By ANGELA CHARLTON Associated Press Writer After several years with a relatively low profile
under President George W. Bush, the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency "is back on the job," EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson told The
Associated Press on Thursday during a trip to Paris. What the
EPA does domestically this year will be watched closely overseas.
Nations worldwide are working toward a major meeting in Copenhagen in
December aimed at producing a new global climate pact. The U.S.
position on curbing its own pollution and helping poor countries adapt
to global warming is seen as key to any new pact. Jackson was
in Paris for international talks on how rich governments can include
global climate concerns in overall development aid. She
dismissed worries that economic downturn was cutting into aid
commitments or investment in new energy resources. She said the United
States should take the lead on clean energy technology, recession or
no.
"We have to get in the race now—and win it," she said. "I don't expect a moving backwards because of recession."
At climate talks in Paris earlier this week, European environment ministers welcomed greater U.S. commitment to environmental issues under the Obama administration—but said it still wasn't aiming high enough in its targets for cutting U.S. emissions.
Jackson said a shift in the American mindset is only beginning. Talking
about energy efficiency and saying companies should pay to
pollute—"that's a revolutionary message for our country," she said. For
a long time, she said, "People didn't even expect the EPA to show up"
at events, much less set policies that could be seen as examples for
the rest of the world. "Now it seems like every day we're rolling back or reconsidering a Bush era policy on clean air," she said. She
said it was time for the United States to take a more active role in
limiting chemical pollutants, after falling behind Europe in that
domain. The U.S. also has lessons to learn from countries such
as the Netherlands, she said, after visiting its low-lying, flood-prone
lands to study ways cities like her native New Orleans can better
manage water.
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