Scientists are “overwhelmingly unified” in concluding that humans are contributing to global climate change, US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Sunday night, and the public is slowly getting the full picture.
Skeptics who stand in the way of action to respond to climate change will not be remembered kindly, he told Alaska reporters.
“I think the people who are slow to come to this table will be written up by historians as having been some of the folks most irresponsible in understanding and reacting to scientific analysis,” he said.
Kerry spoke one day before he and US President Barack Obama will address the US Department of State’s Conference on Global Leadership in the Arctic.
The purpose, according to the department, is to focus world attention on urgent issues facing the Arctic and provide foreign ministers and residents a way to address challenges.
“The president believes this is one of the most important issues we face,” Kerry said. “It is a national security problem.”
Warming’s effects on Alaska have been more dramatic than elsewhere in the country as glaciers thaw, coastlines erode and sea ice, the habitat for threatened polar bears, Pacific walrus and ice seals, diminishes.
The president is taking steps to address warming, Kerry said, and will advocate strongly for an international pact on cutting carbon emissions at a UN conference in December in Paris.
Obama’s climate action plan involves all carbon sources, from appliances to automobiles to power generators.
“So we’re doing as much as we can to try to move people toward sustainable sources of energy and the president will talk about this very much while he’s up here in Alaska. Part of the reason for being here is to underscore this problem,” Kerry said.
Environmental groups planned to protest yesterday over Obama’s decision to grant permits to Royal Dutch Shell for exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska’s northwest coast.
Kerry said the administration is taking a balanced approach to moving away from carbon sources of energy.
“You have to balance it with the fundamentals of your economy and of basic needs. That’s one of the things we’ll talk about here — how fast can we encourage people to switch,” he said.
In related news, the White House said on Sunday that Obama was going to change the name of North America’s tallest mountain peak from Mount McKinley to Denali, the traditional Alaska Native name of the mountain.
By renaming the peak Denali, an Athabascan word meaning “the high one,” Obama is wading into a sensitive and decades-old conflict between residents of Alaska and Ohio.
Alaskans have informally called the 6,194m mountain Denali for years, but the federal government recognizes its name evoking the 25th president, William McKinley, who was born in Ohio and assassinated early in his second term.
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