Ah, so that’s why Al Gore doesn’t wear a necktie

VINCENZO PINTO/AFP The bureaucrats of the European Commission have taken a radical step toward reducing their carbon footprint and halting the progress of global warming: Neckties have been declared “optional.” The logic is that tie-free men will tolerate greater heat, and by setting the air conditioners just one Celsius degree higher, they can cut their ...

600705_070709_barroso_05.jpg
600705_070709_barroso_05.jpg

VINCENZO PINTO/AFP

VINCENZO PINTO/AFP

The bureaucrats of the European Commission have taken a radical step toward reducing their carbon footprint and halting the progress of global warming: Neckties have been declared “optional.”

The logic is that tie-free men will tolerate greater heat, and by setting the air conditioners just one Celsius degree higher, they can cut their 56,000 metric tons of annual carbon dioxide emissions by 10 percent. Apparently, the always snappily dressed Internal Market Commissioner Charlie McCreevy got the idea on a trip to Japan.

Considering that the high in Brussels today is a balmy 66 F (19 C), I can’t say I have much sympathy for the EC’s noble civil servants (it’s 100 F in Washington). If they really want to make a difference, they could probably turn off the air conditioners altogether.

Sam duPont is a Master's candidate at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School and focused his capstone research on transitional democracies and elections in fragile states.

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