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Issue date: 3/5/09
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Act to Reduce Greenhouse gases passes Senate

Bill proposes 25 percent emissions cut by 2020, administrators say Hopkins is on track to meet goal even earlier

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The University's climate policies are in line with the proposed bill in the State Senate.
Media Credit: Daniel Litwin
The University's climate policies are in line with the proposed bill in the State Senate.

This past Monday, legislators in the Maryland Senate voted to approve Senate Bill 278, which commits the state to a 25 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from 2006 levels by the year 2020.

Hopkins has already been making headway toward reducing its greenhouse gas emissions, and administrators believe that the reduction will be achieved ahead of the proposed deadline.

SB 278, the Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Act of 2009, is in agreement with the gas reduction goals set by the Maryland Commission on Climate Change. It is now moving to the Maryland House of Delegates.

The bill mandates that "on or before Dec. 31, 2012," the Department of the Environment will adopt a final plan "to reduce statewide greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent from 2006 levels by 2020."

In 2007, Dr. William Brody implemented the Hopkins Task Force on Climate Change with the mission of reducing greenhouse gases on campus.

The Task Force, headed by Professor Benjamin Hobbs of the Department of Geography Environmental Engineering, remains confident of the University's success should the bill's mandates be approved.

"According to the Climate Change Task Force's recommendations to the President, we recommend that a 50 percent reduction be achieved by 2025, and we believe that these reductions are feasible and economic. The figure in our summary shows that we would achieve the 25 percent goal by 2020 by a wide margin," Hobbs wrote in an e-mail to the News-Letter.

"I believe that the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative is a useful demonstration of the concept of carbon trading, and represents important state leadership that will, I hope, result in more effective federal legislation," Hobbs wrote.

Numerous Hopkins student groups also showed support for the bill and are helping the Task Force meet its goals of greenhouse gas reduction.

One of these groups, the Sustainable Hopkins Infrastructure Program (SHIP), is a student wing of the Task Force.

"The mission of SHIP is to reduce carbon emissions through implementation of various programs and we support the new bill to further that goal," sophomore Dan Teran, the student director of SHIP, said.
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Crystal Heshmat

posted 4/03/09 @ 7:55 PM EST

Interested in Sustainability and Climate Change? You may wish to attend the one day "Introduction to Permaculture" course offered on Saturday April 18 at the Heathcote Community in Freeland, MD starting at 8:30 am. (Continued…)

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