SALT LAKE CITY -- Organizers of a global-warming conference say former Vice President Al Gore will give his keynote remarks privately so he can speak "candidly" to a group including 45 mayors from big and small cities across the country.
The rest of the conference, which starts in this sweltering city before moving to actor Robert Redford's Sundance mountain resort, will be open to the media and selected guests amid tightened security because of Thursday's deadly bomb attack in London on subway cars and a double-decker bus. A larger contingent of Utah troopers and city police, some in plain clothes, have been assigned to guard the conference and reporters will have to obtain security badges, said Michelle Wyman, executive director of the U.N.-sponsored International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives.
The conference opens Sunday afternoon in Salt Lake City and runs through Tuesday at Redford's Wasatch mountain resort east of Provo, Utah. Participants will include scientists, energy officials and private sponsors. None of it will be opened to the general public, Wyman said. Another featured speaker will be former U.S. Energy Secretary and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who will talk about "State Leadership on Climate Protection" over breakfast Monday at the Salt Lake City Library. Richardson canceled his appearance Friday, but his staff called back Saturday asking to reschedule the appearance, Wyman said.
Gore, the Democrats' 2000 presidential nominee and author of a book on climate change, is scheduled to deliver a "State of the Climate" address over dinner Monday at Sundance. Organizers have sought out media attention for the three-day conference but say Gore wants to keep his speech to mayors off-limits."
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Odd.
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