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My
Carbon Pledge Bloggers
Climate Scientist – Mark
Serreze, Ph. D.
Mark Serreze is a senior research scientist with the National
Snow and Ice Data Center. His current research includes
evaluating causes for the declining
sea ice cover, Arctic climate variability and change, and Arctic
atmosphere-ocean-ice interactions.
Arctic Wildlife Scientist – Jack Lentfer, Ph. D.
Jack Lentfer of Homer, Alaska has been an Alaskan wildlife
biologist since 1957 and has worked for the Alaska Department of
Fish and Game, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and as a
private consultant. He was an Alaska Department of Fish
and Game biologist for the North Slope which included the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge. He has studied polar bears
extensively, has represented the United States at international
polar bear meetings, has been on the IUCN Polar Bear Specialist
Group, and was on the United States negotiating team for the
International Agreement for the Conservation of Polar Bears.
He has served on the Alaska Board of Game and as a Scientific
Advisor and a Commissioner on the U.S. Marine Mammal Commission.
He has published numerous scientific and popular articles.
Political/Social Activist –
Howard A. Learner
Howard A. Learner is an experienced attorney serving as the
President and Executive Director of the Environmental Law and
Policy Center. Mr. Learner is responsible for the overall
strategic policy direction, development and leadership of this
public interest organization. Before founding ELPC, he was the
General Counsel of Business and Professional People for the
Public Interest, a public interest law center, specializing in
complex civil litigation and policy development. Mr. Learner is
an Adjunct Professor at Northwestern University Law School,
teaching an advanced environmental law seminar. J.D., Harvard
Law School, 1980; B.A., Political Science, University of
Michigan, 1976.
Living Green – Green
Grandpa
Although he prefers to remain anonymous, this Hoosier
grandparent will reveal that he is a registered Republican who
until just a few years ago was uncertain whether climate change
was being accelerated by humans, or simply a natural cycle of
nature. What changed his mind? “I simply started
researching and reading the body of information available on the
topic, and what I discovered startled me,” he noted. “I am
profoundly worried about my grandchildren’s future. What we
choose to do or not do in the next 10 years will largely
determine their fate, and those who follow them. We need
to stop resisting the idea that this is a problem, roll-up our
sleeves and get to work solving it.”
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