Professor David Victor Co-Writes Feature Piece for Boston Review
Living with Coal: Climate Policy's Most Inconvenient Truth
09/09/2009
David G. Victor and Richard K. Morse,
Boston Review

Governments around the world are now struggling with the question of how to reduce emissions of the greenhouse gases that cause global warming. The task is bigger than any other environmental challenge humanity has faced. Carbon dioxide, the leading human cause of global warming, is an intrinsic byproduct of burning the fossil fuels that power the world economy and thus difficult to regulate.
All fossil fuels emit carbon dioxide when burned, but the real heart of the warming problem is coal. Emissions from coal are growing faster than from any other fossil fuel. Beyond greenhouse-gas pollution, coal is linked to a host of other environmental troubles such as local air pollution, which is why a powerful coalition of environmentalists in the richest and greenest countries is rallying to stop coal…
Read the full article here. This piece appeared in the September/October 2009 issue of Boston Review.

