Tag Archives: COP 28

Political Realism from a Climate Alarmist (the beginning of the end?)

By Robert Bradley Jr.

“The UN’s COP process is almost as dead as its deeply dishonest posturing about ‘keeping 1.5°C alive’…. With the COP process itself on life support, surely it’s time to change tack….”

“The sight of 80,000+ delegates unwittingly providing credibility to the fossil fuel incumbency that COP now unapologetically represents, has become sickening. Stay away. Call it out. Tell the truth.”

– Jonathan Porritt (below)

At least some climate crusaders are realistic in the lack of progress in the mitigation policy designed to dislodge consumer-driven, taxpayer-neutral energies (oil, gas, and coal) and substitute politically correct, inferior ones (wind, solar, batteries). It all gets back to energy density, a fundamental concept that climate activists do not want to understand (or do understand, but want pure de-industrialization).

A recent post by “sustainability campaigner and writer” Jonathan Porritt, “From COP 28 to COP 29” (January 4, 2024), has a number of realistic points regarding politics, while clinging to the narrative that Net Zero is achievable and at hand. It brings to mind what James Hansen said about the Paris Climate Accord back in 2015:

It’s a fraud really, a fake. It’s just bullshit for them to say: “We’ll have a 2C warming target and then try to do a little better every five years.” It’s just worthless words. There is no action, just promises. As long as fossil fuels appear to be the cheapest fuels out there, they will be continued to be burned.

Back to Jonathan Porritt. Here is much of his post (with my subtitles added):

COP 28 limped to its predictably calamitous conclusion on December 13th. The heavily spun headline (“historic breakthrough”) quickly dribbled away into the sands of Dubai, to be replaced by more “balanced” commentaries from governments, businesses and some mainstream NGOs. Three weeks on, even that laboured balancing act now looks either totally naïve or deeply dishonest.

The “historic breakthrough” boiled down to one simple fact: that the final COP 28 Agreement refers explicitly to the burning of fossil fuels as the primary cause of today’s climate breakdown – the first time that has happened in 30 years of futile climate diplomacy.

It gets worse. I won’t weary you with the forensic details of how critical sections of the Agreement have been worded to minimise any serious impact on petrostates and fossil fuel companies. It’s so full of loopholes, weasel words, and vacuous generalisations, let alone unlimited boosterism for all-but-useless technologies like Carbon Capture and Storage, as to fast track this Agreement instantly into the pantheon of toxic suicide notes.

Fake Progress for PR

Every Government delegation will have known that as they watched that gavel come down on the final text on December 13th. Some will have felt “job done”; others “game over”. Every business delegation, messing around in the margins of COP 28 trying to be useful, will also have known this. But will have avoided talking about it, assiduously averting their eyes from the monstrous heap of Emperors’ clothes in the corner.

Worst of all, every NGO with any serious knowledge of the gap between what the science tells us today and the policies now needed to narrow that gap, will have known this. But they held dutifully to the line that COP 28 demonstrated “real progress” ….

Realism, Anyone?

My criticism here applies just as much to those NGOs as to all those government delegations and businesses enjoying the latest COP tourism offer. They’re either totally naïve or deeply dishonest.

And I hate to have to say this, but that particularly applies to many of those “stubborn optimists” or “resolute climate solutionists” who still cannot accept just how fast things are changing around the world. … [T]hey continue, COP after COP, to offer up a “solutions agenda” that they know means very little faced with the raw power of today’s fossil fuel incumbency….

Don’t get me wrong: I’m not saying that the work of these organisations (including Forum for the Future) isn’t still critical: it is. In fact, it’s going to be even more critical over the next few years. People do indeed need to know that the transition away from fossil fuels is both necessary and absolutely doable – in a remarkably short period of time. That’s still the central premise of all the talks I’m doing these days.

But to remain both honest and effective, we solutionists must now preface that authentic solutions agenda, on every possible occasion, with this harsh and sometimes unbearable set of truths:

  1. There is literally no combination of emergency interventions, at this stage, which will keep the average global temperature increase below 1.5°C by the end of the century. As a target, 1.5°C is no longer on life-support: it is definitively dead. Indeed, it’s looking increasingly possible that the average temperature may temporarily reach [an increase of] 1.5°C this year – primarily because of the cumulative impact of the current El Nino. 
  2. That doesn’t automatically mean an irreversible slide on to 2°C and beyond. But if we’re not completely honest about why we have failed so comprehensively to protect 1.5°C, then all future efforts to protect 2°C will fail just as comprehensively, for exactly the same reasons. Stubborn optimism that denies this undeniable realpolitik is now a massive barrier to forcing today’s politicians to narrow that science-policy gap for real. 
  3. The UN’s COP process is almost as dead as its deeply dishonest posturing about “keeping 1.5°C alive”. This has serious implications for all those NGOs still hoping to justify the millions of dollars their funders and members provide them with. With the COP process itself on life support, surely it’s time to change tack, prioritising a last-ditch global “save our COP” campaign, demanding hard-edged reforms? This has to happen before the whole circus descends on CoP 29 in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, a country even more corrupt and just as much in thrall to the curse of fossil fuels as the United Arab Emirates.
  4. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change should also be put on notice. Forced to comply with the UN’s highly politicised, consensus-based decision-making process, its Assessment Reports (and occasional Special Reports) do not tell the truth. The IPCC has rarely managed to reflect the frontline science going on all around the world; its generic reassurances (that 1.5°C is still alive, for instance) are now a travesty of what good, responsible science is all about…. [T]he IPCC … refus[es] to speak the real truth about accelerating climate change to the world’s real power-brokers.
  5. All multinational companies should now threaten to boycott CoP 29 – unless a list of “save our COP” conditions are met. And this should include banning the representatives of all fossil fuel companies. The sight of 80,000+ delegates unwittingly providing credibility to the fossil fuel incumbency that COP now unapologetically represents, has become sickening. Stay away. Call it out. Tell the truth.

I know a lot of my colleagues in both the NGO and business worlds will resent these comments: “unreasonable”, “hectoring”, “extremist” – these are just a few of the responses I get these days. But where, I ask you, have reasonable, calm, middle-of-the-road voices got us over the last 30 years? Irrefutably, just a whole lot closer to that point where we find ourselves tipped over into irreversible climate change.

There’s too much political naivety at the heart of today’s solutions agenda. Do any of these genuinely caring, passionately committed, reasonable solutionists seriously think that today’s fossil fuel incumbency (embedded so deeply in both governments and the whole global business community) gives a flying fuck about what they think, say or do?

I understand why few of my erstwhile colleagues will be keen to join me in taking a different path – in advocating on behalf of those who believe that civil disobedience is now the only way forward: Just Stop Oil, XR and so on. For those of us who’ve worked inside “the system” (as I have done since stepping down as Director of Friends of the Earth in 1990), it’s deeply uncomfortable to have to acknowledge how little real impact we’ve made during that time – both on the climate and the biodiversity fronts. There have been so many dead horses that we should have stopped flogging a long time ago.

For me personally, that realisation kicked in around 2010, when the Tories came back into power, and even more definitively after 2015. It was clear then that there is no accommodation to be had with ideological zealots of that ilk, still locked in a deadly embrace with an industry that will go on prioritising shareholder dividends over the future of life on Earth – until we stop them….

Analysis

Yes: Government delegations, businesses, and NGOs “enjoying the latest COP tourism offer [are] either totally naïve or deeply dishonest.”

Yes: Fossil fuel companies are part of the Climate Industrial Complex.

True: Carbon capture and storage is a boondoggle, but that’s what you get by politicizing energy. ‘Big Oil’ is part of the Industrial Climate Complex, indeed. Greenwashers, too.

Think: “… fossil fuel incumbency” is about energy density and consumers. It is not some accident or artificial construct created by a vast conspiracy of some sort.

Wrong: “… the transition away from fossil fuels is both necessary and absolutely doable.”

Good News: Temperatures are leaving the COP goals of 1.5C and even 2.0C in the dust. And the world will do just fine so long as climate policy does not prevent adaptation to climate change.

A Plea to Climate Alarmists Be Realistic and Happier

When will the likes of Jonathan Porritt shed their deep-ecology skin to realize that politics is the wrong answer; that industrial wind and solar are threats to the living space; that CO2 is not a pollutant but beneficial to global greening; that climate-model extreme scenarios are just that; and wealth-is-health adaptation is the way of the future–as it has been in the past.

Stay radical but get real. Reject the Climate Industrial Complex for freedom from Statism and for human betterment. No more COPs, greenwashing, fossil-fuel boondoggles.

The post Political Realism from a Climate Alarmist (the beginning of the end?) appeared first on Master Resource.

Morano on Fox & Friends presents the top 4 ‘climate hypocrites’ of 2023

From CFACT

WATCH NOW at CFACT’s Climate Depot

Expert shares the year’s worst climate hypocrites, from King Charles to John Kerry – ‘Climate Depot’ publisher Marc Morano ranks the worst climate hypocrites of 2023 on ‘Fox & Friends Weekend.’

Fox News Channel – Fox and Friends – Broadcast December 30, 2023

Transcript: 

Rachel Campos-Duffy: Mirror mirror on the wall. Which climate activist was the most hypocritical of them all. Marc Morano, we love him,  he has all the names and he joins us next.

2023 was a year full of climate activists, celebrities, and billionaires, telling you to cut down on carbon emissions while they live life in luxury. So who tops the list of biggest climate Hypocrites this year? Well our next guest can name a few. Climate Depot publisher Marc Morano joins us now in a very snazzy red suit.

Marc Morano: I’m ready to celebrate.  I take award ceremonies very seriously.

Rachel Campos-Duffy: I love it. So who tops this Oscar?

Marc Morano: Why don’t we start at the bottom, and then we’ll work our way up. We start with King Charles. King Charles
flew to the COP 28 UN climate Summit in a private jet, and he recently founded the Terra Carta, which is the Earth Charter seeking nature rights,  which is trying to grant nature,  trees, lakes, rivers, equal rights to humans.  At the same time, King Charles, formerly Prince Charles, is issuing climate tipping points and here’s the thing Rachel he has servants reportedly iron his shoelaces, and he travels with a portable toilet. So I think he’s probably the last person on planet Earth who should be lecturing us
about climate change. 

See:  King Charles takes private jet to travel to 2023 UN climate summit & See: Climate activist Prince Charles has his shoelaces ironed every morning, travels with own toilet seat

Rachel Campos-Duffy:  It’s so funny because the thing about all these people is they’re all really weird. They’re weirdos. So continue, who’s next on the list?

Marc Morano: The UN cop 28 the Climate Summit itself. It had the largest carbon footprint in the history of climate summits. I’ve been to 18 out of the last 20 of these climate summits all over the world, this one in Dubai had almost over 100,000 participants filled the runways with private jets  — the UK had three different high government officials arrive in three separate private jets. But that wasn’t all, Rachel. As CNN was telling us we needed ‘carbon passports’ to travel — us the unwashed masses –the UN climate was also planning on restricting our meat eating as John Kerry announced he wanted to go after agriculture. But at the UN climate summit,  they were serving wagyu beef, Philly cheese steaks, they had lavish restaurants serving meat. There were no insects on the menu and there was no Bill Gates lab-grown meat either.

See: Private Jets Flock To Dubai For COP 28: Event Set To Have Biggest Carbon Footprint In History & UN climate summit serving burgers, BBQ as it calls for US to stop eating meat – Offerings include ‘juicy beef,’ ‘slabs of succulent meat,’ smoked wagyu burgers & Philly cheesesteaks

Next on the list is before we get to the final winner here is none other than Bill Gates himself. Bill Gates has literally had the world’s largest carbon footprint for years. He’s pushed for longer COVID lockdown during the same weeks he was bidding for bidding on the world’s largest private jet transport company, and Bill Gates has a $43 million Oceanfront home and he’s got a $30,000 a month electricity bill again. This guy has no business lecturing anyone on climate change. 

See: Watch: Climate activist Bill Gates on BBC defends his private jet flying – ‘I’m part of the solution’ & he buys carbon offsets & CBS News: Bill Gates says flying on a private jet doesn’t make him “part of the problem” because he invests billions into fighting climate change & Bill Gates Owns Multiple Jets He Calls His ‘Guilty Pleasure’

Which leads us to the winner here if you want to do a drum roll.

Rachel Campos-Duffy: I will do it.

Marc Morano: The winner is John Kerry, and John Kerry gets this award easily for the end of 2023. We have to give the number one climate hypocrite award to John Kerry because he stood before Congress at a hearing and was grilled by a Congressman where he repeatedly said ‘I don’t own a private jet,  I’ve never owned a private jet.’ And it wasn’t until about 45 minutes later that a congressman grilled him and said wait a minute, your wife owned private jets for decades and then finally sold them when the negative media came out, and John Kerry was forced to say, ‘Yes my wife owns one. Yes, I’ve flown in HER private jets.’

Key video clips of Kerry at 2023 hearing:

Morano: If that’s not lying to Congress, I’m not sure what is. So John Kerry gets the award. Let’s celebrate that.

One last final note, and this is an actual positive award to Abigail Disney, the Disney heiress. We’ve got to give her props. She has come out and stopped flying private jets. She is one of the wealthiest heiresses in the world, heir to the Disney fortune. She now wants to ban private jets for the 1% wealthiest people in the world and I say she’s got it right. We need to support Abigail Disney the Disney heiress, because any of these climate rules they come up with should apply to the John Kerrys and the Bill Gates, and King Charles types first. Let’s experiment on them with travel bans, restrictions on meat eating, insect-eating, And only then should we consider these restrictions for the rest of us. Let’s support what the Disney heiress is doing.

Rachel Campos-Duffy: Sadly, all of these bans will do nothing to solve the so-called climate problem. All this is doing is
impoverishing Americans, impoverishing the Third World, causing more hunger, and famines. It’s funny because they’re hypocrites, and it’s so obvious. It’s sad because it has real-world consequences on on people’s families and lives.

Marc,  I love how you always bring this to our attention. Wishing you a Happy New Year and thanks for joining us with your awesome list.

Morano: Thank you, Rachel appreciate it.  Happy New Year.

#

#

Fox News Channel – Fox and Friends – Broadcast December 30, 2023

Rachel Campos-Duffy: Mirror mirror on the wall. Which climate activist was the most hypocritical of them all. Marc Morano, we love him,  he has all the names and he joins us next…So who tops the list of biggest climate Hypocrites this year? Well our next guest can name a few. Climate Depot publisher Marc Morano joins us now in a very snazzy red suit.

Marc Morano: I’m ready to celebrate.  I take award ceremonies very seriously.

Rachel Campos-Duffy: I love it. So who tops this Oscar?

Marc Morano: Climate Hypocrite #4: We start with King Charles. … King Charles, formerly Prince Charles, is issuing climate tipping points and here’s the thing Rachel he has servants reportedly iron his shoelaces, and he travels with a portable toilet. So I think he’s probably the last person on planet Earth who should be lecturing us. 

Climate Hypocrite #3: The UN cop 28 the Climate Summit itself. It had the largest carbon footprint in the history of climate summits. .. As CNN was telling us we needed ‘carbon passports’ to travel — us the unwashed masses –the UN climate was also planning on restricting our meat eating as John Kerry announced he wanted to go after agriculture. But at the UN climate summit,  they were serving wagyu beef, Philly cheese steaks, they had lavish restaurants serving meat. There were no insects on the menu and there was no Bill Gates lab-grown meat either.

Climate Hypocrite #2: Next on the list is before we get to the final winner here is none other than Bill Gates himself. Bill Gates has literally had the world’s largest carbon footprint for years. Gates has a $43 million Oceanfront home and he’s got a $30,000 a month electricity bill again. 

Climate Hypocrite #1: The winner is John Kerry, and John Kerry gets this award easily for the end of 2023. We have to give the number one climate hypocrite award to John Kerry because he stood before Congress at a hearing and was grilled by a Congressman where he repeatedly said ‘I don’t own a private jet,  I’ve never owned a private jet.’ And it wasn’t until about 45 minutes later that a congressman grilled him and said wait a minute, your wife owned private jets for decades and then finally sold them when the negative media came out, and John Kerry was forced to say, ‘Yes my wife owns one. Yes, I’ve flown in HER private jets.’

Morano: An actual positive award to Abigail Disney, the Disney heiress. We’ve got to give her props. She has come out and stopped flying private jets. She is one of the wealthiest heiresses in the world, heir to the Disney fortune. She now wants to ban private jets for the 1% wealthiest people in the world and I say she’s got it right. We need to support Abigail Disney the Disney heiress, because any of these climate rules they come up with should apply to the John Kerrys and the Bill Gates, and King Charles types first. Let’s experiment on them with travel bans, restrictions on meat eating, insect-eating, And only then should we consider these restrictions for the rest of us. Let’s support what the Disney heiress is doing. .. 

Rachel Campos-Duffy: Marc,  I love how you always bring this to our attention. Wishing you a Happy New Year and thanks for joining us with your awesome list.

The world will not stop burning coal and using oil

By Don Ritter

John Kerry tilts at reality like Don Quixote tilted at windmills. While the 28th UN-related Conference of Parties (COP 28) was wrapping up in Dubai, America’s Special Presidential Envoy for Climate fumed about funding and building new coal-fired electricity generating plants. He declared himself a “militant” opponent of coal. He very personally decried those who would build a new coal plant.

Yet he knows full well that China has funded and built over a hundred coal-fired plants in the past year alone and is building a staggering 234 gigawatts of coal-fired generation. Each gigawatt of generation is equivalent to a new 1000 megawatt coal plant.

Those mind-boggling numbers and the respective increase in emissions of CO2 dwarf hard-won CO2 reductions in the U.S. and Europe. China alone is the mega, indeed, giga windmill Kerry is tilting at.

COP 28 was hosted by the oil-rich United Arab Emirates. The leader of a giant Abu Dhabi-owned oil company was the conference chairman who actually advocated for the importance of fossil fuels in the future of the global economy, stating that “there’s no science to support demands for a phase out of fossil fuels.”

The next host country for COP 29 is another oil-wealth producer, Azerbaijan. The major petro-state producers in the Middle East plus Russia, Algeria, Guyana, Iran, Venezuela, Azerbaijan, Indonesia, and other nations are all looking to expand production for the foreseeable future.

The consuming world is paying them handsomely to do so. They may pay lip-service to a politically and publicly popular climate-change narrative, but given the global economic reality, there is no reason to believe that producers will ever give up their primary wealth creators, oil and gas, and for that matter, coal. Nor will the energy consuming nations, given the symbiosis between producers and consumers.

According to the UN, some 70,000 attended COP 28, with the wealthier, including Mr. Kerry, arriving on their jet-fuel consuming, CO2-creating private jets. The conference was a boon to Dubai’s tourist industry, and a remarkable destination for tourists. But, in the end, the COP 28 final statement incorporates only hortatory language to “transition” away from fossil fuels, not a pledge to “phase-out” fossil fuels.

Hard-core climate activists, led by Kerry, aggressively pursued “phase-out language” but did not get it. That means China, India and developing nations all over the world will continue to burn coal to get their electricity.

The benefit for others

They will continue to need oil and gas to drive their cars, power their economies and use refined derivatives of oil and gas that are part of just about everything produced in the modern world. When John Kerry declares that there should be no coal plants “permitted anywhere in the world,” his words are applied in fact only to the United States, not “anywhere in the world.”

As a result of the COP 28, the big global CO2 emitters will still be able to produce fossil fuel-based wealth, while the Biden administration will continue to try to kill coal — plus oil and gas to a lesser extent (for now) — and thereby undermine America’s industrial and manufacturing sectors and residential ratepayers here at home.

Never mind impending blackouts as coal and gas plants are prematurely “retired” (83 gigawatts worth) resulting from of “green” government regulatory policies and massive taxpayer-funded programs to “go green.” In the Pittsburgh region alone, two coal-fired power plants will be prematurely retired this year because new rules make them uneconomic — rules handed down not from Harrisburg, but from Washington. Rules that pay no attention to how much the area needs that power.

States like Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Kentucky are hard hit by the government’s war on coal — a war that doesn’t apply to miners in Russia, Brazil, India and China, to name just a few countries that live off coal.

The U.S. has some 450 years of coal reserves, the world’s largest. Pennsylvania has some of the finest bituminous coal in the world, coal that consuming and developing countries around the world covet. The state still has nearly 5,000 workers employed in the coal industry. And the administration wants to give it all up.

Diminishing the democracies

Coal is the major target now, but Kerry and company are coming for the CO2 emitted from natural gas next. Marcellus Shale, the largest shale formation in the country, providing natural gas and wealth to Pennsylvania and beyond, is at risk if the climate alarmists and regulatory bodies in Washington have their way.

With the still-developing world, led by China and India, rapidly expanding coal-fired power generation in addition to their increasing appetite for oil and natural gas, squeezing America on CO2 emissions simply makes no sense. Such a strategy only diminishes America and Europe, while empowering China, Russia, and the petro-states.

It cripples the world’s democracies while strengthening the authoritarians. And it does nothing to save the environment.

The post The world will not stop burning coal and using oil appeared first on CFACT.

Was COP 28 climate imperialism’s last gasp?

By Duggan Flanakin

The horde has left Dubai, many in their private jets. Next stop in the champagne and caviar COPcon is Baku, Azerbaijan, which, at 92 feet below sea level, seems an appropriate place to bury Net Zero. The award came on the heels of an historic agreement between Azerbaijan and next-door Armenia, which both nations hope will bring peace to intertwined peoples with a long history of deadly strife.

Azerbaijan, a mostly Muslim nation of 10 million people, straddles Europe and Asia. It relies heavily on oil and gas production, which accounts for nearly half the nation’s GDP and nearly 93 percent of its export revenue. Baku has been an oil center since 1837when tsarist Russians built the first oil-distilling factory nearby.

Prior to the 1905 Russian revolution, Baku produced half the world’s oil sold in international markets. During World War II, Baku supplied 80 percent of the oil for Russia’s eastern front. The nation has rebuilt and expanded its infrastructure since liberation from Soviet rule in 1991.

But while the new Azerbaijani government rebuilt synagogues, it also, in 1990, began a pogrom to expel resident Armenians. Despite this and the recent conquest of ethnic Armenians in the Nagorno-Karabakh region west of Baku, Azerbaijan won the right to host COP 29 when Armenia dropped its bid and supported Baku. The defeated quasi-independent Nagorno-Karabakh government agreed to dissolve as of January 1, 2024.

Meanwhile, the imperialists in Brussels and other European capitals continue to plot their abandonment of the fuels that supply 82 percent of the world’s electricity – a move that would destroy the Azerbaijani economy.

A dozen countries led by the Netherlands have announced crackdowns on what the EU calls “inefficient fossil fuel subsidies.” Canada’s climate minister, Steven Guilbeault, says harming oil companies “ensures that spending is aligned with climate ambition.”

Clearly, such planners have not gotten the memo. Or they choose to ignore the wisdom of the Global South (and China, too, for that matter).

As Brendan O’Neill so brilliantly pointed out, “African diplomats said at COP 28 that ‘the idea of a fossil-fuel phaseout [is] unworkable.’” Moreover, he added, “India, China, Brazil, and other nations are not prepared to sacrifice their economic health at the altar of our deranged anti-modernism.”

O’Neill also hits on the real story of COP 28 – that, for perhaps the first time in 28 tries, the clash between Western ideologues “who are exhausted with the modern world” and developing nations “who want in on the modern world” was out in the open for the world to see.

Developing nations spokespeople tended to agree. Nigeria’s environment minister, Ishaq Salako, expressed astonishment at the rhetoric of John Kerry, Al Gore, and others, saying, “Asking Nigeria, or indeed, asking Africa, to phase out fossil fuels is like asking us to stop breathing without life support.”

The G77 coalition of 135 developing nations also made it clear that its members will not stop using coal (and oil and gas, as well), which they see as vital to ensuring what a spokesperson called “a dignified life for our people.”

Kenyan agricultural engineer Jusper Machogu told the COP 28 delegates, “we want to flourish, we want to replace the 90 percent of Africa’s energy that comes from burning firewood, cow dung, and crop residue. We want to have the four pillars of modern civilization: cement, steel, plastics, and synthetic fertilizers, all available thanks to fossil fuels.”

After 500 years of exploiting Africa’s resources and doing little, if anything, to bring prosperity or even electricity to Africa’s billions, the West now seeks to bully Africans into abandoning a major source of continental wealth – and drive them deeper into debt to install ineffective wind farms and solar arrays. Only Africa (and a few other scattered poor nations) would suffer, as China and India have long since told their would-be superiors to pound sand.

The Institute for Energy Research notes that while nations “officially” agreed to reduce global fossil fuel consumption, oil, gas, and coal still account for about 80 percent of the world’s energy, with production of each hitting new records as world energy demand grows. Even the stodgy British, who proudly abandoned coal years ago, approved a new coal mine shortly after realizing the Russian oil might not be so readily available as an alternative.

Post-pandemic global interest rates, spiked by massive “Net Zero” spending by the Biden Administration and European governments, are adding to the already unaffordable costs of building new renewable energy projects. Cost, along with citizen outrage, is making it increasingly difficult to build new wind farms and solar arrays.

The UN admits that developing countries would need nearly six trillion dollars over the next few years to give up fossil fuels and try to power entire nations on intermittent energy sources – all of which would depend on either debt to mostly European banks or heavy strings attached to government-to-government loans or grants. Yet prior promises of $100 billion have yet to materialize.

[Maybe developing nations also see how Ukraine’s abandonment of its nuclear arsenal left that country vulnerable to Russian aggression.]

Growing backlash in Europe adds to the suspicion that Africans would never see the promised “aid.” At the recent EU leaders’ summit in Brussels, European Council President Charles Michel proposed cutting nearly all of a 10 billion euro fund earmarked for helping European nations build renewable energy projects (wind turbines, hydrogen plants, carbon capture) – a timid enough response to the profligate trillion-dollar boondoggles of the Biden Administration.

The simple truth is that not even the West has enough money to spare to disengage from the engine that fueled the Industrial Revolution. Matt Ridley cites a Climate Change Economics article that admits that achieving Net Zero by 2050 would save about a trillion dollars a year in avoided costs of climate change – at a cost of $10 to $43 trillion a year just to get there. Simply put, every dollar invested in Net Zero brings the West closer to bankruptcy.

O’Neill describes COP 28 as “a war of sorts between Americans and Europeans beholden to the eco-religion and developing nations more interested in growth.” Allison Pearson chastises the eco-religionists who ‘claim that they alone are on the right side of humanity” despite the fact that their project to “save the planet” spells a “painful reduction in comfort and joy for millions” (I would say billions).

Pearson chides the fearmongers who predict a “climate catastrophe” without Net Zero for ignoring the elephant in the room – that we are “certain to have an economic and societal catastrophe if we persist in trying to reach that goal by 2050. Humanity cannot bear it.”

O’Neill condemns the “neocolonial arrogance, its indifference to the needs and rights of people in the developing world” that stands starkly exposed at COP 28 as a vain search for meaning by a generation that so desperately wants to be as relevant as those who brought an end to racial segregation and Apartheid generations ago.

Energy consultant Tilak Doshi called out the “carbon imperialism” of the U.S., the EU, and their developed country allies at COP 26 in Glasgow for daring to dictate a carbonless future energy policy for the developing world. While that arrogance was still in evidence at Dubai, what has changed, he said, “is the pointed responses in opposition by government representatives outside the climate-evangelical Western group of countries intent on weaning the world off fossil fuels.”

Kerry, Gore, and the climate crowd are eagerly anticipating their visit to Baku, where they intend to lay out plans to turn Azerbaijan into a deserted wasteland and quash the hopes and dreams of Africans desperate for affordable electricity and other “modern conveniences.”

Perhaps, though, they should take a cue from the host nation and its historic enemy Armenia, who laid down their weapons to join arm in arm to welcome these glamourous barbarians from the West.

Gro Brundtland, when chairing the world’s first conference on sustainable development, stated that “sustainable” must yield to the higher goal of alleviating poverty, and in the real world, this must include energy poverty. It’s time to abandon climate imperialism – and to set Africa free to chart its own destiny.

That would be good for Africa, even better for the planet and all of its people.

The post Was COP 28 climate imperialism’s last gasp? appeared first on CFACT.

COP 28: Climate Hysteric Peter Kalmus Has the Sads

From Watts Up With That?

In the latest episode of what could be mistaken for a satirical comedy, Dr. Peter Kalmus, a self-proclaimed climate activist and NASA scientist, has expressed his dismay over the recent COP28 summit. His opinion piece, “COP Out: Wrapping Up a Useless Climate Summit That Should Fool Nobody,” reads like a script from a dystopian drama where the villains are fossil fuels, and the heroes are, well, apparently not the attendees of COP28.

Kalmus paints a picture of COP28 as a grand assembly of the world’s elite, jetting in on their private planes to a petrostate, to discuss the perils of the very industry that fueled their arrival. The irony is so thick here that one could cut it with a knife. The summit, according to Kalmus, was nothing more than a stage for the fossil fuel industry to make “dirty side deals”.

Some wealthy humans flew on private jets to the United Arab Emirates, a petrostate, for a two-week meeting. Many of these humans work for the fossil fuel industry. The petrostate leveraged its host status for dirty side deals to expand fossil fuels. There was a session on sustainable megayacht ownership.

 https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/cop-out-wrapping-up-a-useless-climate-summit-that-should-fool-nobody-opinion/ar-AA1lHi6U?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=ad9c0e089b12489a875e5a576bcb4cf5&ei=24

The appointment of Sultan al-Jaber, a fossil fuel CEO, as the presiding official of a climate summit is akin to putting a fox in charge of the henhouse, suggests Kalmus. His portrayal of al-Jaber’s promises to continue investing in oil and expanding fossil fuels post-summit paints a picture of a mustache-twirling villain, gleefully plotting the world’s demise.

The presiding official was a fossil fuel CEO, Sultan al-Jaber, who, days earlier, had said some anti-science, denialist garbage-words. Two days after the meeting ended, he promised that his oil corporation will continue investing in oil and expanding fossil fuels. OPEC, in a joint statement with the Gas Exporting Countries Forum, congratulated the UAE on the “positive outcome” for the fossil fuel industry.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/cop-out-wrapping-up-a-useless-climate-summit-that-should-fool-nobody-opinion/ar-AA1lHi6U?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=ad9c0e089b12489a875e5a576bcb4cf5&ei=24

Kalmus doesn’t hold back in his apocalyptic vision of a world ravaged by global heating, with floods, fires, and broken systems. The fossil fuel industry and industrial animal agriculture are the chief architects of this impending doom. One might expect a superhero to swoop in any moment now to save the day, but alas, this is the real world, and Kalmus seems to believe we’re fresh out of caped crusaders.

We are all in grave danger from global heating, which appears to be accelerating, is irreversible, and is driving all the flooding and heat and fires. It’s caused almost entirely by the fossil fuel industry, with industrial animal agriculture in second place.

 https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/cop-out-wrapping-up-a-useless-climate-summit-that-should-fool-nobody-opinion/ar-AA1lHi6U?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=ad9c0e089b12489a875e5a576bcb4cf5&ei=24

The COP28’s 21-page “global stocktake” is ridiculed as too little, too late. Kalmus is appalled that it took thirty years just to mention fossil fuels in a COP decision text. The stocktake’s call for transitioning away from fossil fuels in energy systems is dismissed as nonbinding, unquantitative, and insincere. It’s as if Kalmus expected a binding global treaty to be signed then and there, magically solving all climate issues.

The wealthy fossil-fuel-industry-influenced humans at COP28 produced 21 pages called the “global stocktake.” The stocktake mentions “fossil fuels” once, on page 4. People who wish to argue that COP28 wasn’t a complete failure have been calling this “historic.” And technically it is, because fossil fuels have never been mentioned in a COP decision text.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/cop-out-wrapping-up-a-useless-climate-summit-that-should-fool-nobody-opinion/ar-AA1lHi6U?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=ad9c0e089b12489a875e5a576bcb4cf5&ei=24

The loss and damage pledges from rich nations, amounting to $700 million, are scoffed at as grossly inadequate. Kalmus compares the United States’ pledge of less than $20 million to the budget of an average high school, highlighting the disparity between the scale of the problem and the response.

In Kalmus’s eyes, COP28 was nothing short of a spectacular failure, a charade that serves only to perpetuate the status quo. He calls for a new international summit and fossil fuel treaty system, free from the influence of the fossil fuel industry. His solution? A stronger climate movement and a ban on the fossil fuel industry from negotiations.

We need to start by agreeing that COP28, like other COPs, was a complete failure. Claiming that it was somehow not a failure, clinging to bits of false hope, generates a powerful illusion that business as usual can continue. We’ve been doing this for 30 years now. The possibility of keeping heating to under 1.5 degrees C has been squandered. If we cling to false hope that it’s working, we will keep doing it, year after year, making no progress. This is what the fossil fuel industry wants; this is how we lose a planet.

We then need to establish an international summit and fossil fuel treaty system that isn’t broken under the weight of fossil fuel industry corruption. To do this, we need to ban the fossil fuel industry from the negotiations, and doing this will require a stronger climate movement. Every single one of us can work, in our own way, to make the movement stronger. Be a climate activist: join with other climate activists—we’re not hard to find—and take risks. It’s up to us.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/cop-out-wrapping-up-a-useless-climate-summit-that-should-fool-nobody-opinion/ar-AA1lHi6U?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=ad9c0e089b12489a875e5a576bcb4cf5&ei=24

New House resolution would nullify UN COP 28 meat plan

By Gabriella Hoffman

“The UN’s plans for your diet would be nothing short of a disaster for your health and food security worldwide,” said Rep. Flood. “Meat is one of the most efficient ways to deliver protein, and here in the Beef State, cattle are a critical part of the Golden Triangle that’s supplying clean ethanol fuel around the world. The resolution I’m introducing today makes it clear that the United States opposes any attempt to reduce or eliminate meat production. Doing so would shatter the world’s food security and end an age-old way of life for millions of farm and ranch families across the globe.”  — Rep. Mike Flood (R-NE)

In Episode 400 of District of Conservation, Gabriella recaps her experience at Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation’s annual NASC Conference in Dewey Beach, Delaware and Rep. Mike Flood’s resolution to defang the COP 28 U.N. Global Food Systems road map from being adopted by the U.S. Tune in to learn more!

Listen on Apple Podcasts

EP 445: Getting Service Members Outdoors with Roy Hill District of Conservation

In Episode 445 of District of Conservation, Gabriella catches up with Roy Hill – formerly of Brownells and now with Swanson Russell. Roy is a longtime firearms industry fixture and is active with Special Operations Wounded Warriors outside of his day job. Tune in to learn more about SOWW and Roy's involvement. SHOW NOTES Swanson Russell Connect with Roy Hill SOWW SOWW Retreats — Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/district-of-conservation/support
  1. EP 445: Getting Service Members Outdoors with Roy Hill
  2. EP 444: Hunting, Shooting Sports Approval Decreases + Nuclear Energy
  3. EP 443: FEMA Climate Declaration, Farm Tour, Wallace J. Nichols
  4. EP 442: Congressman Bruce Westerman, House Natural Resources Chairman
  5. EP 441: Culpeper Battlefields, Field & Stream, Federal Predator Contest Ban

SHOW NOTES

⁠Virginia Deer Hunt⁠

⁠CSF NASC ⁠

⁠Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation⁠

⁠Rep. Mike Flood Resolution ⁠

⁠EP 398: Giving Tuesday, COP28, ExxonMobil’s Lithium Bet

The post New House resolution would nullify UN COP 28 meat plan appeared first on CFACT.

COP 28: UN climate conference ends with more of the same tired ‘goals’

By Craig Rucker

The UN’s annual climate meeting (COP28) is over. The reaction to the final agreement, dubbed “the Dubai Consensus,” is not unexpectantly being heralded as “historic” and “landmark” by the mainstream media.

“COP28 ends with historic deal to ‘transition away’ from planet-warming fossil fuels,” Time Magazine wrote.

“Oil, coal and gas are doomed, global leaders say in historic resolution,” USA Today Headlined.

“COP28 landmark deal agreed to ‘transition away’ from fossil fuels,” boasted the lead story in the UK Guardian.

In reality, these headlines are filled with much pizzaz and little substance. The actual agreement is far more “business as usual” than it is revolutionary.

Specifically, the “consensus” calls for countries to “transition away” from fossil fuels in a “just, orderly and equitable manner” – whatever that means, since none of these terms is defined.

It also renews nonbinding and unenforceable pledges that nations will try to reach “net zero” by mid-century and triple the still-minuscule worldwide amount of renewable by 2030. Yawn.

These are the “same old, same old” items many nations have been undertaking and spending billions on for years. As David Blackmon noted in Forbes, what was agreed to in Dubai was “merely a restatement of commitments many of the signatory governments have already embarked upon for years and failed to achieve.”

They will fail again. The reason is obvious, and it was brought to light throughout the COP-28 process.

Even before the gavel fell to open the proceedings, the G20 nations failed to issue a statement calling for the “phasing out” of fossil fuels last July. This was because countries like Saudi Arabia, China, Russia and South Africa dug their heels in and refused to budge. This remained the case throughout the COP-28 process.

While they did eventually agree to the term “transition” instead of “phasing out” during the final hours of the COP deliberations, it’s unclear what all the fuss was about.

The fact of the matter is, these countries are never going to budge. None of them is about to gut the use of fossil fuels and follow the West’s lead in committing economic hara-kiri.

How can we be sure? Because actions speak louder than words.

The oil-rich UAE, which hosted COP-28, made no bones about placing Sultan Al-Jaber, president of the world’s 11th largest oil and gas producer, in charge of COP-28. While the UAE boasted to the applause of conference attendees that it was putting some $30 billion toward a fund to expand renewable energy development, it kept a little more quiet about the fact that it is spending five times that much – around $150 billion over the next few years – to expand its oil and gas development.

The same could be said for China and India. Despite having slick venues at COP-28 showcasing their commitments to a “clean energy future,” China approved two new coal plants every week in 2022 and India is set to increase its coal use by 25% by 2030.

Having attended 25 of the 28 UN climate meetings since their inception, I’ve become accustomed to this routine COP plotline.

In predictable fashion, as if penned by a second-rate Hollywood script writer, these gatherings have all the drama and intrigue of a sappy Christmas movie on the Hallmark Channel … minus the warm fuzzies that often make Hallmark worth watching.

These COP events typically start with assertions that a looming calamity faces humanity, requiring urgent action. At COP-28, this began when the media hyped natural weather events, like hurricane Idalia and Hillary, and all summer long linked them all to climate change. It continued into November, with the National Climate Assessment report saying climate change is making our modern ultra-high-tech lives harder.

The media narrative then thickens the plot by painting a picture of seeming hopelessness, with evil fossil fuels prevailing. We endure this rigamarole every year, with endless hype about oil-producing nations fueling discord during the conference and the possibility that the summit will end in collapse.

But, true to form, the drama always ends with a “happily ever after.” By the time the conference concludes, a “compromise” is reached, with those on the side of good triumphing (this would be Al Gore and company), evil being vanquished or at least being corralled (fossil fuel companies), and hope being restored for humanity and planet. Sigh.

The reality of these COP meetings is quite different. The heroes are not selfless defenders of “truth and justice.” They are elites, who never lead by example or give up their private jets, limos, red meat and other conveniences, for the betterment of humanity. They indulge in them every year, as I have seen firsthand, basking in the opulence of exotic cities like Dubai, while insisting that others (we commoners) follow their dictates, not their examples.

Perhaps when the public understands this ongoing, repetitive charade, these COP dramas will enter a final season and finally get canceled. Sadly, that’s likely wishful thinking. There’s far too much money and power at stake.

So expect the same sorry plotline to emerge same time, next year.

The post COP 28: UN climate conference ends with more of the same tired ‘goals’ appeared first on CFACT.

The COP28 charade

From Net Zero Watch

By Robert Lyman

‘All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players’, wrote William Shakespeare. He might have been foreseeing the show recently concluded in Dubai, where over 100,000 people reportedly came to play their roles at COP 28, the 28th major climate policy summit.

The centrepiece of the gathering was discussion of the ‘stocktake’ prepared by the United Nations, an assessment of countries’ performance in reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in accordance with their five-year plans (‘NDCs’). The final stocktake report served as the decision document. The world’s media declared, with almost one voice, that the conference had produced a ‘historic agreement to transition away from fossil fuels’. Professor Johan Rockström of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany declared that the decisions taken at COP 28 marked the true ‘beginning of the end of the fossil fuel-driven world economy’.

In fact, COP 28 was a spectacular failure, as measured against the goals that the UN had set for it from the beginning. It did not achieve a single one of the objectives that climate activists sought. Even more important, in spite of the voluntary commitments that various governments made during the conference (mostly aimed at domestic audiences), it is virtually certain to have little or no effect on the global trends in GHG emissions or on the climate.

The news from the stocktake was bad. The report prepared for the conference estimated that, based on current NDCs, the gap in emissions consistent with limiting warming is about 20.3 billion tonnes (Gt) to 23.9 Gt of carbon dioxide equivalent per year. That is about half the world’s current emissions. The report urged more ‘ambition’ in order to reduce GHG emissions by 43% by 2030 and a further 60% by 2035 compared with 2019 levels and to reach net-zero CO2 emissions by 2050 globally.

A new element at the conference was an increased emphasis on phasing out fossil-fuel production and use. The United Nations Environmental Programme published a report in which officials urged the conference to add a new set of targets for emissions reduction that are fuel-specific. It was anticipated that there would be a prolonged debate about whether the conference would endorse ‘phasing down’ or ‘phasing out’ fossil fuel production and about whether that reference should include the word ‘unabated’.

In fact, only intense lobbying by the European Union and the United States, along with several smaller countries, caused the conference to include in the stocktake decision document a carefully-worded reference. The reference is one of an eight-point list of things that the conference ‘called on the Parties’ voluntarily to make national efforts to do. The specific reference to fossil fuels was to ‘transition away from fossil fuels in energy systems, in a just, orderly and equitable manner, accelerating action in this critical decade, so as to achieve net zero by 2050’.

Five things are notable about this reference.

First, the statement of goals is not binding; it is not a legal commitment and there are no penalties if the Parties fail to act on it.

Second, the term ‘transition away’ does not require specific cuts in either fossil fuel use or production.

Third, the reference includes only fossil fuels in energy systems, not, for example, fossil fuel use as feedstocks in petrochemicals production.

Fourth, the reference to a ‘just, orderly and equitable manner’ provides loopholes that will allow the developing countries to argue that the goal does not apply to them and/or that ‘orderly’ excludes hasty action.

Fifth, despite its reference to ‘accelerating action’, there are no specific deadlines. In other words, the statement can be safely ignored unless countries intend to limit fossil fuel production and use anyway.

COP 27 in Egypt focused on the alleged need for more climate aid. COP 28 was expected to continue this effort. Developing countries insisted that the wealthier ones: meet the decade-long commitment to provide at least USD 100 billion per year to the Global Climate Fund to finance mitigation efforts up to 2025; agree to increase funding of climate mitigation up to USD 1.3 trillion per year from 2025 to 2030; double funding for climate adaptation, ideally to at least USD 600 billion per year; and provide large commitments for the ‘Loss and Damages’ fund to assist developing countries when they were affected by severe weather events that they attribute to climate change.

COP 28 failed to deliver on these expectations. The decision document noted that the developed countries did not provide USD100 billion in climate aid per year in 2021. It welcomed pledges made by 31 contributors for the ‘replenishment’ of the Green Climate Fund, resulting in a nominal pledge of USD 12.8 billion to date. That is USD 12.8 billion over a number of years, far from the USD 1.3 trillion per year the developing countries demanded.

It gets worse. The decision document stated that the adaptation finance needs of the developing countries are estimated at USD 215–387 billion annually up until 2030, and that about USD 4.3 trillion per year needs to be invested in clean energy up until 2030, increasing thereafter to USD 5 trillion per year up until 2050, to be able to reach net zero emissions by 2050. The significance of this statement is that without this funding the developing countries may claim that they cannot afford the enormous costs of the emissions reduction measures. As the developing countries now constitute almost 70 per cent (and rising) of global emissions, this means that the net-zero emissions goal by 2050 cannot possibly be met. 

The conference did little to ‘operationalize’ the Loss and Damages Fund that was approved in principle at COP 27. The key decisions about the design of this fund will be dealt with in a committee that will report back to COP 29. The UN did elicit voluntary pledges, and the decision document welcomed the pledges made to provide USD 188 million for the Adaptation Fund (i.e. far below the USD 600 billion per year sought) and pledges for USD 792 million for Loss and Damages. These were voluntary commitments, so there was no agreement to make them obligatory.

The failure of the conference to meet the financial demands of the developing countries should have been the main story coming out of it. Instead, the media ignored it. We can expect the show to continue next year at COP 29 in Azerbaijan.

Robert Lyman is a Canadian economist and the author of Net Zero Watch’s review of Canadian climate policy.

Disgusting Tactics in the Nana Akua Show 16th December 23 between Paul Burgess & Jim Dale

Climate Realism by Paul Burgess

In this episode we were again limited to very little time but it is the disgusting tactics of Jim Dale that made it a very sad episode.

He wastes time ignorantly attacking persons instead of keeping his promise provide evidence of increasing droughts.

Worse than that he slanders one person and does it out of pure ignorance.

The Limitations of Limits

Why COP 28 is destined to disappoint

From Climate Scepticism

BY JOHN RIDGWAY

Following the spectacle and theatre of COP 28, I thought it might be a good idea to remind ourselves of the rationale behind the targets upon which its deliberations were founded. After all, we all thought we knew that a two degree Celsius increase in temperature would spell disaster. Now we all presume to know that one and a half degrees will do the trick. But what exactly is the strength of the science behind the determination of such thresholds?

The COP 28 delegates will tell you that they don’t care anymore, because this is a matter of settled science, and that is all you need to know. Short shrift would be given to any suggestion that there is still debate to be had concerning the scientific basis. As for any suggestion that the specification of the targets was actually a political manoeuvre … well, that is to laugh. Except it’s true, and I’m not even joking.

That values ascribed to safety targets owe more to politics than science should not strike you as controversial, but I am prepared to bet that it will, at least where climate change safety targets are concerned. This is because, whereas safety professionals are quite aware of the arbitrariness that often accompanies the quantification of targets, climate policy-makers wouldn’t dream of conceding an inch on the mantra of ‘following the science’. For them, two degrees increase doesn’t just provide a simply understood framework within which to work, it represents a consensus arrived at by thousands of scientists objectively beavering away in the way that scientists always do. It’s as if the 40 mph speed limit that suddenly appeared on your commute to work was the result of endless studies of accident statistics, combined with consideration of the local road conditions as related to accident causation, rather than an arbitrary gesture in response to a general road safety campaign (which is actually the much more likely scenario). I’m sure a set of consultants would have been employed to validate the choice of speed limit, but rest assured that their recommendations were provided only to help push through the ‘correct’ policy. Speaking as a former traffic control systems safety analyst, I have to hope that you can just take my word that this is how these things generally go down.

But climate science is different, I hear you say. Well, let us look at the evidence for that. What exactly is the history behind the setting of the current climate change speed limit?

It’s politics, stupid

It is generally accepted that the first person to mention a two degree Celsius limit was Nobel economist William Nordhaus, back in the 1970s. As he put it:

“As a first approximation, it seems reasonable to argue that the climatic effects of carbon dioxide should be kept within the normal range of long-term climatic variation. According to most sources the range of variation between distinct climatic regimes is in the order of ±5°C, and at the present time the global climate is at the high end of this range. If there were global temperatures more than 2° or 3° above the current average temperature, this would take the climate outside of the range of observations which have been made over the last several hundred thousand years.”

The first thing to note here is the range of uncertainty, i.e. ‘2° or 3°’. The second is how weak the argument is for this ‘first approximation’. It doesn’t involve a detailed scientific assessment of the impacts of warming, it merely makes the ‘reasonable’ assumption that we might not wish to invite an unfamiliar scenario. As such, it is essentially precautionary in its nature. Furthermore, no data or citations were offered at the time by Nordhaus to back up his claims regarding the Earth’s temperature record.

Be that as it may, there were many who were later willing to back Nordhaus’s intuitions. In particular, the WMO/ICSU/UNEP Advisory Group on Greenhouse Gases produced a report in 1990 that re-iterated the significance of a 2° limit (the lower of the two figures proposed by Nordhaus), this time by arguing for the likelihood of non-linear, catastrophic impacts beyond that threshold. The baton was also picked up by the German Advisory Council for Global Change (WBGU) in the 1990s. It was the WBGU, under chairman Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, that convinced Angela Merkel of the 2°C target, thereby starting a political process that ultimately led to the adoption of the 2°C target by organisations such as the G8, the Major Economies Forum, and the Conference of the Parties held in 2010 in Copenhagen. It was also largely through the exhortations of Schellnhuber (a member of the Club of Rome advocating for a ‘move towards more equitable economic, financial, and socio-political models’) that the target was later to be reduced to 1.5°C. Again, such arguments were ostensibly motivated by the desire to avoid tipping points that could not be proven but were deemed sufficiently plausible to invoke the precautionary principle.

I would not wish to give the idea that there was no science behind the proposal of the 2°C target, or indeed its subsequent reduction to 1.5°C. However, it would be naïve to suggest that the values chosen arose from any detailed calculations corroborated by multiple groups of scientists working independently. The history of the limit owes a lot more to the scientific hand-waving of small but influential bodies who have furnished their political overlords with suitably rounded numbers that can function as a focal point in the climate policy arena. In that respect, the analogy with traffic speed limits is most apt. The science might suggest a speed limit of 37 mph, and even that different limits apply for differently experienced drivers. It is fortunate, however, that speed limits are not set by scientists but set by politicians who understand that focal points are important for success, and simplicity is important for focal points. Richard Betts of the Met Office puts it this way:

“The level of danger at any particular speed depends on many factors… It would be too complicated and unworkable to set individual speed limits for individual circumstances taking into account all these factors, so clear and simple general speed limits are set using judgement and experience to try to get an overall balance between advantages and disadvantages of higher speeds for the community of road users as a whole.”

So 40 mph it is for everyone. Similarly, 1.5°C is chosen not so much for its scientific accuracy but for its political expediency. After all, it is supposed to equate to an acceptable level of risk, and questions of acceptability are political rather than scientific.

Build it and they will come

And that would be the end of my story were it not for one more important detail. If 1.5°C is just a number plucked out of the air because it sets a good target, then why is it that so many scientific studies have subsequently appeared to verify its critical importance? How come that a figure that arose from years of intuitions, guesses and vaguely applied scientific insights has proven to be bang on the money, according to the current crop of peer-reviewed articles published in prestigious journals.

To understand this apparent coincidence, one has to appreciate just how a politically established focal point serves to guide the direction taken by scientific study. Furthermore, one has to drop the naïve view, often expressed, that the scientific method and the competitive nature of the scientific enterprise ensure that any suspect propositions will be challenged and ultimately overturned. The main problem with this naïve view is that it ignores the social feedback that occurs once a particular view has gained dominance. In an ideal world, such dominance should not interfere with the objectivity of decisions taken, but in the real world there are positive feedbacks that tend to reinforce popularity at the expense of veracity. Put another way, once an authoritative position has been established, credence can no longer be purely evidence-driven. One example of this phenomenon is the Matthew Effect as it applies to the establishment of a dominance of citations for particular researchers. Unfortunately, however, because science is a social undertaking, such feedbacks are a lot more pervasive than citation bias alone might suggest, since they also bear upon the popularity of research undertaken, methods adopted, the conclusions to be drawn and the chances of gaining publication. None of the above are free decisions to be undertaken, since they will all be marshalled by a guiding social hand that reinforces with agency that has no need of conspiracy.

Occasionally, though rarely, the reality of social feedback within the scientific domain will be highlighted by those who operate within it. The message is rarely welcomed, however, since it undermines the whole idea that scientific authority can always be trusted to inform political decision-making. The suggestion that science has a propensity to provide politically correct answers does not go down well with those who have been brought up to believe in an unchallengeable scientific integrity. And so the social sanctions for those who speak out can be severe, as exemplified by the recent experience of climate scientist Patrick T. Brown when he detailed how these mechanisms operate within climate science. To him there is no surprise that research vindicating the 1.5°C target hugely dominates within the prestigious journals, any more than I wasn’t surprised to see safety analyses that conveniently validated traffic speed limits that had been the result of politically taken decisions.

But does any of it matter?

One of the most interesting features of limits and targets is the alacrity with which they are set and the facility with which they are ignored. There are laws of physics that should be borne in mind when determining whether a proposed action or current situation can be deemed sufficiently safe. But the law that states ‘thou shalt not exceed 1.5°C warming’ is of quite a different stripe. It was readily conceived with the minimum of required science, and has been subsequently ‘validated’ with more science than can be decently applied. Since COP 15, such limits have been treated with a dread reverence that looks increasingly melodramatic when one considers how much reality and rhetoric have diverged. It is no wonder, therefore, that each successive COP declaration has been heralded with unprecedented hope, only to be reviewed with unprecedented despair. I guess there is only so much one can achieve by setting limits when everyone knows that they are just symbolic focal points.