Ontario, Canada: A Mirror of America’s Economic Future Mortgaged To Falsified Climate Science

Guest essay by Dr. Tim Ball

clip_image002If Obama’s policies on energy and environment were truly original they would be worth consideration, but they are not. He dismisses claims that

The economy will lose millions of jobs and billions in growth. He said, “Let’s face it, that’s what [critics] always say,” and “every time … the warnings of the cynics have been wrong.

Wrong! They failed disastrously everywhere and every time they were applied. Figure 1 above shows a poster from Britain, one of several European nations on the path

Obama pursues.

Ironically, Maurice Strong, architect of the false claims of human produced CO2 causing catastrophic global warming/ climate change, provided a classic example.

Obama and other world leaders are basing their policies on the Reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). This was the climate science agency created by Maurice Strong through the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) and presented to the world in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. Figure 2 shows a simple flow chart of the structures created to control the political and scientific sectors to achieve a political agenda.

 

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Figure 2

Strong chaired the Rio 92 conference and in the same year was appointed to Ontario Hydro. He became Chair and was given free rein by Bob Rae, socialist Premier of the Province. He set about applying the philosophy and policies enshrined in the UNEP program. These were designed to demonize CO2 as the byproduct of fossil fuel driven industries and nations. It was speculated by Strong in his comments to Elaine Dewar cited in The Cloak of Green (1995). He suggested,

Isn’t the only hope for the planet that the industrialized civilizations collapse? Isn’t it our responsibility to bring that about?

 

Dewar asked why he didn’t enter politics to implement his plan. He essentially said you can’t do anything as a politician, but knew a political vehicle was required. He knew that convincing individual governments was almost impossible, as Kyoto negotiations proved. His experience told him the United Nations (UN) was his vehicle.

Dewar wrote that he liked the UN because:

He could raise his own money from whomever he liked, appoint anyone he wanted, control the agenda.

Dewar concluded:

Strong was using the U.N. as a platform to sell a global environment crisis and the Global Governance Agenda.

 

Strong had similar powers and objectives as Chairman of Ontario Hydro and became the architect of that Provinces problems. A 1997 article titled “Maurice Strong: The new guy in your future” says,

Maurice Strong has demonstrated an uncanny ability to manipulate people, institutions, governments, and events to achieve the outcome he desires. It concludes, The fox has been given the assignment, and all the tools necessary, to repair the henhouse to his liking.

This applied to his UN role, but also to his Ontario Hydro role.

Under the guise of claiming Ontario’s debt was a result of expensive nuclear power plants he set about implementing an anti-fossil fuel agenda. One commentator referencing a later scandal involving Strong called “Hydrogate says,

Within no time of his arrival, he firmly redirected and re-structured Ontario Hydro. At the time, Ontario Hydro was hell-bent on building many more nuclear reactors, despite dropping demand and rising prices. Maurice Strong grabbed the Corporation by the scruff of the neck, reduced the workforce by one third, stopped the nuclear expansion plans, cut capital expenditures, froze the price of electricity, pushed for sustainable development, made business units more accountable.

Sounds good, but it was a path to inadequate supply. Key is the phrase he, pushed for sustainable development. In Strong’s, keynote speech at the Rio Earth Summit he said:

Current lifestyles and consumption patterns of the affluent middle class – involving high meat intake, the use of fossil fuels, electrical appliances, home and work-place air-conditioning, and suburban housing – are not sustainable.

 

He’d already created mechanisms to eliminate fossil fuels and bring about reduction and destruction of western economies. Ontario was his personal application and they were a disaster.

Despite evidence of the failures, Canadian environmentalist David Suzuki became involved and urged Liberal Premier Dalton McGuinty to continue Strong’s disastrous policies. Suzuki was forced to resign from his own Foundation because his political activities violated his tax situation. As one commentator noted,

The McGuinty government has a major electrical power problem, one created by its decision to use the power system as a political policy tool. This policy has resulted in the doubling of rates in Ontario to a level higher than in most U.S. states. Ontarios former industrial advantage has disappeared, while the government has been pretending that nothing is wrong.

Because of these energy policies Ontario’s economy continued to decline. The real impact of the decline is offset by the great Canadian socialist policy of equalization. So-called “have” provinces with thriving economies pay money through the Federal government to “have not” provinces. It was Ontario’s destiny as equalization covered political failures

If this continues this is not hyperbole, this is a fact Ontario will become a have not province in confederation. And it will be Premier (Dalton) McGuintys legacy that he in two terms took Ontario from being the strongest economic province in the federation to a have not province.

Replacing nuclear and fossil fuel energies with alternate energies drives up the costs and creates a multitude of other problems. A US Senate report notes,

Comparisons of wind, solar, nuclear, natural gas and coal sources of power coming on line by 2015 show that solar power will be 173% more expensive per unit of energy delivered than traditional coal power, 140% more than nuclear power and natural gas and 92% more expensive than wind power. Wind power is 42% more expensive than nuclear and natural gas power. Wind and solars capacity factor or availability to supply power is around 33%, which means 67% of the time wind and solar cannot supply power and must be supplemented by a traditional energy source such as nuclear, natural gas or coal.

 

Changes in Ontario illustrate the problems. Wind turbulence restricts the number of turbines to 5 to 8 turbines per 2.6 square kilometers. With average wind speeds of 24 kph it needs 8,500 turbines covering 2590 square kilometers to produce the power of a 1000 MW conventional station. Ontario closed two 1000MW plants in 2011 – the Lambton and the Nanticoke coal fired plants. Besides the land, (5,180 km2) you still need coal-fired plants running at almost 100 percent for back up. Strong’s policies eliminate the back up, so you either have dramatically increased costs, inadequate power or both.

Source: Steve Hunter

In 2008 Obama told the San Francisco Chronicle that the

notion of no coal . . . is an illusion, and he favored a cap-and-trade system. So if somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can, Its just that it will bankrupt them because theyre going to be charged a huge sum for all that greenhouse gas thats being emitted.

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It’s only valid if science supports the claim that CO2, because of human production, is causing warming or climate change. It doesn’t, so there is no scientific need to replace fossil fuels.

Focus on CO2 and the assumption an increase causes temperature increase are built into the computer models. William Kinninmonth, former head of Australia’s National Climate Centre explains,

… current climate modeling is essentially to answer one question: how will increased atmospheric concentrations of CO2 (generated from human activity) change earths temperature and other climatological statistics?”…. It is heroic to assume that such a view is sufficient basis on which to predict future climate.

Indian Union Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said

science is politics in climate change; climate science is politics and we are being led by our noses by Western (climate) scientists who have less of a scientific agenda and more of a political agenda.

He should add that western politicians like Obama are promoting energy policies based on falsified political science and alternative energies that don’t work. Ontario, under the control of the grandmaster Maurice Strong, tried and they’ve already failed. It is unadulterated evidence that pursuing them still is purely political. As always the people will pay the price as they have in many jurisdiction beyond Ontario. An appropriate quote to explain such blind behavior comes from former Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev; “Politicians are the same every all over. They promise to build a bridge even where there is no river. Figure 1 cartoons the alternative energy bridge to nowhere in the UK.

I once said the Kyoto Protocol was a political solution to a non-existent climate problem. Obama’s energy policy is more of the same. It is more inexcusable because it failed everywhere it was tried, including by Maurice Strong, the father of the deception that global warming and climate change are a man made problem.

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Eliza
June 3, 2014 6:21 pm

Unfortunately It seems it will be impossible to convince people that there is no AGW (just google news “global warming”. Your children will have to suffer the stupidity of this generation like 200 million Russians and 1 billion Chinese went through the poverty of communism LOLIt has taken at least 100 years for them to learn

Mac the Knife
June 3, 2014 6:21 pm

Sasha says:
June 3, 2014 at 4:02 pm
Sasha,
That is a truly chilling indictment! Truly chilling…….
Our Dear Ruler (see new June 2 2014 EPA Rules on coal fired power plants) seems to have copied the the Maurice Strong game plan. I may have to stop referring to Barack Hussein Obama as ‘Our Dear Ruler’ and address him here after as ‘Our Carbon Copy President’. It just seems more accurate… and three times ironic.
Mac

Leo Geiger
June 3, 2014 6:35 pm

Eve says: I will not agree that the BC carbon tax is successful. It is successful in making most BC drivers go across either the US border or the Albera one for gasoline.
I think you might have a little trouble arguing that the majority of the 4.5 million people living in BC get their gas across a border, before even trying to attribute it all to the carbon tax.
Some interesting numbers exploring this idea:
http://daily.sightline.org/2014/05/21/the-canadians-are-coming/

Steve from Rockwood
June 3, 2014 7:09 pm

“a revenue neutral tax”. I’d like to see just one example.

Reply to  Steve from Rockwood
June 4, 2014 1:01 pm

From Rockwood – revenue neutral tax
Look for the unicorns.

Useful Idiot
June 3, 2014 8:11 pm

What those Ontario energy policies have wrought:
The long, slow decline of the nation’s industrial heartland
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/after-the-gold-rush/article18923563/

Raving
June 3, 2014 8:28 pm

Thinking about having to decide and vote fills me with disgust. Am coming to hate politicians more than lawyers. Must be getting old

Raving
June 3, 2014 8:31 pm

The decline of Ontario is occuring for the obvious reason. Jobs and industry have moved west or out of country. No mystery

June 3, 2014 9:01 pm

Sasha says:
June 3, 2014 at 4:02 pm
You are not the only one to see Maurice Strong as a Bondian super-villain..
My favourite Fenbeagle sketch titled “More is Strong – a Blow Field in China” shows strong as an Ernest Stavro Bloefeld character complete with cat. A must see.
http://fenbeagleblog.wordpress.com/2012/02/04/hanging-up-by-the-constables/

asybot
June 3, 2014 10:43 pm

Harry Passfield says:
June 3, 2014 at 12:18 pm
Eve says (upthread): “There is a reason I live here only my mandatory 153 days of the year and those days are in warm months when I should use the furnace less. The rest of the year is spent in the Bahamas…”
Eve: Would you consider adopting me? I am house-trained.
Forget about Harold heck Eve I am house trained too BUT I’ll cut the lawn and fetch the groceries AND wash the windows! (even when you are in Ontario :-). )

Eve
June 3, 2014 10:44 pm

Leo Geiger, you seem to have pulled up the only article showing that BC’s gas sales have not declined. The one I pulled up was from some BC government group, showing what they had accomplished. It really does not matter. The BC carbon tax as are all carbon taxes, are just another tax to be paid to the government. Makes me happy again that I only live here 5 months of the year and can leave forever if it gets too cold. Take care, stay warm and don’t drive. BTW, my heat is on. I guess that is because it is only 10 on June 4/14. What is this, winter?

Hilary Ostrov (aka hro001)
June 4, 2014 12:50 am

Leo Geiger says: June 3, 2014 at 1:25 pm

Canada would be better off with an end to all of these subsidies, whether directed to fossil fuels or renewables, and the adoption of a simple *revenue neutral* carbon tax like the successful one currently in place in British Columbia.

Poor Mr. Geiger. You really do need to give yourself a break and stop watching/listening to the CBC – and do yourself an even bigger favour by casting a more critical eye on the output from Ottawa’s Stewart Elgie and his “Sustainable Prosperity” shop.
Elgie is an Ottawa-based lawyer who has made far too many, well, unsustainable claims.
Not the least of which are contained in his so-called “papers” on the power and the glory of BC’s carbon tax. There’s a reason that there have been no increases in the rate of this daylight robbery for the last two years. Although I doubt you’ll ever hear about it from Elgie – or from BC’s “Pacific Carbon Trust”.
You see, notwithstanding Elgie’s – and Green MLA and IPCC-nik, Andrew Weaver’s – best efforts, as the BC Auditor General’s office has confirmed, you really shouldn’t believe everything that Elige or the Pacific Carbon Trust – or Weaver, for that matter – have tried to sell you.
Unless of course, not unlike Elgie, you’ve decided to redefine “successful”.
For details, pls see:
Of advocacy carts, evidence horses and Andrew Weaver’s carbon “baby”
and
BC Auditor General confirms enviro-activist Elgie’s “resignation” claim unsustainable

tagerbaek
June 4, 2014 1:28 am

You think Ontario is bad? In Germany we’re paying close to 40 US cents per kWh because of failed enviro-energy-idiocy.

herkimer
June 4, 2014 4:57 am

The posted Ontario hydro rates which doubled between 2002 and 2014 only tells half the story. On top of the BLENDED RATE there are other charges like DELIVERY, REGULATORY CHARGES, DEBT RETIREMENT and HST which almost double blended rate . I am currently paying a blended rate of 9.2 cents/kwh plus 7.2 cents per/kwh of other charges , bringing my total bill to 17.1 cents per kwh. We have been told that this rate will go up 33% soon . Some analysts predict the rate will double again during the coming decade bringing our rate comparable to the 40 cents per kwh in Germany . All this is being done to fight a non existing global warming threat and now some fools now want to add a carbon tax on top of this.

Leo Geiger
June 4, 2014 5:04 am

Steve from Rockwood says: “a revenue neutral tax”. I’d like to see just one example.
British Columbia.
Although it hasn’t been completely revenue neutral since the income tax cuts have slightly exceeded the revenue from the carbon tax, resulting in a net tax reduction in British Columbia for this particular policy. British Columbia has the lowest income tax rates in Canada as of 2012, partly as a result of the revenue neutrality of the carbon tax.

herkimer
June 4, 2014 5:20 am

There is a typo error in my previous post . The total of OTHER CHARGES is 7.9cents/kwh and not 7.2 cents/kwh.

June 4, 2014 5:26 am

A revenue neutral tax:
Stealing from an unfavored group to give to a favored group. So totally neutral. Assuming there is no transaction cost.

herkimer
June 4, 2014 6:24 am

I mentioned earlier that overzealous and financially irresponsible environmentalists combined forces with” tax and spend” liberal government to trash the economy of a previously prosperous province. The best example of this is the planned shutdown of a quite recently built 4000 MW coal fired power plant at Nanticoke, Ontario. Commissioned between 1973-1978 at a cost of $ 800 million, this plant today would cost 4 to 5 times more. The plant spent an additional amount of about $ 900 million for energy efficiencies, robustness and to improve its emissions. So we have here relatively new public assets worth today in replacement value of at least $5 billion dollars being shut down requiring the most expensive renewable energy replacement via nuclear, solar and wind turbine route whose levellized cost plus all the high subsidies is several times higher than coal . Yet new coal plants are being built all over the world in Europe and Asia. Germany is converting to coal from nuclear and building 23 new coal fired plants. United States will have most of its 600 coal fired plants still in place even after Obamas 30% reduction in emissions. China and India are adding coal fired power plants . This mistake has cost Ontario dearly and the tragedy of all this is that this plant was shut down to fight global warming but global warming has turned out to be a non-existing threat for 17 years now. What a waste of public money and assets due bad public environmental policy based prematurely on an unproven and flawed global warming science. Yet I see US embarking on the same route and about to make the same mistakes.

Eve
June 4, 2014 9:30 am

I don’t know how other people are getting such low Ontario electricity rates. My bill April 24 to May 24-usage 254 kWh, cost was 77.26 which works out to .304 per kWh,

herkimer
June 4, 2014 11:49 am

Ontario electricity rates are the third highest in Canada and for 1000 kWh hours, the average monthly bill is $141.69. In the two neighbouring provinces,in Quebec it is $ 68.66 and in Manitoba it is $78.92 about one half of Ontario’s cost . Clearly provinces with low power bills, the electricity is generated to a large part via water hydro power plants . Ontario had an opportunity to buy into these water generated power schemes as they were being planned but foolishly chose to go the nuclear, fossil and renewables route, doubling their cost.

herkimer
June 4, 2014 3:27 pm

According to the 2008 Canadian National Energy Board, Canada plans to reduce the generation of electricity by coal from 16, 272 MW to 10,002 MW by 2030 , a reduction of 38% . Almost all ( or 6000 MW) of this reduction is coming from Ontario. So Ontario is carrying most of the burden and cost for Canada to reduce the usage of coal to generate power.This writer feels that this burden on Ontario is too great resulting in electricity costs that are the third highest in Canada and double the rate of the adjacent provinces.. Other provinces are getting a free ride basically if their coal generated power level is remaining unchanged as the report shows. The blind shutting down of perfectly sound coal plants to meet some smoke and mirror environmental or global warming threat which does not exist was wrong and wasteful for Canada but especially for Ontario’s. taxpayers

Eve
June 4, 2014 3:55 pm

herkimer, Ontario started with hydro electric power. That is why our electricity company was called Ontario Hydro. If you would look on the sygration data that Crispin in Waterloo and Carmichael posted, you would see that about 40% of our electricity comes from hydro electic power. http://www.sygration.com/gendata/today.html
If this still points to yesterdays data, you will see Beck 2, the biggest hydro electric plant in Niagara falls, being throttled as were some nuclear and some oil and even some wind farms. All this while idling an old oil/gas plant and a closed coal plant. I just checked, not yesterdays data; it is today’s and the difference is that today there is no wind. Manitoba has rivers and falls but none as big as Niagara Falls. Quebec buys cheap energy from Newfoundland’s Churchill Falls project, built with federal money and somehow given to Quebec for a song in our traditional “give everything to Quebec” federal politics.
Ontario did not have high electricity prices unil the Liberals came out with their green energy scheme.

herkimer
June 5, 2014 4:51 am

Eve
Thanks for the reference I am aware of the energy mix in Ontario. I was comparing the coal picture more in order relate to the current US situation where they seem to be following the same pattern as Ontario.

Eve
June 8, 2014 12:24 pm

Leo Geiger, from SP, The carbon tax has contributed to a 15 per cent drop in British Columbians’ use of petroleum-based fuels since it was introduced in 2008, said an Ottawa-based think tank, Sustainable Prosperity, in a report issued Wednesday.

nc
June 13, 2014 12:27 am

Dr. Ball with the Ontario Liberals getting a majority will you do an update?