Friday, June 29, 2007

CIPL to Co-Sponsor SF 'Live Earth' Event 7-7-07

LIVE EARTH
www.liveearth.org
The Concerts for a Climate in Crisis

Global Broadcast
WebcastViewing Party & Networking Event
Saturday, July 7th, 11am - 7pm
@ Jillian's Video Cafe in San Francisco
101 4th Street & Howard in the Sony Metreon

Sponsoring organizations: Save The Earth Foundation, Sound Action, Unity Foundation, Center for Biological Diversity, Green Century Institute, Friends of the Urban Forest, The Sierra Club, Global Citizen Center, Instituto Laboral de la Raza, Pacific Environment, California Interfaith Power and Light

Friday, June 22, 2007

Remember Last October? Gearing Up for Our Annual 'Spotlight on Global Warming'

Click here to see last year's press coverage of our Bay Area screenings of An Inconvenient Truth , and please be on the lookout for your chance to sign-up to screen a new film this fall!

Monday, June 18, 2007

Contra Costa Times Coverage: Faiths Take Legal Fight to Automakers

It's been four years since a coalition of religious environmentalists pricked the consciences of the faithful by asking, "What would Jesus drive?"

East Bay clergy members not only have guessed Jesus would drive a hybrid, they also have gone a step further since that 2003 personal challenge to "walk the walk and drive the talk."

They have taken the lead in a legal showdown over a law that would direct automakers to produce only fuel-efficient vehicles.

The Automakers Alliance, and primarily Toyota, sued in 2004 to stop the state from implementing AB1493, dubbed the Clean Car Bill. It became law in 2002 but has yet to be implemented. It requires manufacturers to use the most feasible and cost-effective methods to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

California Interfaith Power and Light, a faith-based environmental organization based in Oakland, supported the law and is urging the manufacturers to drop their lawsuit.

"It's shocking that they would be blocking a bill that would take all necessary steps to apply (clean air) standards," said Jessica Brown, outreach director of the group.

Interfaith Power and Light's goal is to encourage California's 50,000 congregations to adopt sustainable energy practices, and in turn to urge their congregants to do the same. The organization also sounds the drum on global warming.

The organization is rallying its more than 460 member congregations to weigh in by today, when a pretrial conference will be held..

Brown finds a particular irony in Toyota's attack on the bill since so many faith leaders drive a Prius, an energy-efficient hybrid car manufactured by the company.

"We have this DVD that shows how to cut greenhouse gases, and it shows (the Rev.) Sally Bingham driving her Prius," Brown said. "Now they are coming in the back door supporting General Motors and Daimler-Chrysler."

The Rev. Will McGarvey of Community Presbyterian Church in Pittsburg owns two Priuses.

"I wrote a letter today myself to the CEO of Toyota," McGarvey said. "We buy based on fuel efficiency but also being real low emitters. My being a Presbyterian influences that. We ask (congregants) questions about how our faith informs our lives every week, whether we are Christian, Jewish, Buddhist or Muslim. We are a special part of the creation, but we are not more important than it."

In a letter, faith leaders urged Toyota, as the world's largest automaker, to "play a leadership role in the greatest moral dilemma of our time: the race to stop the catastrophic damage that is being done to our sacred planet and its citizens by global warming."

Supporting creation requires steps both protective and remedial, said the Rev. Phil Brochard of St. Paul Episcopal Church in Walnut Creek, who bikes to work twice a week and drives a Honda hybrid on his visits to congregants.

"It's more than a matter of personal conscience," he said. "It's part of our duty to make an impact."

In California, more than 40 percent of greenhouse gas emissions come from motor vehicles. The California Air Resources Board says the technological changes advocated in the bill would save consumers millions of dollars in damage to the environment, particularly in threats to the water supply. But it faced steep opposition from industry.

Automakers argued that it is the province of the federal government, not states, to regulate emissions.

And they said they are already making energy-efficient cars.

Sales figures show consumers have snapped up a record number of alternative-fuel cars in the first quarter of 2007, according to the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers. Sales of hybrid vehicles increased by more than 30 percent from the same period last year, rising from 51,285 to 74,056.

Representatives of Toyota did not respond to numerous requests for comment.

But a spokesman for the auto industry said there's no chance the litigants will drop their lawsuit.

"Not possible," said Charles Territo, speaking for the American Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers.

"I am not aware of any faiths that don't believe the environment is important or of any automakers who don't believe the environment is important," he said. "There is no health or environmental benefit that would come as the result of adopting these standards."

Automakers also challenged a Vermont clean car bill based on California's. The case went to trial, but the judge has yet to issue a ruling.

In September, then-Attorney General Bill Lockyer sued the six largest automakers in the United States, claiming greenhouse gas missions from the vehicles they produce have cost millions of dollars in damage.

Religious leaders have played an increasingly vocal role in the attempt to craft public policy on environmental protection. Last week, prominent clerics from four faiths urged a Senate committee to regulate the greenhouse gases that bring about global warming.

"Some folks get tied up on the global warming piece, whether it is human made or not," McGarvey said. "For me, the issue is climate change. If we can preclude it, why wouldn't we?"

Rebecca Rosen Lum covers religion. Reach her at 925-977-8506 or rrosenlum@cctimes.com.

See the full text of the article HERE

Monday, June 4, 2007

CIPL Clergy/Religious Leaders Sign On Letter to Toyota Motors, PLEASE READ!


Yuki Funo
CEO of Toyota Motor North America

Jim Press
President

Patricia Salas Pineda
Group Vice President and General Counsel of Toyota Motor North America

Dear Toyota Motors:

As representatives from many faith traditions, we ask that Toyota withdraw its lawsuit opposing AB 1493, California’s landmark law to limit greenhouse gas emissions from cars and trucks.

We urge that Toyota, the world’s largest automobile manufacturer, play a leadership role in the greatest moral dilemma of our time: the race to stop the catastrophic damage that is being done to our sacred planet and its citizens by global warming.

Never before in our history has a generation been faced with a challenge of such magnitude and moral consequence as the one before us today.

The scientific debate on global warming is over. The threat is real, and the consequences of inaction could be devastating beyond anything in human history. Rising oceans, monstrous hurricanes and searing heat waves, severe water and crop shortages, global famine and massive population displacement, an end to life on earth as we know it, is what science warns us awaits if we stand idly by and do nothing.

Thankfully, science also tells us that we have not yet reached our global tipping point. There is still a small window of time left in which we can and must act, in which we can and must significantly reduce the causes of global warming, namely, the emission of greenhouse gases.

In California, over 40 percent of greenhouse gas emissions come directly from the vehicles we drive. AB 1493 simply requires that all auto manufacturers use the most feasible and cost-effective reductions for greenhouse gas emissions for cars and trucks. According to the California Air Resources Board, which is charged with implementing AB 1493, the average consumer will actually save money because of these technology improvements.

But our reason for our appeal is much more than just money. Every major religious faith calls on its believers to be faithful stewards of Creation, the web of life that surrounds us, and binds us to each other and to our planet. We all have a moral responsibility to protect Creation to ensure a healthy and sustainable future for our children and the generations that follow.

As clergy and other religious leaders, we are educating our congregations about the dangers of global warming and our moral responsibility to protect Creation. Here in California, over 450 congregations of all faiths have committed to taking action by joining California Interfaith Power and Light (CIPL). Nationally, we are over 4,000 congregations strong and growing. Every day, more and more people of faith are realizing that we all have a moral responsibility to act now to save our planet.

As the worlds’ largest car manufacturer, Toyota can make a world of difference. Please withdraw from your lawsuit against the citizens of California. Instead of being an impediment to a global solution, we urge you to use your engineers and your technological leadership to be a positive force in solving the moral challenge of our lifetime.


In good faith,

INSERT YOUR SIGNATURE HERE by sending us your

1. Name
2. Religious Affiliation
3. Congregation/Organization
4. City/Region in California

Thank you for all your support! For questions call 510-444-4078 x 319.