Climate One 2012

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2012

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A look back at the people and voices of Climate One in 2012.

Transcript of Climate One 2012

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2012

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energyeconomy

environmentto understand any of them

you’ll need to understand them all

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“We are proving up the case that we can have utility scale solar power in this country and the public lands are leading the way.”

DAVID HAYESDeputy Secretary, U.S. Department of Interior

“We have to do something that improves the habitat while at the same time producing the renewable energy.”

JOHN LAIRDSecretary, California Resources Agency

“The potential here is to have a result where the whole ecosystem is actually better off after development than before development.”

DAVID FESTAWest Coast Vice President, Environmental Defense Fund

“[Solar is] going to become a significant energy supply but it’s never going to supply 100 percent and even anything approaching that.”

MICHAEL HATFIELDDirector of Development, First Solar

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“Residential solar here in California actually did pretty well during the recession.”

DAVID BAKERReporter, San Francisco Chronicle

“Investors who have been investing for a long time in renewable energy still see growth and they see a positive future.”

CASSANDRA SWEETReporter, Dow Jones

“I would say that natural gas is cleaner than coal but it’s certainly not a renewable source of energy.”

DANA HULLReporter, San Jose Mercury News

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“[The CAFE standard] is the single biggest step in a generation to get our country off of oil and cut carbon pollution. This is a big deal.”

ROLAND HWANGDirector of Transportation Programs, NRDC

“The electric car companies and startup companies like ours are here to develop new products that now have a chance to exist because the demand is there, and now the regulation matches that demand.”

CHRIS PAULSONVP of Strategy, Coda Automotive

“I believe that we can innovate our way out of our disasters, relying on the excellent technology that comes to the fore, if we can also get the policies and the incentives right.”

MARY NICHOLSChair, California Air Resources Board

“[The oil companies] don’t scratch our back and we’re not scratching theirs at all. We want to build cars and trucks that run on anything but petroleum.”

SHAD BALCHEnvironment and Energy Communications, General Motors

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CLIMATE ONE CONVERSATIONS

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“We’re trying to apply a price to carbon, [which] means that the amount of money that we now spend on our fossil fuel generated energy does not reflect anything close to the actual cost of that energy.”

MARK SCHAPIROJournalist, Center for Investigative Reporting

“The price of resources is going up and it’s going to stay up. And when that happens, you’re going to have to readjust your production profiles, your investment profiles and they [Brazil, China] are anticipating the fact that this is going to be the trend of the next 20 years which is already upon us.”

TOM HELLERExecutive Director, Climate Policy Initiative; Professor, Stanford Law School

“China’s indication in Durban that they were ultimately going to be willing to take on some sort of cap probably by 2020 or something like that, is clearly the signal the world’s been waiting for.”

MARC STUARTCo-Founder, EcoSecurities

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“No matter how environmentally better, how much a particular power source is going to reduce carbon emission, reduce air particulates, reduce all the things that come with conventional power plants, there’s going to be somebody who doesn’t want it wherever it’s going to be placed.”

FELICITY BARRINGERReporter, The New York Times

“The whole issue – is the climate changing, is the earth warning – went from being kind of mostly decided in the public place to being a political issue where people were still fighting about that basic question.”

MARC LIFSHERReporter, Los Angeles Times

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“The first time I was interviewed by the press, I was stunned with the following reaction, some guy says, ‘Do you believe in global warming?’ And I said, ‘Well yeah, I do.’ ...

“We want to be part of the solution. We do not want to be part of the problem. We live in this country. I have grandchildren and children and I want them to inherit a better earth than we did, and I think quite frankly our generation, it was 1970, the EPA was put in the – the water and the air in this country is cleaner than it was when I was growing up in the 50s and 60s and I think it ought to be cleaner next year than it is today. We’re not going to get there for free.”

DAN AKERSONChairman and CEO, General Motors

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“Support your local community. That’s what I always say, this is our village.”

ANDREW SWALLOWFounder, Mixt Greens;

Author, Mixt Salads: A Chef’s Bold Creations

“Good concepts with local entrepreneurs only can find money from high flyer, venture capitalists, hedge funds, big banks, and we need to change this.”

MICHAEL SHUMANAuthor, Local Dollars Local Sense

“So many people crave tangible investments, things that they see where their money is going.”

DAN ROSENFounder and CEO, Solar Mosaic

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“One challenge with water resource is very often that it is managing isolation, you know, according to the political boundaries, when actually has nothing to do with the water shed – the natural boundaries. And in many cases, nobody is really in charge of managing this resource.”

LAURENT AUGUSTECEO, Veolia Water Americas

“We’re not talking about water development. ... It’s water management. How do we more properly use the water that we have?”

JONAS MINTONWater Policy Advisor, Planning and Conservation League

“Right now the [water] policy is disconnected and I think the next 10 years is going to be about much more sophisticated general linkages between food and energy and water policy.”

JASON MORRISONProgram Director, Pacific Institute

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“What’s an issue that connects people regardless of race or gender or economic status? Food; [it’s] really the connecting factor.”

ADARSHA SHIVAKUMARStanford student, litigation plaintiff

“You don’t have to travel to help the world, and you can actually make a stronger impact when you stay in your community because you already know a network of people. ... Find something you’re passionate about and do it responsibly.”

TANIA PULIDOGreen For All Fellow; Brower Youth Award winner

“When young people speak up, people do listen.”

ABIGAIL BORAHStudent, SustainUS.org

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“Should the US or California be going its own way on climate change regulation without the rest of the world joining in?”

LOREN KAYEPresident, California Foundation for

Commerce and Education

“In the energy space, a lot of Americans believe that you can’t change policy at the national level, because big energy companies and their lobbyists control the system.”

DONNIE FOWLERClean Tech Strategist

“What we want out of cap-and-trade is cleaner air. We want good, clean energy jobs. We want to reduce our dependence on foreign oil.”

DAVE METZPollster, FM3

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“[Tesla is] the one company that kind does get it; these are an emotional purchase and it’s not some dumbed down appliance you have to make really boring to get people to accept. Vehicles are all about passion in one way or another. They are about the emotional experience.”

CHELSEA SEXTONConsulting Producer, Who Killed the Electric Car?

“It’s exciting to me that there can be a disruptive startup company that’s trying to disrupt the car companies in general versus the large automakers creating their own EVs or just a little bit less disruptive and exciting.”

KATIE FEHRENBACHERSenior Writer, GigaOM

“You can always pay more for more powerful batteries and that would give you the range you want but ultimately you want long range and cheaper batteries.”

UCILIA WANGContributor, Forbes

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“We should be saying, ‘Wow! Here’s a future we can clearly see we have resource constraints, meaning we have to use what we have more wisely.’ ... We have an energy story that just begs to be treated with the utmost care, respect and intelligence that we can bring to it. We have technologies right now that we can employ, that we’re not employing, and I think that really tells me that we just have a story that isn’t the right story.”

CHRIS MARTENSONFuturist; Author, The Crash Course

“[Young people] need to be empowered to know that they can actually take control of their destiny by voting. When you go buy a product, you are actually telling that company, ‘I support the way you make that product.’ ”

TOM VAN DYCKSenior Vice President, RBC Wealth Management

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“ExxonMobil, the largest and most recalcitrant oil corporation headquartered in the United States, now says in public that the risks of global warming are so significant that even they agree a price on their own fuels is warranted for instant change.”

STEVE COLLAuthor, Private Empire: ExxonMobil and

American Power; former Managing Editor, The Washington Post

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“The way we’re gonna be the most effective at cutting out carbon emissions is if each and every one of us finds the solutions that work for us, not necessarily the solutions that work for our neighbor.”

DAVID FRIEDMANDeputy Director, Union of Concerned

Scientists

“When you’re eating in season it’s more likely that the food is local, it’s more likely that it tastes better, and it’s more likely that it’s carbon friendly, climate friendly.”

DIANA DONLONCool Foods Campaign Director,

The Center For Food Safety

“We need an ignited America to be demanding greener policy, products, politicians, presidents.”

BETSY ROSENBERGRadio Host, On The Green Front

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“We in California are in the midst of a great innovation boom.”

DAN ADLERPresident, California Clean Energy Fund

(CalCEF)

“The closer you can link your clean tech company to an existing industry the better your chance of success in scaling up.”

MATT SCULLINFounder & CEO,

Alphabet Energy, Inc.

“Clean technology and renewables are bipartisan issues. They don’t have to be polarizing.”

JEFF BYRONVice Chair, Clean

Tech Open; former Commissioner, California

Energy Commission

“To get to something that is so ambitious as an 80% reduction, an 80% clean grid basically with low [natural] gas prices, is going to be terrific. It’s going to be really easy because as everybody knows, gas has half the emissions of coal.”

CATHY ZOIPartner, Silver Lake

Kraftwerk; former CEO, Al Gore’s Alliance for

Climate Protection

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“Efficiency is job one in California, that’s the best thing to do. Renewables is job two. And then only clean generation is the third tier.”

JIM BOYDFormer Commissioner, California

Energy Commission

“As we as a society move to a cleaner, less emission, particularly lower carbon, environment, nuclear is right now the only base load source of electricity that produces electricity 24/7 and produces no greenhouse gases.”

MARV FERTELCEO, Nuclear Energy Institute

“I think the issue isn’t how many people die from coal or how many people die from nuclear. It’s what’s smart, what makes economic sense?”

JOE RUBINReporter, Capital Public

Radio/Center for Investigative Journalism

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“Carbon dioxide will go up unless we do something really drastic. And it’s not we, we can’t do it on our own, we have to get China involved. If China continues to add one new gigawatt of coal every week as they have been doing now for the last decade, if they continue doing that, whatever we do in the United States is irrelevant.”

RICHARD MULLERProfessor of Physics, UC Berkeley

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“This whole [energy conservation] movement is very un-empowering for people. And when people are unempowered and feel like they can’t take action, they develop a certain amount of cognitive dissidence so that they diminish the importance of that thing. So if you want people to take action, you actually want to empower them.”

CARRIE ARMELResearcher, Stanford; Co-Chair, Behavior, Energy and

Climate Change Conference

“We have to take responsibility for separating out backward-looking blame with forward-looking responsibility.”

JON ELSECinematographer, Last Call at the Oasis; Professor of

Journalism, UC Berkeley

“We’re driven by facts and by myths that are based [on and] explain the world, not simply strings of facts that tell us what we should do and how we should respond to the world around us.”

JONAH SACHSCo-founder, Free Range Studios;

Author, Story Wars

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“As you drive each year, your electric vehicle gets cleaner as the grid gets cleaner. ”

ANDREA KISSACKSenior Editor, Quest, KQED; Owner of a Nissan LEAF

“It’s been a very interesting and useful learning curve for my house and my family because now we’re really aware of what our overall energy usage is, and it’s kind of shifted how we think about overall energy usage. We wouldn’t have gone there if we didn’t have the EV.”

JOHN KALBFounder, EV Charging Pros; Owner of a BMW ActiveE

“The really early adopters have mostly gotten their cars now. So the question is how we’re going to get to the early majority – when will we even get to them?”

FELIX KRAMERFounder, CalCars; Owner of a Chevy Volt and Nissan LEAF

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“Going from a few billion dollars to $90 billion in clean energy [is] orders of magnitude more than anybody has ever done about global warming.”

MICHAEL GRUNWALDSenior National Correspondent, Time;

Author, The New New Deal

“Clean tech growth and clean tech jobs are nonpartisan.”

NANCY PFUNDManaging Partner, DBL Investors

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“We tell people all the time, you’re gonna get a very beautiful building, you’re gonna get it in a fraction of the time, and oh by the way, you know, it’s icing on the cake, that your utility bills can be lower.”

ANN HANDCEO, Project Frog

“If the lighting [in an office building] is better and it feels better and the air is better and there’s no outgassing and you’re using less energy and everything just feels more natural and you’re a little more productive, people stay three minutes more a day, it pays for all – as if all the energy was free.”

KEVIN SURACEFounder, Serious Energy

“When you think about how you optimize performance in the building, the very first part of the fight has to start with the environment. If you can work with the sun or the wind or the clouds and you can make smart decisions there, everything inside of that becomes much easier.”

GARY DILLABOUGHManaging Partner, Westly Group

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“Between the market and the regulatory incentives and penalties, we’re seeing tremendous amounts of innovation that you wouldn’t have seen 20 years ago. ... The objective is to use our resources more intelligently.”

DAVID GENSLERExecutive Director, Gensler

“It’s not just the bricks and mortar and the mechanical systems, it’s how the building is operated over its life in service.”

MICHAEL DEANEChief Sustainability Officer, Turner Construction

“I think that sustainability starts with making buildings that are beloved by the community and making buildings that 50, 60 years from now that those of us here will want to renew them.”

CRAIG HARTMANDesign Partner, SOM

“All it takes is one new building driving the existing building portfolio to also gain LEED, because there’s no one more competitive than real estate. And that’s what I like about this business.”

PHIL WILLIAMSVice President, Webcor Builders

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“[Wind energy] is not about tree-hugging and Birkenstocks. These are real jobs, often – both installing but also manufacturing the wind components.”

CLINT WILDERAuthor, Clean Tech Nation

“[Clean energy is] a triple win because it’s a win for the environment, it’s a win for the economy, and it’s a win for quality of life.”

DENNIS McGINNPresident, American Council on Renewable Energy

“[It is a] myth that Republicans don’t support renewable energy. And somehow, the political season has produced the fact that it’s the Democrats and the liberals who promote renewable energy and the Republicans are all hung up on oil and gas and all of that stuff. I’d like to get rid of that myth because what we’re really talking about is time and how to get it done. ”

JOHN BOHNCEO, Renewable Energy Trust

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“You burn carbon or hydrocarbons, you’re going to increase the level of CO2. That’s not a theory. That’s just very basic chemistry.”

BOB INGLISFormer Republican U.S. Representative, South Carolina

“The American people at some point have to take clean energy or climate from issue number 12 on their list and move it up to issue number two or three.”

DONNIE FOWLERFounder and CEO, Dogpatch Strategies

“We’re not going fast enough. I think a lot of disruption, a lot of instability, a lot of droughts and unaccustomed events are in our future, unaccustomed weather events. I don’t think there’s anything now that one can do to avert that.”

BILL REILLYFormer Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

“If we’re going to price carbon, the question is, are we going to price it at a level where it will affect the behavior enough so that we actually really change what we’re doing because my strong belief is that we need to change much faster and in a much more urgent way than anybody is thinking about right now.”

TOM STEYERManaging Partner, Farallon Capital

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“The [San Francisco Public Utilities Commission] has reached out to the restaurants, the hotels, and aggressively, in a nice way, to the residents basically saying, ‘Use less water. We’ll provide you incentives to use less.’”

SUSAN LEALFormer GM, SF Public Utilities Commission

“That’s what Prop F is. It provides us the opportunity to impact environmental restoration projects around the world because at the end of the day, Yosemite is one of the most iconic places.”

MIKE MARSHALLExecutive Director, Restore Hetch Hetchy

“The customers are very important. They need reliable water. They need reliable infrastructure.”

SPRECK ROSEKRANSDirector of Policy, Restore Hetch Hetchy

“One-fifth of the energy in the state of California is spent pumping water. One-fifth of our energy. [O’Shaughnessy Dam] spends zero energy pumping water, and in fact, puts as 1.6 million kilowatts back to the system for good public purposes.”

JIM WUNDERMANCEO, Bay Area Council

PROPOSITION F: SAN FRANCISCO HETCH HETCHY RESERVOIR INITIATIVE

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“If I’m a producer, and I don’t want to have a label on my product, I’m going to have to reconstitute my food and my product, and I’m going to aggregate cost to that product. I’m going to pass that on to the consumer.”

JESUS ARREDONDOFounder, Advantage Government Consulting LLC

“The genetic engineering of the future is going to be targeted toward the problems we really have: climate change, high temperature, drought, nitrogen use. These are big, big, big issues. And what you’re voting on here is an opportunity to stigmatize an entire technology.”

KENT BRADFORDDir. of the Seed Biotechnology Center, University of California, Davis

“The future of food is in California. And that future, critically, requires a right to know – transparency.”

KEN COOKPresident, Environmental Working Group

“This is a labeling law. This is not a ban. This is not requiring food companies to change their ingredients or to reformulate their products. If they choose to do that, it’s in response to consumers.”

JESSICA LUNDBERGLundberg Family Farms

PROPOSITION 37: MANDATORY LABELING OF GENETICALLY ENGINEERED FOOD

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“Our job is not to figure out how to keep the fossil fuel industry going with some other fossil fuel that’s marginally better. Our job is to figure out how to provide the energy that people need in ways that will allow the planet to keep working.”

BILL MCKIBBENFounder, 350.org;

Author, Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet

“If we cannot get off the internal combustion engine, with all the technology that we have available to us, shame on us.”

JOHN HOFMEISTERCEO, Citizens for Affordable Energy; Former President, Shell Oil Company

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“I don’t believe that facts are enough. This is not necessarily an issue of facts, it’s an issue about fear. There’s an enormous amount of fear that we are dealing with an issue where the impacts are distant and far away, but the solutions are imminent and people fear them as being very costly and that they are infringing on our freedom, our economy, and our rights.”

KATHARINE HAYHOE

Professor of Atmospheric Sciences, Texas Tech University

“We focus so much on climate change as an issue of science or an issue of policy or economics, you know, cost-benefit analysis, but, you know, not often enough do we frame it for the issue that it really is ultimately. It’s an issue of our ethical obligation.”

MICHAEL MANNProfessor of Geosciences, Penn State; Author, The Hockey Stick

and the Climate Wars

“It’s really a tragedy that [global warming] has become so politicized because, whether you like it or not, [forest] fires burn homes, whether they’re Democrats or Republicans, and the climate system doesn’t care.”

WILLIAM ANDEREGG

Ph.D. Candidate, Stanford University

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“If we continue on this path with CO2, we’ll get to a point where it’s really consequences are too great and very difficult and are impossible for our children to deal with without having great disaster.”

JAMES HANSENHead, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies;

Adjunct Professor, Columbia University’s Earth Institute; Author, Storms of My Grandchildren

(From Left to Right) Dr. James Hansen (middle) stands with the Stephen Schneider Outstanding Climate Science Communication Award jurors -- Dr. Ben Santer, Dr. Bud Ward, and Dr. Larry Goulder -- and Climate One host Greg Dalton. Governor Jerry Brown (D) congratulates Dr. James Hansen for receiving the 2012 Stephen Schneider Outstanding Climate Science Communication Award. Dr. James Hansen speaks to Climate One host Greg Dalton on the effects of global warming and his work on climate science.

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“We try to bring faith and science together and to show that there’s not a conflict, especially when the leaders of world religions are being vocal about the need to protect the Earth.”

RABBI YONATAN NERIL

Founder and Executive Director, Interfaith Center for Sustainable

Development, Jerusalem

“Everybody wants clean air. We want a healthy environment for our children. Once enough people recognize that this is a problem, we will make the changes we need to make. Individual actions matter.”

REV. SALLY BINGHAM

Founder, Interfaith Power and Light

“I would say that some of the best scientists are Christians, who are religious leaders themselves. I have always understood that religion and science do not have a conflict, but rather, scientists are partners with all of humankind to understand the beautiful world that God has created in the first place.”

REV. DONALD NGFirst Chinese Baptist Church,

San Francisco

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“Climate is something that happens over a long time, and it’s an accumulation of numbers, patterns of experience. But air is something that we’re all inhaling 15 to 20 times a minute all the time. It’s a living substance. It’s part of our lives all the time. And the core of this issue is about the air changing.”

JAMES BALOGFounder, Extreme Ice Survey;

Author, ICE: Portraits of Vanishing Glaciers

“We will have tens or hundreds of millions of people who will be displaced [due to rising sea levels] especially those in developing countries who don’t have the means will essentially be homeless; over the course of decades there will be these massive population shifts.”

JON SHENKCinematographer, The Island President

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BOOK SIGNING AT CLIMATE ONE

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on climate one“Greg has a rare gift for provoking thoughtful, civil and passionate conversations about climate change that leave both panelists and audience feeling that they can actually make progress on a very weighty issue.”

MARY NICHOLSChair, California Air Resources Board

“Climate One offers a forum on energy and climate that no one else does — free of rancor, free of spin, free of partisanship — and contributes mightily to the search for solutions grounded in facts and science.”

DONNIE FOWLERFounder and CEO, Dogpatch Strategies

“Climate One is a reality exchange, less about positions than about problem solving. There are issues to be dealt with and the discussion is not advanced by saying the same thing over and over louder and louder. There needs to be reasoned compromise and Climate one helps that process greatly. “

JOHN BOHNCEO, Renewable Energy Trust

“Thoughtful people engaged in sincere conversation can find solutions. I’m grateful that Climate One provides such a forum.”

BOB INGLISFormer U.S. Representative, South Carolina (R)

“We’re all part of a transforming energy industry whether we know it or not. Climate One sears right through the noise we’re all exposed to about climate change to help us understand the salient issues needing debate.”

MATT SCULLINFounder & CEO, Alphabet Energy, Inc.

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“Climate One is one of those all too rare resources nowadays where a thinking person can partake of not just civil but civilized discussion about the vital issues

of our times. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed participating in Climate One discussions and tune into them whenever I can. Please keep up the great work.”

KEN COOKPresident, Environmental Working Group

“Climate One challenges participants to go far beyond their usual talking points and into the complexity of the problem. It’s there that solutions are most likely to

be found.”JONAH SACHS

Co-founder, Free Range Studios; Author, Story Wars

“Climate One provides the opportunity — and credibility — to tell our story to an important audience. Accountability and progress are always demanded.”

SHAD BALCHEnvironment and Energy Communications, General Motors

“Climate One combines high quality panelists with even-handed, lively moderating to provide the public with tremendous insight into how to solve the

greatest challenge of our generation.”ROLAND HWANG

Director of Transportation Programs, NRDC

“Greg Dalton and the team at Climate One provide a critical forum for the most pressing issue of our time.”

DIANA DONLONCool Foods Campaign Director, The Center For Food Safety

“Climate One gives us the kind of urgent, in-depth discussion of global warming we so badly need as a nation — the kind of conversation we have yet to hear in Washington, D.C. Scientists, politicians, military leaders, activists, entrepreneurs

— Greg Dalton brings them all together to hunt for solutions. Invaluable.”DAVID BAKER

Reporter, San Francisco Chronicle

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In 2007 I had the privilege of leading a group of Commonwealth Club members to the Arctic Circle aboard a Russian icebreaker. For nearly two weeks we explored Siberia and the Bering Sea and heard daily lectures from prominent journalists and climate scientists. Witnessing firsthand the signs of a disrupted climate — melting tundra, shrinking sea ice, and butterflies further north than normal — changed my life.

When we returned, Commonwealth Club CEO Dr. Gloria Duffy and I created Climate One, the sustainability initiative at The Club. Today Climate One is a thriving leadership dialogue on energy, economy and the environment. We produce the only regular public radio and TV show on a broad range of climate issues with senior leaders from business, government, and civil society. In 2012, nearly 4,000 people attended 32 events featuring 88 experts.

Climate One is about all of us. Thank you for being a vital part of it.

Greg on his Alaska 2011 trip with the Commonwealth Club

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In Memoriam

Peter Voll1943-2013

A lifelong advocate of experiential and transformational travel, Peter Voll was intimately involved in the creation and development of the 2007 Arctic voyage that gave birth to Climate One. Here he is pictured on that Commonwealth Club trip in front of reindeer on Wrangel Island, a rarely visited UNESCO Heritage Site in the Arctic Circle. He was a consummate professional, gentleman, and devoted member of The Commonwealth Club travel committee.

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Special Thanks to Our Supporters and Partners

Foundation and Corporate Sponsors:ClimateWorks

ChevronGeneral Motors

Wallace Alexander Gerbode FoundationBlu Skye

Pisces Foundation

Climate One Stewards:Al Davis

Mike HaasDan Miller

George MontgomeryToni RembeArthur RockMarc Stuart

Climate One Advisors:Rev. Sally Bingham

Lawrence H. GoulderDan Hesse

A.G. KawamuraVice Admiral Dennis McGinn

William K. ReillyForrest Sawyer

Climate One Founder:Greg Dalton

The Commonwealth Club of California CEO:Dr. Gloria Duffy

Media Partners:KQED FM, San Francisco

KRCB FM & TV, Rohnert ParkKSPB FM, Pebble Beach

KNPR FM, Las Vegas

Legal Counsel:Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman

Cydney Tune

Communications Partner:Webber Shandwick

Book Editor:Jane Ann Chien

Researcher:Sarah Nagelvoort

Photo Credits:Ed Ritger; Rikki Ward; Sonya Abrams;

Steven Fromtling; Greg Dalton; Al DavisFlickr: Dave Crim, Fire Horse Leo,

ilovegreenland, skinnydiver, Teleyinex, Toyota Motor Europe

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Index of Speakers and Programs– January 30 –

Sun Spots

David Hayes, Deputy Secretary, U.S. Department of InteriorJohn Laird, Secretary, California Resources Agency David Festa, West Coast Vice President, Environmental

Defense FundMichael Hatfield, Director of Development, First Solar

– February 3 –Power Plays: Media Roundtable

David Baker, Reporter, San Francisco ChronicleDana Hull, Reporter, San Jose Mercury NewsCassandra Sweet, Reporter, Dow Jones

– February 13 –Cruising 55

Shad Balch, Environment and Energy Communications, General Motors

Roland Hwang, Director of Transportation Programs, NRDCMary Nichols, Chair, California Air Resources Board Chris Paulson, VP of Strategy, Coda Automotive

– February 29 –From Durban to Rio

Tom Heller, Executive Director, Climate Policy Initiative; Professor, Stanford Law School

Marc Stuart, Co-Founder, EcoSecuritiesMark Schapiro, Senior Correspondent, Center for

Investigative Reporting

– March 2 –Covering Carbon

Felicity Barringer, Reporter, The New York TimesMarc Lifsher, Reporter, Los Angeles Times

– March 7 –GM CEO Dan Akerson

Dan Akerson, Chairman and CEO, General Motors

– March 23 –Going Local

Dan Rosen, Founder and CEO, Solar MosaicMichael Shuman, Author, Local Dollars Local SenseAndrew Swallow, Founder, Mixt Greens; Author, Mixt Salads:

A Chef’s Bold Creations

– March 26 –Speaking Youth to Power

Abigail Borah, student, SustainUS.orgTania Pulido, Green For All Fellow; Brower Youth Award

winnerAdarsha Shivakumar, Stanford student, litigation plaintiff

– March 29 –Water World

Laurent Auguste, CEO, Veolia Water Americas Jonas Minton, Water Policy Advisor, Planning and

Conservation League Jason Morrison, Program Director, Pacific Institute

– April 3 –The Island President Screening and Discussion

Jon Shenk, Director, The Island President

– April 19 –Power Poll

Donnie Fowler, Clean Tech StrategistLoren Kaye, President, California Foundation for Commerce

and Education Dave Metz, Pollster, FM3

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– April 23 –Covering Electric Cars

Chelsea Sexton, EV advocate, Who Killed the Electric Car? Katie Fehrenbacher, Senior Writer, GigaOMUcilia Wang, Contributor, Forbes

– April 24 –Crash Course

Chris Martenson, Futurist; Author, The Crash Course Tom Van Dyck, Senior Vice President, RBC Wealth

Management

– May 8 – ExxonMobil and American Power

Steve Coll, Author, Private Empire: ExxonMobil and American Power; former Managing Editor, The Washington Post

– May 21 – Green Myths Busted

Diana Donlon, Cool Foods Campaign Director, The Center For Food Safety

David Friedman, Deputy Director, Union of Concerned Scientists

Betsy Rosenberg, Radio Host, On The Green Front

– June 4 – Innovation Power

Dan Adler, President, California Clean Energy FundJeff Byron, Vice Chair, Clean Tech Open; former

Commissioner, California Energy Commission Matt Scullin, Founder & CEO, Alphabet Energy, Inc.Cathy Zoi, Partner, Silver Lake Kraftwerk; former CEO, Al

Gore’s Alliance for Climate Protection

– June 11 – Nuclear Revival?

Jim Boyd, Former Commissioner, California Energy Commission

Marv Fertel, CEO, Nuclear Energy InstituteJoe Rubin, Reporter, Capital Public Radio/Center for

Investigative Journalism

– June 21 – Skeptical Climate Science

Richard Muller, Professor of Physics, UC Berkeley

– July 10 – Story Wars

Carrie Armel, Researcher, Stanford; Co-Chair, Behavior, Energy and Climate Change Conference

Jon Else, Cinematographer, Last Call at the Oasis; Professor of Journalism, UC Berkeley

Jonah Sachs, Co-founder, Free Range Studios; Author, Story Wars

– August 20 – EV Riders

John Kalb, Founder, EV Charging Pros; Owner of a BMW ActiveE

Andrea Kissack, Senior Editor, Quest, KQED; Owner of a Nissan LEAF

Felix Kramer, Founder, CalCars; Owner of a Chevy Volt and Nissan LEAF

– September 7 – Green Buildings: Building Innovation

Gary Dillabough, Managing Partner, Westly GroupAnn Hand, CEO, Project FrogKevin Surace, Founder, Serious Energy

Green Buildings: Building Green Cities

David Gensler, Executive Director, GenslerCraig Hartman, Design Partner, SOM Michael Deane, Chief Sustainability Officer, Turner

Construction Phil Williams, Vice President, Webcor Builders

– September 17 – Green New Deal

Michael Grunwald, Senior National Correspondent, Time; Author, The New New Deal

Nancy Pfund, Managing Partner, DBL Investors

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– September 28 – Clean Money

Dennis McGinn, President, American Council on Renewable Energy

Clint Wilder, Author, Clean Tech NationJohn Bohn, CEO, Renewable Energy Trust

– October 9 – Energy and the Election

Donnie Fowler, Founder and CEO, Dogpatch StrategiesBob Inglis, Former Republican U.S. Representative, South

CarolinaBill Reilly, Former Administrator, U.S. Environmental

Protection AgencyTom Steyer, Managing Partner, Farallon Capital

– October 15 – Tear Down that Dam?

Susan Leal, Former General Manager, San Francisco Public Utilities Commission

Mike Marshall, Executive Director, Restore Hetch HetchySpreck Rosekrans, Director of Policy, Restore Hetch HetchyJim Wunderman, CEO, Bay Area Council

– October 25 – GMO: Label or Not?

Jesus Arredondo, Principal and Founder, Advantage Government Consulting LLC

Kent Bradford, Director of the Seed Biotechnology Center, University of California, Davis

Ken Cook, President, Environmental Working GroupJessica Lundberg, Lundberg Family Farms

– November 9 – Carbon Math

Bill McKibben, Founder, 350.org, Author, Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet

John Hofmeister, CEO, Citizens for Affordable Energy; Former President, Shell Oil Company

– November 23 – Chasing Ice Screening and Discussion

James Balog, Director of Time-Lapse and Still Photography, Chasing Ice; Author, Extreme Ice Now: Vanishing Glaciers and Changing Climate

– December 4 – James Hansen: The Stephen Schneider Award Part 1:

Political Science

Bill Anderegg, Ph.D. Candidate, Stanford UniversityKatharine Hayhoe, Professor of Atmospheric Sciences, Texas

Tech University Michael Mann, Professor of Geosciences, Penn State; Author,

The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars

Part 2: James Hansen: The Stephen Schneider Climate Science Communication Award

James Hansen, Head, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies; Adjunct Professor, Columbia University’s Earth Institute; Author, Storms of My Grandchildren

– December 12 – Congregation Power

Reverend Sally Bingham, Founder, Interfaith Power and Light

Rabbi Yonatan Neril, Founder and Executive Director, Interfaith Center for Sustainable Development, Jerusalem

Reverend Donald Ng, First Chinese Baptist Church, San Francisco

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