Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee
366 Dirksen
01/04/2008 at 02:30PM
From E&E News:
The agency’s fire suppression efforts would get a $148 million
increase – to just under $1 billion – under the plan, a total based on
the 10-year average of fire suppression costs. Last year, the Forest
Service spent $1.4 billion fighting fires, the National Interagency
Fire Center said.
The Bush administration budget proposal would provide $297 million for
projects to reduce hazardous fuels, down from $310 million in fiscal
2008. Fire preparedness would fall to $588 million from $666 million
in fiscal 2008.
Several lawmakers last week slammed the proposed budget, saying it
overemphasizes firefighting at the cost of fire prevention and forest
restoration. . . Kimbell will be the sole witness before House
appropriators on Wednesday. The chairman of the Interior subcommittee,
Rep. Norm Dicks (D-Wash.), was also highly critical of the agency’s
proposed budget cuts.
The Forest Legacy Program, which helps conserve threatened private
forests, would be reduced $40 million, to $12.5 million. The budget
would also eliminate $40 million that Dicks placed in the fiscal 2008
budget for road decommissioning and reclamation.
“The Forest Service has just gotten crushed,” Dicks said in an
interview last week. “It’s cut 16 percent … and they don’t have enough
money over there to do the trail work, the road work, the forestry
with the states, the conservation.”
Witness
- Abigail R. Kimbell, Chief, U.S. Forest Service
House Appropriations Committee
Senate Appropriations Committee
Interior and Environment Subcommittee
B-308 Rayburn
13/02/2008 at 10:00AM
The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) invites you to learn
about the likely effects that global climate change will have on the
structure, function, and ecological dynamics of forest ecosystems in the
United States. As Congress discusses climate change policies and
legislation, it is important to develop a better understanding of these
impacts.
Panel
- Dr. Anthony C. Janetos, Director, The Joint Global Change Research
Institute
- Dr. Allen M. Solomon, National Program Leader for Global Change
Research, U.S. Forest Service
- Dr. Anthony L. Westerling, Assistant Professor, Sierra Nevada Research
Institute, UC Merced
Changes in average annual temperature, precipitation, length and timing
of the growing seasons, and other climate-related factors can result in
a number of both short- and long-term changes to forests, including
altered growth rates, changes in stand structure and dynamics, and
shifts in geographic distribution of both individual tree species and
forest types. In addition to these direct effects, climate change has
the potential to indirectly change the structure and dynamics of the
entire forest ecosystem by affecting insect infestations, wildfire
patterns, and other key processes and components of forested landscapes.
In 2005, mortality due to mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae)
alone affected over 3 million acres, and this number is rapidly
increasing over a significant portion of the intermountain West. Recent
studies have tied both increases in catastrophic wildfires and the rapid
expansion of bark beetle infestations to climate change. These changes
will have dramatic and far-reaching effects on biodiversity, ecosystem
functioning, water management, and recreation and tourism, as well as
the multi-billion dollar forest products industry in the United States.
This briefing is part of an EESI initiative
focusing on sustainable forest bioenergy. To adequately assess the role
that forests can play in addressing climate change, it is critical that
we first have a firm understanding of the effects that climate change
will have on forests. Biomass assessments and carbon sequestration
formulae that pre-suppose static forest dynamics and processes will
inevitably result in unreliable conclusions. As one of the key elements
of the global carbon cycle, it is essential that the dynamic interaction
between forests and climate must be taken into account when discussing
bioenergy, carbon sequestration, afforestation or other forest-based
solutions to climate change.
This briefing is open to the public and no reservations are required.
For more information, contact Jetta Wong at 202-662-1885
([email protected]) or Jesse Caputo at 202-662-1882 ([email protected])
Environmental and Energy Study Institute
1334 Longworth
11/02/2008 at 02:00PM
Institute of Ecosystem Studies President Dr. William
Schlesinger is going
to be speaking at 6:00 pm this Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington,
D.C., about his recent work on the interaction between forests and
climate—and its implications for how and whether carbon offsets should
be allowed.
Glenn Hurwitz has more at
Grist.
Before coming to IES, Dr. Schlesinger served
in a dual capacity at Duke University, as both the James B. Duke
Professor of Biogeochemistry and Dean of the Nicholas School of the
Environment and Earth Sciences.
255 11th Street SE (close to the Eastern Market metro stop)
RSVP with Glenn Hurwitz (glenn dot hurowitz at
ecologyfund dot net)
American Lands Alliance
20/09/2007 at 06:00PM