $8 billion for a 20 based Union Bank, that it did not stake in Morgan Stanley, already own. Meanwhile Monday, biggest bank underscored Japan's largest brokerage com- far that nation's financial pany, Nomura Holdings, agreed to ies have come from their pony up $225 million for the Asian nomic crisis in the 1990s. operations of Lehman Bros. Hold- he deal by Mitsubishi UFJ ings Inc., which filed for bank- al Group also highlighted ruptcy protection last week. rucial role as the United "It says a lot about the strength ies to restore health and of Japanese banks to be able to do ice to its tottering finan- this," Tu Packard, a senior econo- em. mist at Moody's Economy.com, said ears, Asian nations have of the Mitsubishi UFJ plan. "The i the heavy spending of the Japanese have lots of experience vernment and American dealing with troubled assets." ers by investing much of Morgan Stanley also had been ide surpluses in U.S. gov- in talks with China Investment and corporate bonds. Corp., China's sovereign wealth huge stockpiles of foreign fund, which took a 9.9 percent China, Japan and other stake in the U.S. investment bank ountries have the where- in December. But an investment o plow much more money banker familiar with the discus- ressed American assets in sions said there was not enough ing months. Many Asian time to work out the involved regu-. I institutions, which a latory and political issues. ago foundered from bad Like the Japanese, Chinesebanks practices and mismanage- have plenty of experience with bad day look a lot better than assets. Over the years, China has . counterparts and appear poured tens of billions of dollars o seize buying opportuni- into its top state-owned banks to clear off troubled loans and shore ashington's plan to bor- up banks' finances. Advisers say candidates are sticking with tax cuts, energy spending By JONATHAN WEISMAN and SHAILAGH MURRAY The Washington Post WASHINGTON - As the scale of the government's interven- tion transforms the nation's fiscal landscape, neither presidential candidate seemed ready Monday to readjust his campaign promises to match a changing reality that could push the federal budget defi- cit next year toward $1trillion. Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain indicated they will not stand in the way of the Bush administration's $700 billion res- cue of U.S. financial markets, and each offered his own proposals for making it more palatable to voters: Obama laid out a plan to overhaul federal contracting and save an estimated $40 billion a year, while McCain proposed an oversight board to monitor the bailout. But advisers in both campaigns said they are not about to shelve their own plans to get the economy back on track - or embrace more aggressive budget-cutting mea- sures - in the face of a short-term surge in the federal deficit. "This is a major fiscal problem in the short run, but it doesn't alter the long-run fiscal picture," said Jason Furman, Obama's economic policy coordinator. "The biggest challenge we face in our economy over the next year is getting it moving again, creating jobs and relieving the squeeze on families. That's our overriding priority for the next year." Said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, McCain's chief economic policy adviser and a former director of the Congressional Budget Office: "In terms of the numbers, obvi- ously the landscape has changed. In terms of the (underlying) chal- lenge, no, I don't think there is much change." Given the drama on Wall Street, economists of all economic stripes say the candidates' reluctance to adjust to the newlandscape, as well as their focus on such peripheral issues as lobbying ties to mortgage giant Fannie Mae, are turning the campaigns into a sideshow. The sheer size of the bailout could give the next president political cover to address long-festering fiscal problems, such as the burgeoning costs of Medicare and Medicaid, yet neither of the men vying for the job has shown an interest in taking advantage of it, they say. "The U.S. fiscal situation is dra- matically deteriorated from what it was," said Martin N. Baily, a former chairman of President Bill Clinton's Council of Economic Advisers. "There is a debate which we need to have that is becoming more urgent: Our fiscal picture does not add up." Bruce Bartlett, a Treasury offi- cial in the Reagan administration, said: "This is just a terrific oppor- tunity for both of these guys to do a do-over. Most of these proposals were formulated when they were als, companies and government running to get their party's nomi- - livimg beyond its means, bor- nations. It looks ridiculous to keep rowing to prop up overconsump- peddling ideas that are no longer tion. Swapping the private debt viable, as if nothing has changed. of banks and homeowners with Then whoever is elected is at public borrowing by the federal least elected on a plan that makes government changes nothing, said sense." Douglas W. Elmendorf, former Even before the bailout plan Federal Reserve Board economist was announced, the Congressio- now at the Brookings Institution. nal Budget Office estimated this And while Obaml and McCain month that the deficit for fiscal have pledged that they would live 2009 would reach $438 billion, within some fiscal constraints, already a record in dollar terms. neither has offered enough details If Treasury needs half the money about how they are going to pay it has sought for the bailout plan for promised tax cuts, health-care in 2009, as well as money already plans and energy spending, said promised to.. seize Fannie Mae, Leonard E. Burman, director of Freddie Mac, Bear Stearns and the the nonpartisan Tax Policy Cen- insurance giant American Inter- ter. national Group, the deficit could "Both of them would dig the approach $900 billion. As a per- hole way deeper," he said. centage of the economy, that num- Campaigning Monday in Green ber would rival the highest deficits Bay, Wis., Obama outlined pro- in history, recorded in the Reagan posals to tighten federal ethics administration, said Rudolph G. and contracting rules and bring Penner, another former CBO direc- unprecedented scrutiny to the leg- tor, now at the Urban Institute. islative process, including through Some, or even much, of that a new clearinghouse to assess cor- money could be recouped as the porate tax breaks. government tries to sell off the His speech, outlining an 11-page assets it plans to buy, but by the "Plan to Reform the Greed and time the bailout is resolved, Wash- Excesses of Washington," built ington will have to confront the on the regulatory overhaul for the retirement of the baby-boom gen- financial services industry that eration as well as soaring Social he proposed last week. To curb Security and Medicare costs. the influence of lobbyists, Obama By buying the bad debt of col- would have all bill writing be con- lapsing financial firms, the-govern- ducted in public. Congregs holds ment could stop panicked investors public hearings on legislation, and from withdrawing money, freeing lawmakers debate and vote in the up lending, boosting home sales open, but the conference com- and lifting the economy. But the mittees where final language is current crisis, in large part, was crafted meet mostly behind closed created by a nation - its individu- doors. p t