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Al Gore, UN panel share Nobel Peace Prize for climate work Share on Facebook
Former Vice President Al Gore, newly named co-winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, said Friday that global warming is the most dangerous challenge facing humanity and it's time to step up awareness of the threat.

by Associated Press - Saturday, 13 October 2007


"It truly is a planetary emergency and we have to respond," Gore said.

Gore was awarded the prize earlier Friday along with an international network of scientists for spreading awareness of man-made climate change and laying the foundations for counteracting it.

Shortly after being named the winner, he said he would donate his half of the $1.5 million prize money to the Alliance for Climate Protection, a bipartisan nonprofit organization that is devoted to changing public opinion worldwide about the urgency of solving the climate crisis.

Gore made his comments Friday from the organization's headquarters.

Climate change "is the most dangerous challenge we've ever faced, but also the greatest opportunity we've ever had to make changes we should have been making anyway," Gore said. "Now is the time to elevate global consciousness about the challenges that we face."

"This is just the beginning," he added.

In its citation, the Nobel committee lauded Gore's "strong commitment, reflected in political activity, lectures, films and books, has strengthened the struggle against climate change. He is probably the single individual who has done most to create greater worldwide understanding of the measures that need to be adopted."

Gore, whose documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth," won an Academy Award earlier this year, had been widely tipped to win Friday's prize, which expanded the Norwegian committee's interpretation of peacemaking and disarmament efforts that have traditionally been the award's foundations.

Almost immediately after the honor was announced, attention turned to Gore's future and whether he would enter the 2008 presidential race.

Gore, the Democratic nominee in 2000, didn't mention the campaign during his remarks Friday.

Two Gore advisers, speaking on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to share his thinking, said the award will not make it any more likely that he will seek the presidency in 2008.

If anything, the Peace Prize makes the rough-and-tumble of a presidential race less appealing to Gore, they said, because now he has a huge, international platform to fight global warming and may not want to do anything to diminish it.

One of the advisers said that while Gore is unlikely to rule out a bid in the coming days, the prospects of the former vice president entering the fray in 2008 are "extremely remote."

"Perhaps winning the Nobel and being viewed as a prophet in his own time will be sufficient," said Kenneth Sherrill, a political analyst at Hunter College in New York.

The last American to win the prize, or share it, was former President Carter, who won it 2002.

At the time, then committee chairman Gunnar Berge called the prize "a kick in the leg" to the Bush administration for its threats of war against Iraq. In response, some members of the secretive committee criticized Berge for expressing personal views in the panel's name.

The current Nobel committee chairman, Ole Danbolt Mjoes, referred to that dispute on Friday, saying the committee "has never given a kick in the leg to anyone."

The White House said the prize was not seen as increasing pressure on the administration or showing that President Bush's approach missed the mark. Bush has been widely criticized outside the U.S. for not taking global warming seriously enough.

"Of course he's happy for Vice President Gore," White House spokesman Tony Fratto said. "He's happy for the international panel on climate change scientists who also shared the peace prize. Obviously it's an important recognition."

Fratto said Bush has no plans to call Gore.

Eighty-four percent in the U.S. believe world temperatures are rising, according to a poll last month by The Associated Press and Stanford University's Woods Institute for the Environment. Yet while about seven in 10 said they want strong public and private action to help the environment, fewer than one in 10 said they had seen such steps in the past year.

Gore, who was an advocate of stemming climate change and global warning well before his eight years as vice president, said the award was meaningful because of his co-winner, calling the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change the "world's pre-eminent scientific body devoted to improving our understanding of the climate crisis."

The committee cited the IPCC for its two decades of scientific reports that have "created an ever-broader informed consensus about the connection between human activities and global warming. Thousands of scientists and officials from over 100 countries have collaborated to achieve greater certainty as to the scale of the warming."

It went on to say that because of the panel's efforts, global warming has been increasingly recognized.

Rajendra Pachauri, the IPCC chairman, said he and Gore really had 2,000 co-laureates — each of the scientists in the U.N. panel's research network.

"This award also thrusts a new responsibility on our shoulders," Pachauri said. "We have to do more, and we have many more miles to go."

But some questioned the prize decision.

"Awarding it to Al Gore cannot be seen as anything other than a political statement. Awarding it to the IPCC is well-founded," said Bjorn Lomborg, author of "The Skeptical Environmentalist.

He criticized Gore's film as having "some very obvious mistakes, like the argument that we're going to see six meters of sea-level rise," he said.

"They (Nobel committee) have a unique platform in getting people's attention on this issue, and I regret they have used it to make a political statement."

In his 1895 will creating the prize, the Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel said it should be awarded for efforts toward peacemaking and disarmament, and the award now often also recognizes human rights, democracy, elimination of poverty, sharing resources and the environment.

 

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Will award make Gore jump into US prez race?

The award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Democrat Al Gore and the UN climate panel on Friday increases pressure on the former US vice-president to launch a late bid for the presidency, but advisers said he is showing no signs of interest in the 2008 race.

Gore, who lost a Florida vote recount battle in the 2000 election to Republican George Bush, has attracted growing support in recent days from thousands of Democratic activists who want him to enter the race.

An organization called draftgore.com is one of several trying to persuade Gore to run. The group ran a full-page ad in the New York Times on Wednesday described as “an open letter to Al Gore.”

“Many good and caring candidates are contending for the Democratic nomination,” the ad said. “But none of them has the combination of experience, vision, standing in the world, and political courage that you would bring to the job,” it added.

“He is probably the single individual who has done most to create greater worldwide understanding of the measures that need to be adopted,” the Norwegian Nobel Committee said in its award citation.

 

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