Clean Air-Cool Planet is the Northeast's leading nonprofit organization dedicated to finding and promoting solutions to global warming.



Clean Air-Cool Planet is the Northeast's leading nonprofit organization dedicated to finding and promoting solutions to global warming.


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Special Conference Edition:
CLIMATE SOLUTIONS FOR THE NORTHEAST
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Leadership Stories

Presenters at the Climate Solutions conference will address a range of relevant topics.

Ann Weaver Hart photo

Former New Hampshire Governor Jeanne Shaheen is best known for leadership on the environment. She spearheaded the nation's first joint effort to reduce pollution emitted by her state's three major fossil-fuel power plants. The Clean Power Strategy, enacted in January of 2001, saw the governor forge a coalition of politicians, environmental activists, and public health workers to develop legislation aimed at cutting down on multiple pollutants. She was also one of the prime movers in environmental efforts at the New England Governors Conference, leading, in 2001, to the New England Governors and Eastern Canadian Premiers climate action plan.

Ann Weaver Hart photo

Ann Weaver Hart, President, University of New Hampshire: What are the obstacles and the benefits of undertaking climate action and advocacy on campuses? The University of New Hampshire has a broad spectrum of efforts underway, including groundbreaking energy conservation measures, a campus-wide, multi-faceted Sustainability Program, and the world-renowned research Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans and Space.

John DiStephano photo

John DeStefano, Mayor, City of New Haven: The City of New Haven, Ct.—a member of Cities for Climate Protection—has taken a number of aggressive steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Mayor DeStefano will join a Monday plenary discussion on policy leadership, while a breakout on Tuesday will feature a panel of mayors—moderated by Mayor Peter Clavelle of Burlington, Vt. They will discuss the unique position of cities and towns in addressing many of the planning and policy issues that get at the heart of climate change solutions.


Breakout Spotlight

Just two of the nine breakout sessions at Climate Solutions for the Northeast demonstrate the breadth and depth of this conference:

One, Effective Communication for Global Warming Solutions (Monday afternoon), will help anyone dealing with the climate change issue—from environmental organizations to city planners and green corporations—create an accurate and effective message.

Transport Solutions: Beyond Tailpipes (Tuesday morning) covers the full range of options: vehicle technologies, fuel alternatives, measures to reduce vehicle miles traveled (VMTs) and restructuring communities in ways that help eliminate motor vehicles.

The communications breakout, chaired by Joe Keefe, president of NewCircle Communications, includes nationally known political strategist Mark Mellman of The Mellman Group, Cindy Luppi, organizing director of the Clean Water Fund, and Mary Tkach, vice president of environmental sustainability for the Aveda Corporation.

Stephanie Pollack, acting president of the Conservation Law Foundation, will moderate the transportation breakout. Rob Sargent, senior energy policy analyst with the National Association of State PIRGs, will discuss current and future choices for vehicles and fuels.

Steve Winkelman, manger of transportation for the Center for Clean Air Policy, will detail long-range planning choices to reduce vehicle use, while Don Strait, executive director of The Connecticut Fund for the Environment, and Chris Bruhl, president of the Business Council of Southwestern Connecticut, will offer a joint presentation on business efforts to curtail VMTs in Connecticut’s crowded southwest corridor.

MAJOR CLIMATE CONFERENCE TO BE HELD NEXT MONTH IN CONNECTICUT

CEOs, mayors, university presidents and top environmental policymakers from across the Northeastern United States and Eastern Canada are invited to gather May 11 through 13 in Hartford, Connecticut to discuss the next steps in implementing state and regional climate action plans.

Spotlight on Keynote Speakers


Amory Lovins photoAmory B. Lovins, chief executive officer of Rocky Mountain Institute, is a consultant experimental physicist educated at Harvard and Oxford.

Mr. Lovins’s work focuses on transforming the automobile, real estate, electricity, water, semiconductor, and several other manufacturing sectors toward advanced resource productivity. He has briefed 16 heads of state, held several visiting academic chairs, authored or co-authored 28 books and hundreds of papers, and consulted for scores of industries and governments worldwide.

He has received an Oxford MA (by virtue of being a don), eight honorary doctorates, a MacArthur Fellowship, the Heinz, Lindbergh, Right Livelihood ("Alternative Nobel"), World Technology, and Time Hero for the Planet awards, the Happold Medal, and the Nissan, Shingo, Mitchell, and Onassis Prizes.

The Wall Street Journal named Mr. Lovins one of 39 people worldwide "most likely to change the course of business in the '90s"; Newsweek has praised him as "one of the Western world's most influential energy thinkers"; and Car magazine ranked him the 22nd most powerful person in the global automotive industry.

Rev. Sally Grover photoThe Rev. Sally Grover Bingham, Founder of The Regeneration Project, is a priest in the Episcopal Diocese of California and has been the chair of its Commission for the Environment for the last eight years.

The Rev. Bingham has been active in the environmental community for 20 years and has brought widespread attention to the linkage between ecological issues and the Christian faith, which led to formation of Interfaith Power and Light organizations in many states.

She serves on the national board of Environmental Defense, is the Environmental Minister at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco, and is an appointed member of the City and County of San Francisco's Commission on the Environment.

Frank Cassidy photoFrank Cassidy, President and Chief Operating Officer of PSEG Power LLC, since 1999, was previously President and Chief Executive Officer of PSEG Energy Technologies.

A leader moving PSEG—a company committed to operating “in a manner that protects the environment, and the health and safety of employees, customers and the public”—forward in the areas of developing alternative energy sources and clear-air technologies, Mr. Cassidy had been Senior Vice President Fossil Generation of Public Service Electric and Gas Company (PSE&G) since February 1995, and Vice President Transmission Systems since November 1989.

He serves on the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Air Act Advisory Committee and on the boards of the Center for Clean Air Policy, the Northeast States Clean Air Foundation, the Association of Edison Illuminating Companies, and the Electric Power Supply Association.

Made possible through a grant from the Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, Climate Solutions for the Northeast is being organized by Clean Air – Cool Planet. Conferees will address the business, public policy and communications issues at hand in the region’s drive to reduce the greenhouse gases emissions threatening its security, environment, public health, and economic viability.

The conference is being held at the Hartford Hilton, a participant in the CERES Green Hotel Initiative. Registration and hotel information is available at www.cleanair-coolplanet.org/action/register_csn.php.

Clean Air-Cool Planet will present its first Northeast Climate Leadership Awards during the conference. The awards will go to a campus, business and municipality exhibiting extraordinary leadership in emissions reductions.

Among the keynote speakers who will address the 300 or so participants are Frank Cassidy, President and CEO of PSEG Power, and the Rev. Sally Bingham, Executive Director of the Regeneration Project. Amory Lovins, CEO of the Rocky Mountain Institute, will give the final keynote address at the Tuesday luncheon.

At the conference, leading scientists and policy specialists will examine climate change impacts on the Northeast, and look at the state and regional action plans recently adopted to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the public and private sectors. Clean Air-Cool Planet has attracted dozens of decision-makers from cities and towns, campuses and business who understand the implications of continued climate change in the Northeast. In breakout sessions, these leading men and women will share the challenges they face in reducing greenhouse gas emissions and discuss the compelling reasons why reductions make sense for their organizations.

The Connecticut Clean Energy Fund and PSEG are conference co-sponsors; KeySpan and SmartPowerCT are also providing generous support. A contribution from Shaw’s Supermarkets will offset carbon emissions related to travel and hotel operations for the conference.


Diverse Offerings for the Business-Minded at Climate Solutions

For leaders interested in learning how climate change impacts and greenhouse gas reduction measures might relate to their businesses, Climate Solutions for the Northeast will offer a useful variety of speakers, breakout sessions and networking opportunities. Among the breakout session offerings:


Northeast Leadership on Renewable Technologies and Alternative Fuels

Northeast companies are already leading the way in creating new and innovative energy technologies—while creating jobs, economic growth and expanded opportunity. This panel will focus on solar, wind, and fuel cell technologies and how together they represent a renewable hydrogen energy future, being shaped right here in the region by these and other visionaries.

Moderator:   Arthur Diedrick, Chairman of Development, State of Connecticut
Panelists:   Steve Zwolinski, President, GE Wind Energy
    Walter “Chip” Schroeder, President, Proton Energy Systems
    Jan van Dokkum, President, UTC Power
    Mark A. Farber, President and CEO, Evergreen Solar

These business leaders will discuss how their technologies will contribute to a better environment while creating shareholder value. They will talk about what companies like theirs are looking for from communities, towns, cities, and states in order to site manufacturing facilities and deploy their clean energy technologies in the Northeast.


Business Case for Greenhouse Gas Reductions

Businesses of all sectors and sizes are recognizing the organizational value of addressing their own contributions to climate change. Want to learn more about the options and benefits available to your company? Plan to be here…

Moderator:   Dan Reicher, Executive VP Northern Power Systems
Panelists:   Gordon Peterson, VP Organizational Effectiveness, The Timberland Company: Timberland has taken a three-pronged emissions reduction approach, focusing on energy efficiency, renewable power and green freight.
    Christopher Lloyd, Director, Environmental and Safety Technical Services, Verizon, Inc.: Telecommunications giant Verizon has experienced a tremendous payback on a $25 million investment in energy-efficiency over the past couple years, and is also involved in cutting edge energy research and development.
    Bob Bechtold, President, Harbec Plastics, Ontario, NY: A privately held, locally-based manufacturing operation, Harbec is a model for the relevance and applicability of distributed generation.


Climate Risk From Insurance and Investment Perspectives

Corporations in the region are beginning to acknowledge, through annual environmental reports, economic exposure due to climate change. Some are motivated by the need to compete globally, and others by the threat of shareholder resolutions. Ask these leaders in the financial, insurance and investment worlds, and they’ll tell you—business can’t afford NOT to act on climate issues.

Moderator:   Helen Sahi, Managing Director, Corporate Environmental Affairs, Fleet Boston Financial
Panelists:   Mindy Lubber – Executive Director, CERES
    John Cusack – Senior VP – Marsh, Inc.

Among the topics to be discussed by these heavy hitters from the nation’s seventh largest bank, the Coalition for an Environmentally Responsive Economy, and Wall Street, will be anticipated changes in their lending, investment, and underwriting practices; implications for their customers; risk reduction (both mitigation and adaptation) and the need for financial industry response and preparations.

 


Reminder: Reserve Hotel Rooms by April 18

The Hartford Hilton has reserved a limited number of rooms for conference attendees at a nightly rate of $89.00. This block of rooms is available only until April 18.

To reserve accommodations at conference rate, call Hilton Hartford Hotel 1-860-728-5151 or click here for online reservations


 

Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation
Supported by a generous grant from the Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation


Co-sponsored by:    Connecticut Clean Energy Fund Logo        PSEG logo

Supported by:        Keyspan logo         Smart Power logo

Carbon offsets for this conference are being provided through a contribution from Shaw's Supermarkets.   Shaw's Supermarkets logo