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Why Wall Street is Greener than the White House

By Bruce Piasecki and Peter Asmus
February 19, 2006   |   2 Comments

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"It is telling that the first major call for regulation to address the rapidly escalating impacts of climate change is coming from the finance sector."

- Ross Gelbspan

The information and views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on its Web site and other publications.

2 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 2
February 22, 2006
Stuart seems a bit feisty, doesn't he. Do corporations need government regulation? You bet they do. Government is the only entity that can create the level playing field that enables them all to keep market share.

But the main joy I take in this article is that it seems to make GS into the canary in the mine shaft. When the headquarters of investment capital decides to go green, something big has happened in American consciousness. The cumulative effects of global warming, Peak Oil, air land and water losses, and increasingly necessary environmental restrictions are finally coming to the attention of big money, and when they change, so will all the corporations that need big money. They will change, if they have to, just to get the money. So hurray for the canary - and for its ability to sway government if not with the present regime, at least in future.

Jim
Portland, Oregon
Comment
2 of 2
February 22, 2006
"We need governments to regulate us into submission"? Give me a break. Next will be the suggestion that we should let the U.N. tell us how.

I'll accept that point of view when all the finance fat-cats leave their big corporate urban offices, high-rise appartments, stop driving their limos, stop taking 36 cross-country / global air flights per year to "do business" and all the other hypocritical suggestions mentioned. Gee, I wonder what the environmental cost is to artificially transport the energy, the food, the water, the waste and the people in and out of the "big city". We don't need another incentive for bigger-brother government. It's already too big.

Stuart
Los Alamos, NM
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