Though climate change is a global issue, the Northeast, from Pennsylvania through Maine, plays a big role. According to the report, the nine-state region produces more carbon dioxide emissions than all but six nations. In the Northeast, transportation emissions account for the most emissions, one-third of the total, and electric power plant emissions total just under one-third.
Peter Frumhoff, Union of Concerned Scientists director of the Global Environment Program, said a simple "replacement strategy" -- using fuel-efficient, low-emission or no-emission technologies already available -- could allow the region, nation and world to reduce emissions by as much as 3 percent a year over the next 25 years.
"Right now we're adding fuel to a fire and it will burn more intensely if we don't make changes," said William Moomaw, professor and director of the Center for International Environment and Resource Policy at Tufts University. "Doing nothing is the worst action we can take."
The Northeast Climate Impacts Assessment is a collaboration of the Union of Concerned Scientists and a 14-member team of climate experts to assess climate change and its impacts on the northeastern United States.
The group already has begun a follow-up round of analyses to assess climate change impacts on forests, agriculture, coastal areas, urban centers and human health, as well as options for mitigation and adaptation. A report is expected early next year.
"Our forests will be affected by higher temperatures and lower water, as will our agriculture and public health, even under the aggressive lowering of emissions. We need to prepare and cope with the changes because the impacts are now unavoidable," Mr. Frumhoff said.
"And our potential to cope is a factor of the emissions choices we make today. The chance we have now is to minimize the stresses on the system by minimizing emissions of heat-trapping gases."