Let’s hope climate talks finally come to grips with energy, scientific and economic reality
Paul Driessen
“Show us the money!” climate activists demand, and rich countries are expected to pony up.
Do I hear $100 billion? Would you give $1 trillion? Now, then, would you give $2 trillion?
The climate reparations bidding war is on. What began at
$100-billion-a-year at COP-21 in Paris rapidly ballooned to
$1.3-trillion on the eve of COP-27 in Sharm-el-Sheikh-Down, Egypt and now stands at $2.4-trillion annually! And we’re nowhere near “going once, going twice, sold.”
Of course, it was always about the money – endless sums of cash
supposedly to help developing countries (like China!) adapt to dangerous
manmade climate change, cover entire regions with wind and solar, and
secure “fair, just and equitable” reparations
for soaring temperatures, rising seas, destructive storms, floods,
droughts and famines allegedly caused by countries that have used fossil
fuels since 1850.
Yes, China. The Middle Kingdom has long postured itself as a developing country, when it comes to when it might start building fewer coal-fired power plants and slowly shift to “renewable” energy.
Now China says it will pay non-cash climate reparations, if the United States pays in dollars.
Of course, any US, UK, German, et cetera “fair share” would be
exorbitant – and paid while they “transition” rapidly away from fossil
fuels, regardless of the economic, social and ecological costs.
As Oliver Hardy would say, “Another fine mess you’ve gotten me into,”
Joe, John and the rest of Team Biden’s climate-obsessed,
fossil-fuel-eradicating, eco-justice warriors.
They and their
activist, media and academia allies created the climate scare – the
assertion that fossil fuel emissions alone are driving today’s climate
and weather. Never mind that, since the last Pleistocene ice age, average global temperatures climbed significantly (Baruch Hashem);
sea levels rose some 400 feet; and floods, droughts, hurricanes and
other disasters ravaged planet and humanity countless times. Anything
happening today, however, is due to countries that got rich using fossil
fuels. Or so they insist.
Therefore, naturally, COP-27
organizers, activists and attendees now say the “climate crisis”
requires enormous payments from rich countries to poor countries – or
more accurately, from poor people in rich countries to rich kleptocrats
in poor countries. That raises another inconvenient truth.
Not long ago, Obama “science advisor” John Holdren intoned:
“Only one rational path is open to us – simultaneous de-development of
the [United States and other over-developed countries] and
semi-development of the under-developed countries, in order to approach a
decent and ecologically sustainable standard of living for all in
between.” This de-development ideology is shared by many others.
Well, de-development and de-industrialization are already underway in Britain, Germany and elsewhere,
because wind, solar and battery (WSB) energy cannot possibly replace
abundant, reliable, affordable, non-weather-dependent fossil fuel and
nuclear energy. Jobs, companies and entire industries are already
disappearing across Europe, as it destroys fossil fuel power plants but
has nothing viable to replace them.
So how are all these
de-developing Formerly Rich Countries (FRCs) going to deliver billions
or trillions annually, to pay climate reparations and help poor
countries develop? They cannot possibly do so.
Even worse,
eco-imperialist developed countries continue demanding that poor
countries develop only to the minimal extent that WSB technologies would
permit. Rich countries, the World Bank and global financial
institutions refuse to finance anything but pseudo-renewable energy.
These unconscionable policies perpetuate joblessness, poverty, disease and death – and advance the other basic goal of “climate stabilization” programs: controlling our lives and living standards. But poor nations have inalienable, God-given rights to develop, using fossil fuel,
nuclear and hydroelectric power – and petroleum as feed stocks for
fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, plastics and hundreds of other miraculous
life-enhancing, life-saving products (developed by countries that are now expected to pay reparations).
Developed nations must help
developing nations reach those goals. Instead, they too often block
pathways to better lives. Still more outrageous, the USA and Europe have
the nerve to ask African, Asian and Latin American nations to produce
more oil and gas, but only for export to the USA and Europe!
Meanwhile, Britain is setting up “warm rooms,” where people can go for a
few hours a day, instead of freezing hungry and jobless in dark
apartments. It’s as though Merry Old England has suddenly been
transported back to the Middle Ages, by politicians who put climate
virtue signaling above their constituents’ basic needs.
Meanwhile, Germany is dismantling an industrial wind power installation – so that it can extract the lignite coal underneath, to run generating plants, to keep factories operating and homes warm!
Even crazier, these are just a few examples of the insanity gripping the world’s political classes, especially during Conferences of Parties (COPs) on climate change. Happily, escaping this insane asylum requires little more than recognizing a few simple realities.
* The vast majority of nations signed the Paris climate treaty for the
money – most of which they are now beginning to realize they will never
receive. Moreover, coal, oil and natural gas still provide 82% of the
world’s energy; nuclear, hydroelectric and biomass (wood and dung)
provide most remaining energy needs, and less than 2% comes from wind
and solar.
* Developing countries will be using fossil fuels
for decades to come – and emitting more plant-fertilizing carbon dioxide
in the process – much of it to extract the raw materials and
manufacture the “green tech” they will export to the US, UK, EU and
other soon-to-be-FRCs. So even if developed countries totally eliminated
their fossil fuel use, atmospheric greenhouse gas levels will continue
to climb.
* But that won’t matter, because there is no
evidence that we face a climate crisis, much less a manmade climate
crisis, much less changes unprecedented in Earth or human history.
Humans are likely affecting temperature, humidity, climate and weather
to some degree, especially around large urban “heat islands.” But that
is a far cry from cataclysms allegedly resulting from fossil fuels
replacing the powerful natural forces that have controlled climate and
weather throughout history.
* The 1.5 degrees C that we are
supposed to avoid to avert catastrophe is arbitrary, meaningless – and
tied not just to the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, but to the
end of the Little Ice Age. Another degree or two of warming would be
mostly beneficial, whereas another little or big ice age would devastate
agriculture, habitats, wildlife and humanity.
* The entire
climate crisis agenda is based on computer models that (a) cannot
possibly reflect all the forces that govern climate, and (b)
consistently predict planetary warming that is two to three times greater than actually recorded by satellites, weather balloons and surface temperature monitors.
* Basing economy-destroying, life-altering policies on useless models
is sheer insanity – especially if the replacement energy comes from WSB
systems that would require mining, processing, manufacturing and
installations on scales that would ravage our planet.
The only reason these realities are so little known is that climate activists, politicians, academics, and news and social media studiously demonize, harass, censor, silence, deplatform and demonetize scientists, economists and energy experts who challenge climate crisis narratives.
Thankfully, the Truth is slowly winning out. Perhaps COP-27 will bring a healthy dose of climate and energy sanity. If it doesn’t, we could end up with John Holdren’s formula for rolling back development and living standards. Just don’t expect the ruling elites and their Hollywood and Big Tech allies to lead by example.Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of books and articles on energy, climate change, environmental policy and human rights.
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