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Democrats offer long-shot bill to meet Obama’s climate change challenge

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The president took pains Tuesday night to reinforce the message he’d sent during his inaugural address: that climate change is real, and that the United States must respond regardless of the polarizing politics on the issue.

That was the same message from top U.S. climate scientists Wednesday, who warned a Senate panel led by Boxer that there will be growing consequences associated with climate change.

One of the scientists sounded a dire warning about the potential effects of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, which environmental groups oppose because it would tap Canadian oil sands, which are higher in carbon emissions than other sources. Dozens of climate activists and celebrities were arrested Wednesday in front of the White House for a protest of the pipeline, which would run through the nation’s belly down to Texas.

“If we are partners to that and accelerate that activity, we’re moving this curve in the wrong direction,” said James McCarthy, a professor of biological oceanography at Harvard University.

The American Petroleum Institute released a poll Wednesday that found widespread public support for the pipeline.

The Harris Interactive poll, part of the industry group’s effort to ramp up support for the project, found that 69 percent of those surveyed favored building the pipeline. Eighty-three percent thought the pipeline would strengthen the nation’s energy security, said institute President Jack Gerard. Even more — 92 percent of those surveyed — think jobs should be a consideration when the administration decides whether to approve it, Gerard said.

“Millions of people are still looking for jobs in the United States, and we still import nearly half our oil, much from suppliers far less reliable and friendly than Canada,” he said.

There’s a “Cheerio effect” to climate change, said J. Marshall Shepherd, the president of the American Meteorological Society and a professor at the University of Georgia. Ordinary people see the consequences, from rising sea levels that threaten coastal communities, more severe droughts and rainfall in places that are unaccustomed to them, and higher food costs thanks to disrupted weather patterns, he said.

“It’s not just about polar bears,” he said.

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