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		Obama highlights climate progress at home 
		before journey overseas 
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		 [September 01, 2016] 
		By Roberta Rampton 
 HONOLULU (Reuters) - Preserving natural 
		places will help the world adapt to warming temperatures, U.S. President 
		Barack Obama said on Wednesday as he began a 10-day trip to stress the 
		urgency of curbing climate change and attend a G20 meeting in China.
 
 "No nation, not even one as powerful as the United States, is immune 
		from a changing climate," Obama said after landing in Hawaii, the 
		Pacific island state where he grew up.
 
 Obama, who is racing to cement his legacy on climate change before his 
		presidency ends on Jan. 20, will make a rare visit to Midway Atoll on 
		Thursday, deep inside the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument 
		where he expanded protections last week.
 
 The tour leads up to a meeting in China on Saturday with Chinese 
		President Xi Jinping, who is hosting the G20 group of leading economies.
 
 Obama and Xi worked together in Paris last year to secure a global deal 
		to cut carbon emissions and are expected to take the next steps soon to 
		help bring that agreement into force.
 
 Native Hawaiian student Narrissa Spies said she hoped Obama's trip to 
		Midway would inspire him. Spies, 34, went there in 2010 on a 
		"life-changing" marine studies visit.
 
		
		 
		"I saw what my ancestors must have seen on the main Hawaiian Islands 200 
		years ago," said Spies, a PhD candidate now studying coral resistant to 
		stresses like warming water.
 Earlier on Wednesday, Obama stopped in to a summit about the health of 
		Lake Tahoe, the deep alpine lake in the Sierra Nevada mountains on the 
		Nevada-California border whose average surface temperature reached an 
		all-time recorded high last year.
 
 "The challenges of conservation and combating climate change are 
		connected, they're linked," said Obama, who was interrupted by 
		protesters yelling: "Keep it in the ground," a campaign to limit fossil 
		fuel production.
 
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			Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) (back to camera) embraces 
			President Barack Obama as he arrives on stage to deliver remarks on 
			the environment and climate change at the 20th Annual Lake Tahoe 
			Summit at Harvey's in Stateline, Nevada, U.S. August 31, 2016. 
			REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst 
             
			Green groups have urged Obama not to rest on his laurels. The U.S. 
			Supreme Court put his plan to slash carbon emissions from power 
			plants on hold earlier this year.
 "We’re hoping that he will actually withdraw the Arctic from his 
			five-year plan on offshore drilling, like he did with the Atlantic, 
			because it’s an even worse place to drill," said marine biologist 
			Jackie Savitz of the Oceana conservation group.
 
 (Additional reporting by Timothy Gardner, David Morgan and Jeff 
			Mason; Editing by Peter Cooney and Paul Tait)
 
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