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CNN.com -Nine states break with Bush on greenhouse gases -Aug 25, 2005 <br />31 <br />^/~//~" C~ PRINTTHIS <br />~V V ~w Powered by f~Clldca6tllty <br />Nine states break with Bush on greenhouse gases <br />NEW YORK (Reuters) --Nine northeastern U.S. states are working on a plan to cap and then <br />reduce the level of greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, the first U.S, deal of its kind <br />and one which would see the region breaking with President George W. Bush who refused to sign <br />the Kyoto Protocol <br />The move comes as California, Washington and Oregon are considering a similar pact - a dynamic environmentalists say <br />could pressure the federal government to adopt a national law. Bush refused to sign the Kyoto Protocol, the greenhouse <br />gas reduction plan adopted by more than 150 countries. <br />Under the plan being worked on, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, <br />Rhode Island and Vermont would cap carbon dioxide emissions at 150 million tons ayear -roughly equal to the average <br />emissions in the highest three years between 2000 and 2004. <br />Starting in 2015, the cap would be lowered, and emissions would be cut by 10 percent in 2020. <br />Each state legislature would have to approve the caps, said Dennis Schaln, a spokesman for Connecticut's Department of <br />Environmental Protection, <br />"This is a process that would be an agreement among states and to really implement it and have a firm commitment, the <br />states will each have to approve legislation and regulations to meet these conditions,' he told Reuters. <br />The draft is being circulated among industries, power companies and environmental groups for feedback, he said. The <br />group hopes to reach a final agreement in September. <br />Phil Cherry, policy director at Delaware's Department of Natural Resources, also confirmed details of the pact. <br />Many scientists believe carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases cause global warming that is affecting coastal areas, <br />icebergs and wildlife. Around 40 percent of U,S, carbon dioxide emissions come from fossil fuel power plants. <br />The United States is the world's largest emitter of carbon dioxide. The Bush administration wants cuts to be voluntary and <br />resists mandatory measures it says would hurt economic growth. <br />Many international leaders have criticized Bush's refusal to sign Kyoto, which is meant as a first step toward braking a rise <br />in global temperatures from abuild-up of gases from fossil fuels emitted by power plants, factories and cars.. <br />In the absence of national control on emissions, Schain said: "This seems to be the appropriate course of action." <br />The so-called Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative would explore amarket-driven cap-and-trade system where businesses <br />must trim emissions under set limits or buy credits from companies that have complied with the limits. <br />Environmentalists praised the proposed plan. <br />"It moves the United States fiirther toward doing something about the problem;' said Kert Davies of Greenpeace in <br />Washington, D.C. "That eventually allows us back into the global solving of this problem" <br />The deal was brokered by New York Republican Gov. George Pataki, who is weighing a White House run in 2008. <br />http://cmi.worldnews.printthis.cliclcability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=CNN.com+-+Nine.., 8/25/2005 <br />