Gore, U.N. climate panel win Nobel Peace Prize
By John Acher and Wojciech Moskwa
OSLO (Reuters) - Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore and the U.N. climate panel won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for helping galvanize international action against global warming before it "moves beyond man's control."
Political opponents saw the award as a snub to President George W. Bush who has doubted the science of global warming and rejected caps on emissions of gases believed to cause it but the White House said it was happy for the winners and praised their work.
Gore, who lost narrowly to Bush in the 2000 presidential election and who some hope will run again in 2008, shared the $1.5 million prize with the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
The former Democratic senator, speaking in California, called global warming "the most dangerous challenge we've ever faced" but declined to address whether he might enter the presidential race. He has said he has no plans to do so.
The committee awarded the prize from a near record field of 181 candidates for their efforts to draw attention to mankind's impact on the climate and measures needed to address it.
"Action is necessary now, before climate change moves beyond man's control," the committee said.
It warned that climate change -- linked to droughts, floods and rising seas -- could threaten living conditions across the world, prompt mass migrations and increase the risk of wars.
"We wish to put world climate on the agenda in connection with peace," committee chairman Ole Danbolt Mjoes said. Continued...
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