Saturday, February 25, 2012

Environmental ‘Disaster' Looms for Florida by Cindy Swirko

Florida as we know it — beaches, fresh drinking water, the Everglades — will disappear unless action is taken to curb climate change, national environmental leader Carol Browner said at a dinner Friday night.

"Doing nothing simply spells disaster," said Browner, a University of Florida law graduate, Miami native and former administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency. "We have to get started. Further delay will only make it more difficult and more expensive."

Browner spoke at a dinner Friday night as part of the UF Levin College of Law's annual environmental conference, which this year was titled "Fishable? Swimmable? 40 Years of Water Law in Florida and the United States."

Browner is the former secretary of Florida Department of Environmental 

Protection and most recently was director of the White House Office of Energy and Climate Change Policy. She also served as President Bill Clinton's EPA administrator.

 Browner said the National Academy of Scientists estimates that 98 percent of scientists believe climate change is real, man-made and under way.
If it continues, Florida stands to lose its beaches from a rise in sea levels, salt water intrusion will reduce fresh water, severe storms will increase and other damage will occur, Browner predicted.

"It kind of begins to sound like a disaster movie, but unfortunately, it's not. It's reality," Browner said.

Conversely, spurring industries such as solar and wind power to combat climate change will create new businesses and lead to economic growth, she said. The U.S. is already a leading exporter of such technology to Europe and China, Browner said.

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