Paul Driessen
What an unpalatable irony. The 1783 Treaty of Paris ended
the Revolutionary War and created the United States. The 2015 Treaty of Paris
could end what’s left of our democratic USA – and complete the “fundamental
transformation” that the Obama Administration intends to impose by executive
fiat.
Meanwhile, as a prelude to Paris, October 24 marked a
full ten yearssince a category 3-5 hurricane last hit the United States.
(Hurricane Wilma in 2005; Sandy hit as a Category 2.) That’s a record dating
back at least to 1900. It’s also the first
time since 1914 that no hurricanes formed anywherein the Western Atlantic,
Caribbean Sea or Gulf of Mexico through September 22 of any calendar year.
Global temperatures haven’t risen in 18 years and are more
out of sync with computer model predictions with every passing year. Seas
are rising at barely seven inches a century. Droughts and other “extreme
weather events” are less frequent, severe and long-lasting than during the
twentieth century. “Vanishing” Arctic
and Greenland
ice is freezing at historical rates, and growing at a record pace in Antarctica.
But President Obama still insists that dangerous climate
change is happening now, and it is a “dereliction
of duty” for military officers to deny that climate change “is an immediate
risk to our national security.”
Meanwhile, the Washington
Post intones: “Republicans’ most potent argument against acting on climate
change – that other nations won’t cut emissions, so US efforts are useless – is
crumbling. The European Union has had overlapping climate policies in place for
years. China, the world’s largest emitter, continues to fill in details about
how it will meet the landmark climate targets it announced a year ago. World
negotiators are set to convene in Paris in November to bundle commitments from
dozens of nations into a single agreement that should set the world on a path
toward lower emissions.”
Right. A path toward less plant
fertilizing carbon
dioxide, to prevent “unprecedented disasters” that aren’t happening (except
in SimPlanet computer models), by stabilizing a perpetually changing climate
that is driven by powerful natural forces over which humans have no control –
under a 2015 Paris treaty that will inflict global governance by unelected
activists and bureaucrats, bring lower
living standards to billions, and initiate wealth redistribution of at
least $100 billion a year to ruling elites in poor countries.
For once, President Obama wants America to play a
leadership role, through a war on carbon-based energy that his own EPA admits
will reduce hypothetical global warming by an undetectable 0.02 degrees 85 years
from now. If we slash our fossil fuel use, he insists, the rest of the world
will follow. It’s delusional.
For once, we should lead from behind – instead of with
brains in our behinds. A brief recap of what other nations are actuallydoing
underscores how absurd and deceitful the White House, EPA and Postare.
European nations and the European Union have long claimed
bragging rights for “leading the world” on “climate stabilization,” by
replacing hydrocarbon fuels with renewable energy. Their efforts have done
little to persuade poor nations to follow suit – but have sent EU energy prices
skyrocketing, cost millions of Euro jobs and made the EU increasingly
uncompetitive globally. Now Europe says it will make an additional 40% emissions
reduction by 2030, but only if a new Paris agreement is legallybinding on all
countries.
However, two months ago, China, India and Russia refused
to sign a nonbinding US-sponsored statement calling for greater international
cooperation to combat hypothetical warming and climate change. And virtually
all developing countriesoppose any agreement that calls for binding emission
targets or even“obligatory review mechanisms” of their voluntary efforts to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
What they do want is a treaty that guarantees $100
billion per year for climate change “mitigation, adaptation and compensation,”
plus modern energy technologies given to them at no cost. And that appears to
be only the opening ante. India environment minister Prakash Javadekar recently
said “the bill for climate action for the world is not just $100 billion. It is
in trillions of
dollars per year.” Developed nations are “historically responsible” for
climate change, he argues, and must ensure “justice” for developing countries
by fully funding the Green Climate Fund. India alone must receive $2.5 trillion!
So far, pledges to the fund total just $700 million – and
Prime Minister David Cameron has said Britain would provide a one-time
contribution of only $9 million. He has called renewable energy “green crap”
and plans to end
all “green” subsidies by 2025, to reduce electricity prices that have sent
millions of families into energy poverty and caused the loss of thousands of
jobs in the UK
steelmaking sector.
Germany’s reliance on coal continues to rise; it now
generates 44% of its electricity from the black rock – more than any other EU
nation. In Poland, Prime Minister Eva
Kopacz says nuclear energy is no longer a priority, and her country’s
energy security will instead focus increasingly on coal.
But it is in Asia where coal use and CO2 emissions will
soar the most –underscoring how completely detached from reality the White
House, EPA and Washington Post are.
China now gets some 75% of its electricity from coal. Its
coal consumption declined slightly in 2014, as the Middle Kingdom turned
slightly to natural gas and solar, for PR and to reduce serious air quality
problems. However, it plans to build
363 new coal-fired power plants, with many plants likely outfitted or
retrofitted with scrubbers and other equipment to reduce emissions of real,
health-impairing pollution.
India will focus on “energy efficiency” and reduce its
CO2 “emission intensity” (per unit of growth), but not its overall emissions.
It will also boost its reliance on wind and solar power, mostly for remote
areas that will not be connected to the subcontinent’s growing electrical grid
anytime soon. However, it plans to open a new coal mine every month and double
its coal
production and use by 2020.
Pakistan is taking a similar path – as are Vietnam, the
Philippines and other Southeast Asian nations. Even Japan plans to build 41 new
coal-fired units over the next decade. Overall, says the International Energy
Agency, Southeast
Asia’s energy demand will soar 80% by 2040, and fossil fuels will provide
some 80% of the region’s total energy mix by that date.
Africa will pursue a similar route to lifting its people out
of poverty. No more solar panels on huts. The continent has abundant oil, coal
and natural gas – and it intends to utilize those fuels, while it demands its
“fair share” of free technology, “capacity building,” and climate “reparation”
money.
During the 2011 UN climate conference in Durban, all
nations agreed that the next treaty would have legally binding emission targets
and mandatory reviews of emission reduction progress. They also set up the
Green Climate Fund wealth redistribution scheme. Now those CO2-reduction
pledges are in history’s dustbin, because developing nations believe they have
the upper hand in any climate negotiations.
They’re probably right. President Obama told 60 Minutes
his definition of leadership is “leading on climate change,” and he desperately
wants a legacy beyond his Iran, Iraq, Syria, Russia, Ukraine, Bowe Bergdahl and
economic disasters. Moreover, Western nations have created a climate monster
and Climate
Crisis Industry, which must be appeased with perpetual sacrifices:
expensive, unreliable energy, fewer jobs, lower living standards and more dead
people. No wonder Asian and African countries expect to get trillions of
dollars, free energy technology, and a free pass from any binding commitments.
Voters, consumers, elected officials and courts must wake
up and take action. House Speaker Paul Ryan, members of Congress, governors,
business leaders and presidential candidates need to learn the facts, communicate
forcefully, repudiate destructive energy and climate policies – and let the
world know the Senate will reject any Obama treaty that binds the USA to
slashing emissions and transferring its wealth.
Above all, they must debunk, defund and demolish the
mountains of anti-fossil fuel, anti-job, anti-growth, anti-family regulations
that Obama and Co. have imposed – or plan to impose before they leave
office – in the name of preventing a climate crisis that exists only in their
minds and models.
Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee
For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org)
and author of Eco-Imperialism:
Green power - Black death.
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