Remarks by the President to Recipients of the President's Environmental Youth Awards

* Reuters is not responsible for the content in this press release.

Thu Apr 17, 2008 12:25pm EDT

WASHINGTON--(Business Wire)--
Rose Garden

   10:03 A.M. EDT

   THE PRESIDENT: Thanks for coming. Please be seated -- and welcome
to the Rose Garden. And thanks for bringing such good weather.
(Laughter.)

   Laura and I are thrilled you're here, and we are thrilled to honor
young Americans who are helping their communities by safeguarding the
environment. I'm really pleased that Steve is with us, too, thanks for
coming; and Debbie, thanks for being here.

   I want to welcome your parents and your sponsors, and I know
they're incredibly proud of you. I appreciate the dedication that
you've shown to improve neighborhoods. I really thank the fact that
you're a person who's willing to be a responsible citizen and take
action.

   I'm pleased to have all the regional administrators here. It's
good to see friends from around the country. Thanks for coming. Thanks
for serving the country.

   I appreciate the fact that you know that we live in a country of
unbelievable splendor and beauty, and no matter which state we call
home, we can always find the work of the Almighty in our state. And
today, we honor 36 young men and women who have devoted their time,
energy, and creativity to being good stewards of that creation. And we
appreciate the work you're doing to preserve our beauty for
generations to come.

   The students here today come from all across the country. And your
accomplishments are as diverse as your home states. Steve will read
out the accomplishments, but I'll just touch on a few.

   First, for people from New York, who collected used books that
would have ended up in landfills and donated them to schools and
nursing homes and homeless shelters.

   People here from Massachusetts, who worked with local fishermen to
switch from using lead weights to using substances that didn't have
the potential to poison local birds.

   Virginia, the good folks from Virginia used recycled electronic
equipment so it wouldn't end up polluting the environment. Makes a lot
of sense; it's a rational plan.

   Good people from Tennessee, who led hundreds of members of your
community to switch to more energy-efficient light bulbs -- just like
Laura insisted we did here at the White House. (Laughter and
applause.)

   How about the good folks from Washington state, who worked with
the school district and helped save more than half a million dollars
by encouraging teachers to reduce their energy use in the classroom.

   These are practical ways to help protect our environment. And one
way to thank you is to have the Administrator present awards to you.
You set a great example for people around the country and you set a
great example for the government -- we're focused on conserving and
protecting our environment. I don't know if you know this or not, but
in -- we created the Northwestern Hawaii Island Marine National
Monument, which is the largest single conservation area in our
nation's history and the largest protected marine area in the world.
And we did so because there are more than 7,000 species in the
monument, and a quarter of them exist nowhere else on the Earth. And
the good news is, Laura went over to dedicate the monument and did a
fabulous job.

   We're working hard to protect our wildlife. Through the principle
of cooperative conservation, which means we bring together different
stakeholders -- conservationists and sportsmen and local leaders, and
federal, state, and tribal authorities -- to protect species that are
at risk.

   We're protecting and strengthening our National Park System. One
way to dedicate ourselves to conservation is to take that which is
already in existence and make it better. And so last year I announced
the National Park Centennial Initiative, which is a great plan to
enhance our National Parks during the decade leading up to their 100th
anniversary in 2016. This is an initiative that's going to allow the
park system to hire more park rangers and increase the use of
technology and upgrade its facilities and its historic buildings. I'm
looking forward to working with Congress to make sure this effort is
fully funded.

   Finally, we're working to ensure that America can develop
alternative energy sources and develop new technologies so we can
address global climate change without harming the economy. And I
believe we can do both. I believe we can be good stewards of the
environment, and I believe we can grow our economy -- which we're
going to have to do to be able to afford the technologies necessary to
change.

   So yesterday I announced an important national goal -- which is
stopping the growth in U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by the year 2025.
It's a goal we can achieve. It's important to set realistic goals, and
then work hard to achieve those goals.

   The key to keeping -- making this work is to unleash the
entrepreneurial spirit of the country and to develop the new
technologies that will allow us to utilize cleaner, more efficient
energy sources -- which, by the way, will have the beneficial effect
of becoming -- making us less dependent on oil, particularly oil that
comes from parts of the world where the people may not exactly like
us. So in other words, we're working on our national security and our
economic security, and at the same time having the beneficial effect
of being wise stewards of the environment.

   But today, you're tired of hearing about an old guy speak, we want
to hear the stories of young people -- young people who will be the
future leaders of the country, young people who have laid out a
strategy as to how to protect their local communities and have done
so.

   So I welcome you here, and ask Laura and Steve to join me here on
the podium to present the awards. Congratulations, welcome to the Rose
Garden and thanks for coming. (Applause.)

   END 10:14 A.M. EDT

White House Press Office
1-202-456-2580

Copyright Business Wire 2008
Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.