Rhode Island Denies Youth
Climate Petition
Peter Nightingale, NaturesTrustRI@pobox.com
(EcoRI photo) |
The denial coincides with the Special Report on Global Warming issued by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
In a press release the panel quotes Jim Skea, co-chair of one of its working groups, who stated that “limiting warming to 1.5ºC [2.7 ºF] is possible within the laws of chemistry and physics but doing so would require unprecedented changes.”
The petition of Nature's Trust Rhode Island is in line with this and with the Washington Post headline "The world has just over a decade to get climate change under control, U.N. scientists say."
Clearly, the Raimondo Administration fails to recognize and live up to this challenge.
Chloe Moers of Providence, a 16-year old petitioner and member of the board of Nature's Trust Rhode Island said: "This response ignores the need for change to happen in Rhode Island and is dismissive of our constitutional rights. This is a serious issue that needs to be addressed immediately and it affects the well-being of all of us."
In contrast with the recent IPCC report and despite the evidence presented in the petition, DEM justifies its denial by stating that the requested measures "would be unprecedented" and not "the only or best approach."
The department offers neither arguments nor alternatives; apparently, it overlooked that proposed approach is used in Oregon and the San Francisco Bay Area, as the petition mentions.
Alex Duryea, a graduate student at
the University of Rhode Island and a member of the board of Nature's Rhode
Island said: "I am disappointed with the response. I really hoped that
Rhode Island's Department of Environmental Management would have jumped at the
opportunity to do more to protect the youth from the impending consequences of
business as usual."
Meghan Janicki, a tenth grade
student from West Warwick High School, reacted by stating: "All that
action can do is help, and RI DEM is not willing to help us, or the
environment. We must be willing to take action or make change for
anything to get better."
Philip Tierney, age 14, of East Providence said: "It is so disappointing that the state won't listen to us. Climate change is coming at a rapid pace, and they don't do anything about it; the future looks scary."
Philip Tierney, age 14, of East Providence said: "It is so disappointing that the state won't listen to us. Climate change is coming at a rapid pace, and they don't do anything about it; the future looks scary."
RI DEM agrees with petitioners that climate change is "a critical issue affecting public welfare," and the department lists actions taken by the state, but it fails to mention that Governor Gina Raimondo is on record supporting expansion of the fossil fuel infrastructure in Rhode Island, a major step in the wrong direction.
Supplemental information:
3. Raimondo press release: "I
am committed to moving ahead with cost-effective, regional energy
infrastructure projects — including expansion of natural gas
capacity..." https://www.ri.gov/press/view/24624
4. "The
world has just over a decade to get climate change under control, U.N.
scientists say" https://www.washingtonpost.com/energy-environment/2018/10/08/world-has-only-years-get-climate-change-under-control-un-scientists-say/?utm_term=.ed8bcfa51fed