
Russell
W. Peterson
Inducted 2007
Russsell
Wilber Peterson having earned a doctorate
in chemistry from the University of Wisconsin-Madison
in 1942, and took a position with the
DuPont chemical company. For over 26
years Peterson held prominent jobs in
research, manufacturing and sales, and
finally in corporate management, becoming
an executive.
As
governor of Delaware, one of his major
accomplishments as governor was to lead
the effort to adopt a Coastal Zone Act.
This sweeping legislation prohibited
all new development of heavy industry
in a two-mile wide, 115-mile-long zone
that covered the shores of Delaware Bay,
the Atlantic coast and bays on the leeward
side of Delaware’s barrier islands
in the south.
From
1973 to 1976 Peterson served as chair
of the President’s Council on Environmental
Quality(CEQ) he was instrumental in assuring
that the Environmental Impact Statement
process was implemented, fending off
efforts in the Nixon and Ford administrations
to prevent implementation of the process.
In 1974 Peterson, as chair of CEQ, organized
and co-chaired a federal task force to
study the claim that chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs) used in aerosol sprays and as
refrigerants were a threat to the ozone
layer When the task force’s report
was issued, Peterson called for regulations
outlawing the use of CFCs in aerosol
sprays and for research to find substitutes
for use in refrigerants. Twelve months
later, the world community adopted a
timeline for phasing out production of
CFCs.
His
work at CEQ was lauded by many, including
former Staff Director Steven Jellinek,
who said: “...your courage, your
eloquence and your determination to keep
the big picture in view provided both
inspiration and motivation to the broader
environmental community across the nation.”
As
president of the National Audubon Society
from 1979 to 1985), Peterson led efforts
to expand Audubon’s scientific
and educational capabilities. He strengthened
the group’s work on influencing
environmental decisions and broadened
its wildlife protection program.
As
chairman of the Center on the Long-Term
Biological Consequences of Nuclear War,
Peterson worked with Carl Sagan, Paul
Ehrlich and Peter Raven to recruit prominent
scientists around the world to inform
world leaders and the public about the
environmental threat of nuclear weapons.
Peterson was also president of the International
Council for Bird Preservation , and has
served as a principal officer in three
international environmental organizations
and as an ongoing participant in numerous
activities of the United Nations.
The
League of Conservation Voters gave Peterson
its Lifetime Achievement Award in 1995
and said this of him: “Ever the
scientist and always the humanist, you
have woven these twin passions into a
lifetime of dedication to protecting
this earth. Whatever the job, whatever
the administration, you have put the
environment ahead of politics, supporting
pro-environmentalists wherever you have
found them.”
The
National Wildlife Federation gave Peterson
its Conservationist of the Year Award
in 1994. The Federation’s president
and chief executive officer, Jay Hair,
saluted Peterson’s “remarkable,
unstinting, courageous and insightful
contribution to environmental protection
around the world.”
The Wilderness Society bestowed its highest
honor, The Robert Marshall Award, on Peterson
in 1984. The group said of Peterson: “Renaissance
man – scientist, scholar, statesman,
educator, public servant, author, esteemed
colleague: yours has been an extraordinary
and profound contribution toward protecting
and enhancing the environment of our nation
and our world, follow, in your own words,
a ‘one world’ vision – so
essential to the preservation of this fragile
planet.”
Former
President Jimmy Carter reflected on Peterson’s
career in a speech at the University
of Delaware in 1993: “Every time
something wonderful has happened when
I was president and since then in the
field of environmental quality in this
country or on a global basis, Russ Peterson
has been intimately involved in it.”
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