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WASHINGTON, DC, November 5, 2008 (ENS) – Congratulations to President-elect Barack Obama and his team with messages of hope and pledges of support rolled in today from environmental and sustainable business groups across the political spectrum.

The Sierra Club said in a statement, “If the Obama administration is as smartly, deliberately, and thoughtfully run as his presidential campaign, our country and our future are in very capable hands.”

Obama declared in his victory speech, “We cannot go back to the old way of doing things.”

The groups agree and each organization – from the investors of the Ceres Group to the grassroots members of Defenders of Wildlife – has words of advice for Obama along with their congratulations and compliments.

Many groups are reminding Obama of his pledge to make clean energy his top priority, to reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil, kickstart economic recovery, create millions of jobs, and curb climate change.

Fred Krupp, president of Environmental Defense said, “This election offers us the greatest opportunity we have ever had to change course on global warming.”

“We must do everything we can to pass climate legislation here at home and to craft a global compact that unites the world against the common enemy of rising temperatures, melting ice caps, erratic weather and the spread of disease,” said Krupp.


President-elect Barack Obama (Photo
courtesy Obama for America)

Mindy Lubber, president of Ceres, the largest coalition of investors, environmental and public interest organizations in North America, said members of her group want the Obama administration and Congress to curb global warming by passing legislation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent below 1990 by 2020, and 80 percent below the benchmark by 2050.

Ceres urges reform of the capital markets to require “honest accounting of financial risks that companies and investors face from climate change.”

An Obama administration should end tax incentives and subsidies for high carbon-emitting technologies and projects and enact mandates that 20 percent of the nation’s electricity come from renewable power by 2020 and at least 30 percent by 2030, Lubber said.

“The new administration and Congress must shun the excuse that it is ‘too expensive’ to act to curb global warming, to treat our resources as limited, or to end our allegiance to high-carbon fuels,” said Lubber. “It is too expensive not to act, and the cost of inaction in a future world of 9 billion people is what Barack Obama last night called “a planet in peril.”

“It is a world in a headlong rush toward climate instability, water scarcity, high food prices, deeper global poverty, and locked in a perilous addiction to oil and coal,” she said.

“The reward for action is a green and sustainable economy that creates new business opportunities, trains a legion of new workers, helps heal the environment and assures our future,” Lubber said. “We believe investors, companies and those who work for them are just waiting for the signals from Washington to begin this work. Those signals should come quickly – in the first 12 months of the new administration.”

With 750,000 members and activists, Environment America and its federation of state environment groups endorsed Obama for president and 29 candidates for Congress and lobbied swing voters on behalf of their candidates.

“This election pitted the energy policy of last 30 years against that of the next 30 years,” said Anna Aurilio, director of Environment America’s Washington, DC office. “”This is now a clean energy Congress – 65 percent of new House members and all of the new Senate members come from states with strong renewable electricity requirements.”

“Senator McCain focused on the oil, coal and nukes of the past, while Senator Obama called for a new energy economy fueled by renewable energy such as wind and solar, investments in clean technologies of the future and five million new jobs. From Senator Obama on down the ballot, the candidates who won were talking about a clean energy future and voters understood that this was the key to a stronger economy, a more secure world and the solution to global warming,” she said.

The Alliance to Save Energy today urged Obama to fulfill his campaign promise to make building a sustainable energy future for America a key priority upon taking office in January.

“The Obama-Biden ‘New Energy for America’ plan contains many exciting, creative, and urgently needed energy-efficiency actions,” said Alliance President Kateri Callahan. “The Alliance stands ready to help our new president and his team deliver a new energy future for America that is built on a bedrock of energy efficiency.”

The Apollo Alliance of environmental, labor and business organizations said, “President-elect Barack Obama’s priority list jives with Apollo’s clean energy, good job goals. Sweeping Democratic victories in yesterday’s elections are expected to bring good fortune to wind and solar interests and hope to all those interested in stabilizing the climate.”

With his congratulations, Wildlife Conservation Society President and CEO Steven Sanderson said, “Our nation is positioned to be a world leader in saving wildlife and wild places across the globe, including policies to address climate change.” He encourages the incoming administration and Congress to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, “including reducing rates of deforestation which may account for 20 percent of all global carbon emissions.”

“Efforts such as these are good for both wildlife and humanity,” said Sanderson, “which share a common future as creatures inhabiting the same planet.”

The historic victories of President-elect Barack Obama and environmental champions in Congress create a new era of opportunity for environmental priorities, said Defenders of Wildlife president Rodger Schlickeisen.

“A new day is dawning in Congress and the White House. Environmental champions won major victories at the polls yesterday, and the prospects for environmental progress in 2009 look bright,” he said, urging them to tackle global warming, safeguard endangered species and better protect wildlife on public lands.

“Let’s be clear – we have a lot of work ahead of us. We’ve just had eight years of the most anti-environmental presidency America has ever seen,” said Schlickeisen. “Reversing the damage done by the Bush administration will take years of hard work.”

“Defenders of Wildlife looks forward to working with President Obama and our champions in Congress to reverse President Bush’s assault on our environment and promote a green economy for the people and wildlife of America.”

The Center for Biological Diversity looks forward to working with the Obama administration and the new Congress to take swift action to stem the extinction crisis, reverse the current course toward runaway global warming, and promote the cultural diversity that is the essential foundation of a fulfilling life for all peoples, plants, and animals,” said Executive Director Kierán Suckling.

“Mass extinction, global warming, and erosion of diversity are the greatest threats humanity has ever faced,” he said. “The time left to address them is growing short. In our 20 years advocating for wildlife, wilderness, and untamed culture, we’ve never before witnessed a presidential election with so much promise to actually solve these issues.”

Eli Pariser, executive director of MoveOn.org Political Action, “Our members sense the opportunity to achieve things that seemed improbable if not impossible only a year ago. For our members, this is the culmination of a decade of work to build a progressive, people-driven politics in America.”

After endorsing President-elect Obama in February, MoveOn’s 4.5 million members contributed more than $88 million towards Obama’s presidential campaign, the organization announced today. More than one million MoveOn members worked in a coordinated field effort with the Obama campaign.

“President Obama will face daunting challenges from the day he takes office,” said Pariser. “We look forward, however, to being part of the enormous wave of civic and political engagement that his Presidency has inspired and that will enable him to achieve the things that have been on the top of his agenda and ours. We look forward to the change all of us worked so hard to create.”

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Stan Greenberg

October 23rd, 2008 by Sundance Channel

Leading Democratic pollster and political strategist, Stan Greenberg is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Greenberg Quinlan Rosner. Greenberg has served as polling advisor to President Bill Clinton, President Nelson Mandela, Prime Minister Tony Blair, Prime Minister Ehud Barak, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, and their national campaigns.

Greenberg’s work for private sector organizations – including major corporations, trade associations and public interest organizations – focuses on managing change and reform.

Greenberg is the author of Middle Class Dreams, published by Random House in 1995, which explores the political challenges of social and economic change. He regularly addresses corporate audiences on the changing environment in which they operate. Greenberg’s research is some of the most widely cited in the national media.

1. What’s your favorite political movie?

The Candidate. Very early on captured the tension between idealism and ambition and the role of an amoral but smart consultant who exploits it. The final question of the movie, What Do we Now?, set up much of the ambivalence many now feel about politicians and what guides them.

2. What role do you feel art plays in politics?

With email chains and virtual video, there is so much penetration of arts and culture into the campaigns — as they find audiences in ways not possible in the old forms of communication. But some movies have broken through more broadly, like Wag the Dog, and West Wing, as voters look for leaders who might act in the public interest.

3. What do you think is the biggest issue for the next generation of Americans?

The economic crisis has hit young people hard and the worry about jobs and what hope America offers. Young people are still more optimistic than other voters but this crisis and the last years of stagnation have led many millions to now step up to change things through politics.

4. Who was the first political candidate you were excited to vote for and why?

Robert Kennedy. He was the last national leader who really united black and white for progressive goals for the country. He spoke of inequality and injustice and acted bravely and elegantly. He touched people, even when he went to South Africa to express our conscience at a time that it was under assault in the US and South Africa.

5. What factors are important to you in choosing a president?

Want somebody who will be bold and understand the scale of what our country faces.

6. What issues would you like to see politicians focus more on?

If I could choose one thing, I want a president who will see energy independence and global warming as requiring a war-like mission, somebody who will spur the country to unite behind this cause.

And I need for them to think about inequality and what kind of country we have if we continue on the current course.

7. Which issues would you like to see politicians focus less on?

Junk issues that distract us from the issues the president will have to face after the election

8. Which candidate’s initiatives do you feel better address environmental concerns?

Not drill, baby, drill. I’m intrigued by natural gas a transition to a clean energy policy, but the most important thing is presidential leadership that mobilizes the country and gives us the credibility to address the China and India problem. There is no solution to global warming without bringing those countries along.

9. This is your soapbox – shout it out! What do you need to get off your chest?

I’m tired of timidity in politics.



BOSTON, Massachusetts, April 7, 2008 (ENS) – The world’s largest financial services company, Citi Inc., has joined a network of investors, environmental groups and other public interest organizations working with companies to address sustainability challenges.

Citi was approved March 27 as a Ceres network company by the Ceres board of directors, who cited the company’s leadership on climate change as a determining factor. Companies that join the Ceres company network commit to making continuous strides in improving their sustainability performance and reporting practices.


Citibank ATM machines at a New York
City branch. (Photo by Richard
Alexander Caraballo)

Citi is among more than 70 companies in the Ceres network, including more than 20 Fortune 500 companies. Ceres also directs the Investor Network on Climate Risk, comprised of more than 60 institutional investors who collectively manage over $5 trillion in assets.

“We are pleased and excited to join the Ceres network. Ceres is a well-respected NGO known for its expertise on climate change and stakeholder engagement,” said Pamela Flaherty, president and chief executive of the Citi Foundation and director for citizenship at Citi, “We look forward to partnering with them to further develop our initiatives in this space.”

Citi provides consumer banking and credit, corporate and investment banking, securities brokerage, and wealth management. Citi’s brand names include Citibank, CitiFinancial, Primerica, and Smith Barney.

Until 2004, Citi was one of the world’s top funders of the fossil fuel and logging industries, which made the corporation a major target of the Rainforest Action Network, RAN, and other environmental groups. Embarrassed by demonstrations such as a 35-foot-tall Earth-shaped balloon carrying the message “Citi Lives Richly and the Earth Pays!” at Cornell University and similar critical banners in front of its New York headquarters, in 2004, RAN and Citigroup agreed that the corporation would adopt an environmental policy to guide its lending practices, a step other banks have since taken.

In May 2007, Citi announced its latest expansion of the company’s sustainability program with a $50 billion commitment over the next 10 years to address global climate change.

The company says it intends to act through investments, financings and related activities to support the commercialization and growth of alternative energy and clean technology among the clients and markets it serves, as well as within its own businesses and operations.

“Citi’s commitment to tackle the challenges posed by climate change is exciting,” said Mindy Lubber, president of Ceres. “Citi is well positioned to reduce both its own operational greenhouse gas footprint and those of its clients. Ceres looks forward to working with Citi to develop solutions to the climate threat and further integrate sustainability into the company’s business strategies, products and services.”

Citi joins financial service companies Bank of America, State Street, and Wachovia, which are already members of the Ceres network.

In January, Ceres released a report, “Corporate Governance and Climate Change: the Banking Sector,” which analyzes climate change governance practices of the world’s largest banks. Of the 40 banks scored in the report, Citi was ranked highest among U.S. banks.

The report found that a growing number of banks are beginning to factor the risks of climate change into their businesses, but that more aggressive actions are needed from banks, such as explicitly incorporating carbon costs and climate risk into their lending and investment decision-making.

In response to this growing concern around the carbon impact of investments, Citi joined JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley last month in releasing the Carbon Principles, a new set of guidelines for advisors and lenders to U.S. power companies.

The principles were in response to the financial risks power companies face from emerging carbon-reducing regulations.

“The Carbon Principles are a great start and are heading in the right direction by putting carbon intensive industries on notice that they need to factor carbon costs and climate risks into their business development plans,” Lubber said.


The protests continue. This one took
place on November 16, 2007 at a
Citibank in San Francisco. (Photo
courtesy Rainforest Action Network)

“We are looking forward to seeing Citi and the other bank signatories take these principles a step further by disclosing specifics on actual implementation,” said Lubber, “including carbon pricing.”

Environmentalists are by no means satisfied with Citi’s position. The Rainforest Action Network says the Carbon Principles are “an important step toward recognizing the climate risks associated with financing coal plants” but the group says they are “limited by their lack of any binding commitments and their failure to address the impact of destructive coal extraction methods such as mountaintop removal mining.”

In December, Rebecca Tarbotton, director of Rainforest Action Network’s Global Finance Campaign, pointed out, “Citi is the largest financier of the coal industry, which is by far the leading cause of climate change.”

The environmental group is urging Citi’s new chief executive Vikram Pandit to “set new standards for the banking industry by refusing to invest in outmoded and dangerous industries like coal.”

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BOSTON, Massachusetts, April 6, 2008 (ENS) – The world’s largest financial services company, Citi Inc., has joined a network of investors, environmental groups and other public interest organizations working with companies to address sustainability challenges.

Companies that join the Ceres company network commit to making continuous strides in improving their sustainability performance and reporting practices by engaging with investors, environmental groups, and other stakeholders.

Citi was approved as a Ceres network company by the Ceres board of directors, who cited the company’s leadership on climate change as a determining factor.

Citi is among more than 70 companies in the Ceres network, including more than 20 Fortune 500 companies. Ceres also directs the Investor Network on Climate Risk, comprised of more than 60 institutional investors who collectively manage over $5 trillion in assets.

“We are pleased and excited to join the Ceres network. Ceres is a well-respected NGO known for its expertise on climate change and stakeholder engagement,” said Pamela Flaherty, president and chief executive of the Citi Foundation and director for citizenship at Citi, “We look forward to partnering with them to further develop our initiatives in this space.”

In May 2007, Citi announced its latest expansion of the company’s sustainability program with a $50 billion commitment over the next 10 years to address global climate change.

The company intends to act through investments, financings and related activities to support the commercialization and growth of alternative energy and clean technology among the clients and markets it serves, as well as within its own businesses and operations.

“Citi’s commitment to tackle the challenges posed by climate change is exciting,” said Mindy Lubber, president of Ceres. “Citi is well positioned to reduce both its own operational greenhouse gas footprint and those of its clients. Ceres looks forward to working with Citi to develop solutions to the climate threat and further integrate sustainability into the company’s business strategies, products and services.”

Citi joins financial service companies Bank of America, State Street, and Wachovia, which are already members of the Ceres network.

In January, Ceres released a report, Corporate Governance and Climate Change: the Banking Sector, which analyzes climate change governance practices of the world’s largest banks. Of the 40 banks scored in the report, Citi was ranked highest among U.S. banks.

The report found that a growing number of banks are beginning to factor the risks of climate change into their businesses, but that more aggressive actions are needed from banks, such as explicitly incorporating carbon costs and climate risk into their lending and investment decision-making.

In response to this growing concern around the carbon impact of investments, Citi joined JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley last month in releasing the Carbon Principles, a new set of guidelines for advisors and lenders to U.S. power companies.

The principles were in response to the financial risks power companies face from emerging carbon-reducing regulations.

“The Carbon Principles are a great start and are heading in the right direction by putting carbon intensive industries on notice that they need to factor carbon costs and climate risks into their business development plans,” Lubber said,

“We are looking forward to seeing Citi and the other bank signatories take these principles a step further by disclosing specifics on actual implementation,” said Lubber, “including carbon pricing.”

View This Story On Eco–mmunity Map.