Mark Whitworth: Biodiversity and Vermont’s Climate Action Plan

This commentary is by Mark Whitworth, president of Energize Vermont, a non-profit organization that promotes sensible energy and climate policies for the state.

We are witnessing a stunning global loss of biodiversity that some are calling the Sixth Great Extinction. An asteroid impact caused the Fifth Great Extinction 65 million years ago.

The United Nations estimates that one million species are now at risk of extinction. UN scientists describe consequences of this tragic and heartbreaking loss that vary from loss of food security to increasingly frequent pandemics to collapsing economies and loss of cultural heritage.

Mark Whitworth

Mark Whitworth is the president of Energize Vermont

Human-caused habitat degradation and pollution are at the root of this crisis. Climate change is an accelerant, forcing countless species to find new homes by climbing in elevation or moving toward the poles. But, in too many cases, human activity has degraded migration corridors and potential migration destinations, leaving species with nowhere to go.

Vermonters might like to see themselves as leaders in environmental matters. But it is Florida, and not Vermont, that is showing leadership in safeguarding biodiversity by creating “a national model for how to safeguard threatened species for generations.”

Where would we start if we wanted to help combat the loss of biodiversity here in Vermont? The international Staying Connected Initiative has identified critical wildlife linkages that connect the Adirondacks to the Canadian Maritimes. Six of the 10 linkages include land in Vermont.

It is a painful irony that Vermont has encouraged some of this essential habitat to be fragmented and whittled away under the pretext of climate action. Consider Green Mountain Power’s industrial wind turbine complex in Lowell. It has permanently degraded vital Staying Connected habitat. In exchange, the project’s promoters promised us that it would avoid 74,000 tons of CO2 emissions each year — the amount of carbon produced by Metro New York City traffic in less than half a day. Our wildlife habitat is irreplaceable and far too valuable to be squandered in this way.

Protecting the Staying Connected linkages is the bare minimum we should aspire to. The Half-Earth Project, inspired by renowned biologist E. O. Wilson, would have us go further by “working to conserve half the land and sea to safeguard the bulk of biodiversity, including ourselves.”

A serious effort in Vermont to stem the loss of biodiversity might start with protecting those forests that our own Agency of Natural Resources has designated as “highest priority.” These include core blocks of forest habitat and the connectivity blocks that tie them together.

In 2020, the Vermont Legislature enacted the Global Warming Solutions Act, which created the 23-person Vermont Climate Council. The council, along with dozens of contractors, state employees, and subcommittee appointees, is now developing a Climate Action Plan that is intended to promote climate adaptation, enhance our resilience to climate impacts, and mitigate climate change (by reducing our emissions of greenhouse gases).

Many members of the council community are expressing concerns that the Global Warming Solutions Act was written in a way that does not empower them to safeguard biodiversity, preserve our natural resource heritage, or honor cultural priorities. That’s because the act’s only hard targets relate to emissions reduction. In the words of one climate council subcommittee member, emissions reduction is the bottom line; everything else is just placed on a wish list.

At a recent meeting of the Vermont House’s Energy and Technology Committee, Chair Tim Briglin acknowledged that Vermont cannot affect how warm the planet gets. He went on to suggest that more should be done to prepare Vermont communities for the things we can actually affect.

Chair Briglin is right. We Vermonters have little influence over atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases. But we have a tremendous amount of influence over land use practices. It is time to use that influence to ensure the survival of the species who depend upon Vermont’s wildlife habitat and its connection to habitat beyond our borders.

Some of these practices can serve double-duty by helping to mitigate climate change. According to the UN, changing our land practices alone could deliver 30 percent of the emissions reductions that we need to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement on climate action by 2030.  It is likely that most Vermonters would embrace these practices enthusiastically, but under our new climate law, their beneficial effects would not even count.

Please join me in urging our legislators to update and improve the Global Warming Solutions Act so we can:

  • Give the Climate Council the flexibility to create a plan that does not sacrifice adaptation and resilience benefits in order to serve the single bottom line of emissions reduction
  • Find a way to count the benefits of the UN’s nature-based solutions to help us mitigate climate change in environmentally smart ways
  • Stem the loss of biodiversity by protecting our highest-priority forest blocks from being degraded in the name of climate action—because nothing is more important than safeguarding the bulk of biodiversity, including ourselves.
Images courtesy of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Mark Whitworth

5 thoughts on “Mark Whitworth: Biodiversity and Vermont’s Climate Action Plan

  1. There is a growing magma chamber underneath Vermont. We must mobilize immediately and marshal our resources to mitigate the effects of the volcanic apocalypse. It’s for the children.

  2. Well at least he’s quoting his boss, the United nations! Yet another person pimpimg for the new world order. Around these parts we have so many bears they are a complete nuisance. We’ve got too many!

    VNRC wants to reduce the population of Vermont to 200,000, probably this guy too. It’s all part of the new world order, too bad he doesn’t realize he’s being used.mthey have a name for that too.

  3. Saving biodiversity is a worthy goal. Tying it to global warming is a fool’s errand: there’s no CO2 warming worth bothering about.

    Climate science is the “science” of computer modelling and confusing causation. It excels in confusing causes and projecting effects. It’s non-science that’s only grown because so much money has been thrown at it. If you’d paid people to find global cooling instead, I guarantee they would’ve found it (remember the recent cold snaps in the US and Europe? Global cooling!! Proof.)

    Here’s an excellent documentary on Swedish wind farms that has relevance for Vermont: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7RgyLDVlAg4

  4. Mark,
    Vermont has CO2 reduction targets that are totally meaningless, because if Vermont were to disappear, the world would not even notice it.

    Vermont is just a fly on an elephant’s ass.

    It would be far better for Vermont the have:

    1) super-efficient housing and other buildings, which would require very little energy for heating and cooling,
    2) highly efficient light duty vehicles, such as the non-plug-in Toyota Prius, which gets 50 plus mpg.

    All else, such as increased, HEAVILY SUBSIDIZED RE, i.e., wind, and solar, and batteries, would be 3 to 5 times more expensive, on an A-to-Z, lifetime basis.

    • Attitude changes must not be dictated in a centralized commend/control manner, i.e., so much percent CO2 reduction by this date, or else the world goes to hell.

      That tyrannical, break-their-will approach will never work, anywhere.

      Attitude changes must start at home, and expand from there in circles.

      People who live in efficient houses, and drive efficient vehicles, automatically become different people.

      People who live in energy-hog houses, and drive gas-guzzling vehicles have wasteful, dissipating lifestyles.

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