Article
published Oct 13, 2007
Gore, U.N. scientists take home Peace Prize
By SETH BORENSTEIN and LISA LEFF Associated Press Writers
PALO
ALTO, Calif. Ñ For years, former Vice President Al Gore and a host of climate scientists
were belittled and, worst of all, ignored for their message about how dire
global warming is.
On
Friday, they were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their warnings about what
Gore calls "a planetary emergency."
Gore
shared the prize with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United
Nations network of scientists. This scientific panel has explained the dry
details of global warming in thousands of pages of footnoted reports every six
years or so since 1990.
Gore,
fresh from a near miss at winning the U.S. presidency in 2000, translated the
numbers and jargon-laden reports into something people could understand. He
made a slide show and went Hollywood.
His
documentary "An Inconvenient Truth" won two Academy Awards and has
been credited with changing the debate in America about global warming.
For
Gore it was all about the message.
"This
is a chance to elevate global consciousness about the challenges that we face
now," he said Friday at the offices of the Alliance For Climate
Protection, a nonprofit he founded. "The alarm bells are going off in the
scientific community."
Despite
a live global stage, Gore did not take questions from reporters, avoiding the
issue of a potential 2008 presidential run. His aides repeatedly say he won't
enter the race. Gore donated his share of the $1.5 million prize to the
nonprofit.
"For
my part, I will be doing everything I can to try to understand how to best use
the honor and the recognition from this award as a way of speeding up the
change in awareness and the change in urgency," Gore said in brief
remarks. "It is a planetary emergency and we have to act quickly."
In
announcing the award earlier in the day in Oslo, Norway, Nobel committee
chairman Ole Danbolt Mjoes said the prize was not a slap at the Bush administration's
current policies. Instead, he said it was about encouraging all countries
"to think again and to say what can they do to conquer global
warming."
Gore
is the first former vice president to win the Peace Prize since 1906 when
Theodore Roosevelt, who by that time had become president, was awarded. Sitting
Vice President Charles Gates Dawes won the prize in 1925. Former Presidents
Jimmy Carter won it in 2002 and Woodrow Wilson in 1919.
Gore,
who learned of his award from watching the live TV announcement Ñ hearing his
name amid the Norwegian Ñ was not celebratory Friday. His tone was somber. He
spoke beside his wife, Tipper, and four Stanford University climate scientists
who were co-authors of the international climate report. Outside the building,
schoolchildren held a sign saying, "Thank you Al."
For
years, there was little thanks.
From
the late 1980s with his book "Earth in the Balance," Gore championed
the issue of global warming. He had monthly science seminars on it while vice
president and helped negotiate the 1997 Kyoto Protocol that called for cuts in
greenhouse gases.
"When
he first started really working on the climate change issue, I remember he was
ridiculed in the press and certainly by political opponents as some kind of
kook out there in la-la land," said federal climate scientist Tom
Peterson, an IPCC co-author. "It's delightful that he's sharing this and
he deserves it well. And it's nice to have his work being vindicated."
Since
his loss to George W. Bush in 2000, Gore put aside political aspirations and
become a global warming evangelical. He traveled to more than 50 countries. He
presented his slide show on global warming more than 1,000 times.
He
turned that slide show into "An Inconvenient Truth."
The
film won praise but also generated controversy. On Wednesday, a British judge
ruled in a lawsuit that it was OK to show the movie to students in school. High
Court Judge Michael Burton said it was "substantially founded upon
scientific research and fact" but presented in a "context of alarmism
and exaggeration." He said teachers must be given a written document
explaining that.
More
than 20 top climate scientists told The Associated Press last year that the
film was generally accurate in its presentation of the science, although some
were bothered by what they thought were a couple of exaggerations.
Gore's
movie was deeply personal. It was about him after losing the 2000 election and
about his travels, and he talked about the changing climate in a personal way.
"He
has honed that message in a way that many scientists are jealous of," said
University of Michigan Dean Rosina Birnbaum. She was a top White House science
aide to Gore and President Clinton. "He is a master communicator."
Climate
scientists said their work was cautious and rock-solid, confirmed with constant
peer review, but it didn't grab people's attention.
"We
need an advocate such as Al Gore to help present the work of scientists across
the world," said Bob Watson, former chairman of the IPCC and a top federal
climate science adviser to the Clinton-Gore Administration.
Watson
and Birnbaum, who regularly briefed Gore about global warming, described him as
voracious, wanting to understand every detail about the science. Birnbaum
recalled one Air Force Two journey with Gore and the head of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
"Gore
was such a consummate scientist that he would keep asking and asking and asking
deeper and deeper questions until at one point Jim Baker of NOAA and I ran back
to our seats to go back through textbooks to get the answers," Birnbaum
said. "It was both exhilarating and exhausting to be part of his science
team."
Scientists
and Nobel committee members said it was not a stretch to award the Peace Prize
to Gore and the scientists. Studies by national security experts say a hotter
world with changes in water and food supply can lead to wars and terrorism.
"We're
already seeing the first climate wars, in the Sahel belt of Africa," said
Jan Egeland, a Norwegian peace mediator.
The
man who beat Gore in 2000, President Bush, had no plans to call Gore to
congratulate him. But spokesman Tony Fratto called it "an important
recognition" for both Gore and the scientific panel.
Some
in the shrinking community of global warming skeptics and those downplaying the
issue, were dubious, however.
"I
think it cheapens the Nobel Prize," said William O'Keefe, chief executive
officer of the conservative science-oriented think tank the Marshall Institute.
O'Keefe, a former oil industry executive and current consultant to fossil fuel
firms, called Gore's work "rife with errors."
As he was leaving the alliance's office, Gore was asked whether the Nobel would quiet climate naysayers. He said the award would help the cause of fighting global warming overall: "I hope we have a chance to really kick into high gear."