By Deborah Zabarenko, Environment Correspondent
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - No U.S. law curbing climate-warming emissions is likely until President George W. Bush leaves office in 2009, Sen. Jeff Bingaman, Democratic chairman of the powerful energy committee, said on Tuesday.
Major climate change legislation "is less likely than not" with Bush as president "given the position that he's taken in opposition to any mandatory limits on greenhouse gases," Bingaman told the Reuters Environment Summit in Washington.
The fact that 2008 is a presidential election year reduces the chance that a U.S. bill to fight global warming will become law, he said.
Bingaman, a New Mexico senator who has sponsored a measure to limit emissions of greenhouse gases that warm the planet, said Bush's stance is hurting U.S. standing in the international community.
Calling last week's White House-sponsored meeting of the world's biggest greenhouse polluters a non-event, Bingaman said he heard complaints privately from delegates who called it a waste of time.
"For the United States to have a leadership role in this whole discussion, we're going to have to do something ourselves to demonstrate our own commitment to dealing with the problem," Bingaman said.
"Until that happens, until we can adopt a cap and trade system economy-wide or take some significant step to start controlling greenhouse gas emissions, we're not going to be deferred to in any serious way by the international community on this subject."
'IT AIN'T HAPPENING' Continued...
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