
Al Gore: Palpable Vindication for the former VP.
Financial Times Deutschland,
Germany
A Well-Deserved
Nobel for Al Gore
"In the
not-too-distant-future, the United States will be a superpower in preventing
carbon dioxide emissions. Al Gore has set this movement in motion."
By Timm Kragenow
Translated By Ulf Behncke
October 12, 2007
Germany
- Financial Times Deutschland -
Original Article (German)
The Nobel
Peace Prize for Al Gore and the U.N.-climate council, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [IPPC] once and for all makes 2007
the year of protecting the climate. With no help from George W. Bush, Al Gore
has managed to bring the problem of global warming to the attention of the
American people.
By now,
even the least-informed investor has gotten the message that the amount of
exhaust the atmosphere can absorb - an essential element in future economic
development - is limited. Those who depend on technologies that result in high
carbon dioxide emissions, run the risk of paying a very high price for
disposing of those greenhouse gasses in the future.
Up to now it has been Europe which has been the climate
protection-trailblazer,
with all of the advantages and disadvantages that this implies. But it's
already becoming clear that climate protection has moved to the very top of the
U.S. political agenda. It's to Al Gore's credit that he found a way to make the
dangers and potential costs of the greenhouse effect clear to the American
public. That he has received the Nobel Prize for this is just as it should be:
He has opened a new era in American society by dispelling ignorance and
creating awareness.
American
industry has already recognized that in the future, even the United States will
have to limit emissions. Large U.S.-based corporations
are calling for a fixed
limit, because they need a reliable framework to work with. It will probably be
only a matter of months or a year or two for this to happen. But the driving
force of U.S. innovation has already spun into action. Venture capitalists in
Silicon Valley are beginning are preparing for the day that silicon will be
used not only for computer chips, but also increasingly for producing solar
panels.
In the
not-too-distant-future, the United States will be a superpower in preventing
carbon dioxide emissions. Al Gore has set this movement in motion. And this
after he once appeared to be the big loser and most unlucky fellow in American
politics. Now he's the big winner. Congratulations.
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