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As long as we believe,
Nothing can come between,
The dreamer and his dream!

April15, 2000 Time Magazine

Time Magazine Essay written by Leonaro DiCaprio

It’s a great honor for me to chair Earth Day 2000, especially because the primary focus of this year’s campaign is global warming. Global warming has to be the greatest misnomer of the new millennium, as it is such a benign, almost soothing name for the single most important environmental threat to the future of our planet and all living things on it.

This new millennium balances us on the edge of history. If we continue to ignore the issue of global warming, we will almost certainly suffer the drastic effects of climate changes worldwide.

I recently came upon a magazine article describing the problems facing the islands of Kiribati. If you don’t remember the name, Kiribati is an obscure group of Pacific islands that became instantly famous as the location for the first televised sunrise of the new millennium. Not only are the islands experiencing more cyclones and droughts, but the fact is that the rising ocean levels are eroding and contaminating the land. The dancing islanders we watched on television now may become environmental refugees. This scenario seems destined to be re-enacted on a much larger scale. The predicted effects of greenhouse gases on the atmosphere include climate changes that will cause more severe typhoons, hurricanes and flooding, plus the bleaching of coral reefs, the melting of polar ice caps, an increase in insect-borne tropical diseases and much, much more.

Thirty years ago in the U.S., Earth Day 1970 and the subsequent Clean Air Act of 1970 helped spur worldwide changes that have had positive effects on the environment. Some governments began to eliminate lead in gasoline and clean up power plants. Now it’s time to take the next step – to do for energy conservation and clean energy what was done for clean air in 1970. Fortunately there are things we can do, and that’s what Earth Day 2000 will try to emphasize.

One of the most important things we can do is drive fuel-efficient, high-gas-mileage cars – cars that have fewer toxic emissions and produce less carbon dioxide, the main culprit behind global warming. Hybrid cars, which have electric motors and gas engines, are coming to the market. Using public transportation and carpooling are ways that people can reduce fuel consumption as well.

And, of course, we can be part of the biggest Earth Days ever on April 22, 2000. Events will take place in every time zone on the planet in cities such as New York, London, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Tel Aviv and Manila, creating a continuous, 24-hour Earth Day celebration. And it will be an honor for me to chair the Earth Day 2000 event in Washington. It’s time to send a message that politicians and corporations can’t ignore.