Opinion: Global Warming Claims Are Primarily And Deliberately A Product Of Bureaucratic Political Activity

Bureaucracy, the rule of no one, has become the modern form of despotism. – Mary McCarthy

Guest essay by Dr. Tim Ball

The Daily Mail headline says, Canada bans government meteorologists from talking about climate change. It implies government censorship, but is actually another part of the political battle over global warming. It is reminiscent of James Hansen’s false claim that the Bush White House was muzzling him. John Theon, his NASA boss at the time, says in a US Senate Report it was untrue. There is always a story behind a headline and it is rarely what the media report or imply. This Canadian story forewarns of the problems of controlling bureaucracy. 

The Obama administration used the US Supreme Court (SCOTUS) and Administrative Law to bypass the checks and balances of the people (Congress). By losing the lawsuit brought against the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by the State of Massachusetts that said the EPA were not fulfilling their role of protecting the people from harmful substances, they triggered arbitration by SCOTUS. EPA now imposes Obama’s political ambitions through the bureaucracy. The question is how do you control a bureaucracy? The simple answer, as the US Founding Fathers intended, was cut off funding, but like all things political it’s easier said than done.

Establishing Bureaucratic Political Control.

 

Maurice Strong took ideas from his involvement with the Club of Rome and transformed them into a bureaucratic structure. He created the United Nations Environment Programme within which was formulated Agenda 21, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). One article summarized his abilities as follows.

Maurice Strong has demonstrated an uncanny ability to manipulate people, institutions, governments, and events to achieve the outcome he desires.

He knew control of politicians from a multitude of nations was almost impossible so he worked through the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) to control the bureaucrats in every national weather agency. As the article summarizes,

Strong prefers to operate in the background. He, perhaps more than any other single person, is responsible for the development of a global agenda now being implemented throughout the world.

He knew that if you control the weather bureaucrats you control the politicians on matters of weather and climate. What politicians don’t know is that, like the Environment Canada (EC) protesters they are mostly meteorologists and know little about climate.

Bureaucratic Political Shenanigans, Canadian Style.

 

Environment Canada, the agency where “meteorologists” say they are being muzzled, was involved in the entire IPCC debacle from the start. Strong used his personal friendship with Canadian Prime Ministers, especially Paul Martin Jr., who Strong hired to an important job in a major corporation when he was a young man. Gordon McBean, the second highest bureaucrat at Environment Canada (Assistant Deputy Minister) chaired the first meeting to form the IPCC in Villach Austria in 1985.

—————-

Disclaimer: I wrote an article on McBean and the activities at EC and received my first lawsuit from the same lawyer who handled the Weaver and Mann lawsuits. I chose to withdraw that article because I could not afford to fight. I later wrote another article on McBean, but much had now been disclosed.

—————

Ironically, most disclosure came from within EC. Their failures were so egregious that the public protested vociferously and they were forced to take action. Typically, as with all climate fiascos, it appears they attempted to cover up or justify what was going on. They commissioned an internal study and report titled Action Plan for Climate Science Research at Meteorological Service of Canada (MSC) prepared by a group called The Impact Group. This was obtained by Canada’s Access to Information (ATI) provision. Ken Green wrote an article in the National Post on December 12, 2003 identifying some of the issues. Here is the major conclusion of the Impact Report that shows why they did not want it disclosed.

Elements of an Action Plan for Climate Science Research at MSC (obtained through an Access to Information request) indicate that Canadas climate change science program is being driven by a predetermined political agenda with a clear disregard of scientific needs. The Impact Group observes for example, that Canada collects less climate science data per-square-kilometer of any other major country. It observes that the archiving of climate data is so highly fragmented that it is difficult to find out what datasets are available, let alone how to access them.

 

Yet the report shows that our resources are not being directed to remedy those information gaps. Rather, our climate resources are being directed toward finding ways to mitigate climate change before its even adequately measured. The Impact Group also points out that we are only just beginning to unravel the complexity of the physical, chemical, and biological interactions that determine climate and suggests that the manmade component of climate change is still to be discerned. Coming from a contractor to Environment Canada, thats a pretty sharp divergence from the claims by Environment Minister David Anderson that the science of climate change is solid and settled.

McBean was a major participant in the singular and devastating direction EC took. He practiced his political view of environmental issues and particularly global warming expressed in a speech to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) in 1995.

As the Canadian government web page noted at the time;

Environment Canada is a strong supporter of, and an active participant in, the IPCC. Dr. John Stone (Environment Canada, retired), holds a position on the Bureau and Working Group II, Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Art Jaques, Director, Greenhouse Gas Division, Environment Canada, is a member of the Task Force Bureau on National Greenhouse Gas Inventories. As well, over 30 Canadian scientists from government, universities and the private sector are participating as authors and editors for the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report.

John Stone’s position is critical as the liaison between the Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA) group directed by McBean and the IPCC. The ACIA Reports are almost the sole source for Arctic coverage in the 2007 IPCC Report.

Green spoke to the exclusion of Canadian skeptics that the Report confirms.

Skeptics of catastrophic climate change theory such as myself have long complained that the way governmental agencies conduct science is badly politicized. We have also complained about a lack of consultation – although some of the most reputable climate scientists in the world work in Canada, they have rarely been consulted or asked to advise the government on the science of climate change.

In 2006, 60 prominent Canadian climate and related experts wrote a letter to Prime Minister Harper asking for an open debate on global warming. It began,

As accredited experts in climate and related scientific disciplines, we are writing to propose that balanced, comprehensive public-consultation sessions be held so as to examine the scientific foundation of the federal government’s climate-change plans.

McBean orchestrated a response letter with another IPCC member, computer modeler Andrew Weaver (Disclaimer: Also with a lawsuit against me). They got 90 signatures, but most were Environment Canada, Government employees or people benefiting from government largess. It’s another form of “the debate is over”.

McBean spent his career promoting these views and it appears they effectively destroyed the Canadian Weather Service while wasting billions of dollars. Other EC employees were more involved. As Donna Laframboise wrote,

The relationship between one country’s climate modelers and the IPCC illustrates this point. George Boer is considered the architect of Canada’s climate modeling efforts. As an employee of Environment Canada, he has spent much of his career attempting to convince the powers-that-be that climate models are a legitimate use of public money.”

They are not well spent. Canada’s Auditor General identified $6.36 billion “climate change funding announcements between 1997 and 2005”, but at what price? Apparently most went to people and programs that agreed with the government position. It left other legislated requirements incomplete. In a December 13, 2011 story Environment and Sustainable Development Commissioner Scott Vaughan reported:

Environment Canada has failed to implement a strategic plan to improve its internal scientific research in areas ranging from managing air and water pollution to toxic chemicals.

Billions are spent on useless computers and climate change while not dealing with real problems. They’re not alone, it’s happening in national weather agencies round the world.

To cover these wastes EC took money from other programs that now make chances of any science virtually impossible. There are fewer weather stations in Canada now than in 1960, and many were replaced with unreliable Automatic Weather Observing Stations (AWOS). Important activities and data collection practices were abandoned. When I chaired the Assiniboine River Management Advisory Board (ARMAB) in Manitoba the worst flood on record occurred. We asked Water Resources why they anticipate the event. They said they had no data on the amount of water in the snow in the valley. We learned EC had canceled flights that used special radar to determine water content. Savings as I recall were $26,000. The cost of unexpected flood damage was $7 million to one level of government alone. Loss of weather data means long continuous records, essential to any climate studies, will fail. This data cannot be replaced or replicated.

Another egregious example of EC’s failure was cancellation of their financial support for a joint program with the National Museum of Canada in the 1980s and 1990s. Run under the auspices of the National Museum of Natural Sciences it was titled Climatic Change in Canada During the Past 20,000 years. This program brought together a multitude of experts in all different aspects of climate and climate reconstruction and produced volumes of collected papers, published in Syllogeus by the museum that put Canada in the forefront of climate research and reconstruction. To my knowledge none of these experts was called to testify before Parliamentary hearings on Kyoto or were appointed to the IPCC. EC deliberately excluded Canadian climate experts – something that continues to this day. Climate change became political and unaccountable because bureaucrats at Environment Canada controlled it.

But McBean wasn’t done. He also established his post-bureaucratic career and control of climate funding before retiring by using $61 million of taxpayer money to set up the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences (CFCAS). Canada’s main funding body for university-based research on climate, atmospheric and related oceanic work. He took over as Chair shortly after he retired. CFCAS did what EC did, that is essentially only fund people who agreed with their political position. As Wikipedia notes, The foundation has invested over $117 million in university-based research related to climate and atmospheric sciences. Most of this is taxpayer’s money, although there may be some Insurance company money because McBean is Director of the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction. Terence Corcoran wrote in the 23 January 2013 National Post,

 

At the Insurance Bureau of Canada, one of its mottos is: Prepare for Severe Weather. Meanwhile, the policy director of the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction is Gordon McBean, a veteran climate alarmist who formerly headed a climate think-tank until its government funding was cut.

Government Trying To Control Bureaucrats.

 

In response to the political activities of climate bureaucrats the current Canadian government has gradually re-assigned people and reduced funding to EC and CFCAS. They are doing what they can within the restrictions of union contracts, legislation and public propaganda by those affected.

What is happening in Canada is politicians elected by the people reining in bureaucrats. They and by extension those they fund respond politically by going to the media and claiming they are being muzzled and it is the death knell of climate science.

Maurice Strong set up the IPCC through the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) because he knew it give the IPCC control of every weather office in every nation and thereby most of the politicians. Even those who dare to challenge find it almost impossible to redress even if elected to do so. It’s as basic as Boyd-Orr explained, If people have to choose between freedom and sandwiches they will take sandwiches especially if they don’t understand or have been deceived about the facts.

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pat
June 8, 2014 8:30 pm

Tim Ball says –
“There is always a story behind a headline and it is rarely what the media report or imply”
how’s this from Chad at the Chicago Sun-Times?
8 June: Chicago Sun-Times: Chad Merda: Obama says he’d like to ‘go off’ on those who deny climate change
Photo Caption: President Barack Obama is fed up with people who deny climate change exists.
How frustrated is President Barack Obama with those people who deny climate change is a real thing? So frustrated, he’d like to “just go off” on them.
His comments came in an interview with New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman.
Friedman bluntly asked Obama if he wants to “just go off on the climate deniers in Congress.”
Obama’s answer?
“Yeah, absolutely,” the president said…
http://politics.suntimes.com/article/washington/obama-says-hed-go-those-who-deny-climate-change/sun-06082014-235pm
at NYT, the following two sentences are the full extent of the exchange (in a lengthy piece) that inspired Chad to write the rubbish at the Sun-Times. of course, Obama didn’t say what Chad’s headline claimed he said, but hey, whatever.
how could Friedman be so stupid as to utter the phrase “CLIMATE DENIERS” to the President? oh, he works for what Gerald Celente calls “The Toilet Paper of Record”:
7 June: NYT: Thomas L. Friedman: Obama on Obama on Climate
Do you ever want to just go off on the CLIMATE DENIERS in Congress?
“Yeah, absolutely,” the president said with a laugh…
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/08/opinion/sunday/friedman-obama-on-obama-on-climate.html?ref=opinion&_r=3&referrer=
given it’s the CAGW followers who are protesting “climate” & “climate change”, if Obama does want to “go off” on deniers, he should be going off at them because they are denying climate change happened before they discovered CAGW!

June 8, 2014 8:56 pm

Katou says:
June 8, 2014 at 8:30 pm
davidmhoffer says:
June 8, 2014 at 8:21 pm
You asked if I was selling land in Florida .If you didn’t get the dig

You are absolutely correct, I did not get the dig. Very clever.
,you would also not recognize that the Harper Govt. was the first to send over to Ukraine his underlings to stand along side the Washington imposed Govt . You have heard the Nuland phone conversation haven’t you ? Well maybe you haven’t because you may just gobble up what the the MSM spew out .Just like AGW ,its more about what isn’t being said on MSM then what is .
Nobody who is familiar with me would suggest that I just gobble up what the MSM spews out. However, for anyone who actually follows international politics to any great degree, it is clear that relations between Harper and Obama are very frosty, that Harper stood by the Ukrainian government to support them quite of his own volition, and what the Nuland phone call demonstrates is that while the US clearly does meddle in the affairs of other countries (the Democrats are sending their campaign expertise to support Justin Trudeau’s election bid for example, talk about interference in the affairs of an ally not to mention pissing off Harper even more than the Keystone Pipeline BS) they just aren’t very good at it. Everything that they tried to do was “soft power”, it accomplished nothing, and the Russians have gotten everything they want out of the situation by using hard power. The US looks embarrassingly impotent, and that goes for both before and after the unstable conditions occurred. Meddled yes. Imposed? LOL.

Katou
June 8, 2014 9:09 pm

davidmhoffer says:
June 8, 2014 at 8:56 pm
Look there is not a chance in Hell JT does not stand a chance of getting elected Prime minster .You know it and Harper knows it . Yes imposed is what it was because it was not in the Ukraine’s Constitution .It was a cou ,plain and simple .I see that Syria had their Constitutional elections .I think they had a bigger turn out then Ukraine despite the fighting going on in each country . I see Obama is wanting to send even more arms to the rebel forces in Syria . I wonder if Putin might decide to do the same for the Ukrainian people that don’t like their present Govt. Interesting times

June 8, 2014 9:17 pm

Katou;
I wonder if Putin might decide to do the same for the Ukrainian people that don’t like their present Govt.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Good lord man, he already did, and a bunch of troops under “no indignia” uniforms to boot. Yet you kick the Americans for making some phone calls.

June 8, 2014 9:17 pm

indignia = insignia

pat
June 8, 2014 9:23 pm

btw the Aussie Prime Minister Abbott is in Canada & our broadcasters SBS & ABC (partially- and fully-funded by taxpayers respectively) feel its important we at home know “CLIMATE PROTESTERS” are on his tail!
8 June: SBS: PM Abbott heads to Canada
CLIMATE PROTESTERS who gathered outside the parliament in Ottawa on Saturday were well aware of the Abbott government’s policy of scrapping the carbon tax and other climate programs…
The protesters sang a song by Australian composer Glyn Lehmann called “I am the earth”…
http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2014/06/08/pm-abbott-heads-canada
9 June: ABC: Prime Minister Tony Abbott arrives in Canada for talks with Stephen Harper to boost trade, investment
By James Glenday in Ottawa
Ahead of the talks, CLIMATE CHANGE PROTESTERS rallied outside the Canadian parliament, which is close to where Mr Abbott is staying…
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-06-09/tony-abbott-arrives-canada-for-talks-with-pm-stephen-harper/5509008
isn’t there something anti-nature about CAGW followers?

Katou
June 8, 2014 9:36 pm

davidmhoffer says:
June 8, 2014 at 9:17 pm
.
good lord man, he already did, and a bunch of troops under “no indignia” uniforms to boot. Yet you kick the Americans for making some phone calls.
===============================================
Now I don’t want to get into debating which propaganda might be true .Next thing we will have to debunk the Jew card they tried playing . You do know that the eastern region has many Russian speaking Ukraine’s and many of them were in the army and they are the ones fighting against the regime in Kiev that wants to force them by law not to speak Russian eh . Think Quebec and if we tried that here with the french language .They would hold a referendum so quick to separate it would make your head spin .

dp
June 8, 2014 9:37 pm

It’s nice to see “global warming” being framed as what it really is – a political problem. That simplifies the solution which becomes: How we vote.
And how we influence voting is as old as the republic – we publicize the crooked nature of other side using their words, methods, agenda, failures, and personality flaws. Because they’ve given so freely of these characteristics it is a simple matter of compiling them into excellent presentations that don’t put the audience to sleep, and to put them in front of opposing audiences because we already agree.
Paging Topher to the white telephone, please.

June 8, 2014 9:43 pm

Katou;
I know the history of the region quite well. You’ve got some half truths behind your assertions. There’s no point debating further with you. You are either gobbling up some really bad information and repeating it, or deliberately disseminating it. G’night.

June 8, 2014 10:26 pm

The purpose of the entire “global warming” effort is to be used as a lever to effect the global “progressive” policy agenda. It goes something like this: The “progressives” don’t like the notion of have and have not countries. In their world view, wealthier entities, whether they are people or countries get that way through “exploitation” of others. The poor countries, it would appear, are not poor because they don’t have real property ownership or have a corrupt legal system or are run by a corrupt despot and the assorted cronies, they are poor because they just don’t have money because the rich countries took it all. So primary in the world view of the “progressive” is “redistribution of wealth”.
Now they can’t exactly go around TELLING companies which countries they can and can not build things in but they can make it extremely expensive to build things in the less desired places. In fact, they can make it SO expensive to build something in a “developed” country that even with the inefficiency, graft, theft, and corruption it is cheaper to do it in the “developing” country. And if you at an organization like the UN, it is for the most part populated with bureaucrats appointed by various tyrants and despots. What this really amounts to is a fleecing of the developed countries by transferring massive amounts of wealth into the pockets of corrupt cronies of various leaders.
In addition, by controlling CO2 production, the UN can effectively put their hands on the throttle of developed world economies. In order to increase production of anything, more energy must be consumed. In order to consume more energy, energy must be produced. In order to produce more energy, CO2 must be emitted provided you are also very careful to push strongly back against nuclear power. Solar and wind are non-starters for industrial scale power. You can not operate even one electric arc steel mill furnace from windmills and solar panels reliably — if at all. Last I read, some 30% of US energy production involves doing things with water. Pumping it out of the ground, transporting it around, collecting the waste, treating and disposing of it, all takes energy and it all must work 24x7x365. We can’t wait for a breeze to flush our toilets or run our fire hydrants. By controlling CO2 emissions by a country, you are effectively controlling that country’s economy.
This isn’t about the perils of CO2 emissions. It’s about the perils to the progressive world view if people are left along to emit as they will. They aren’t reducing emissions, they are simply moving them. Meanwhile China at my last count has some 23 nuclear reactors in various states of construction. The latest being Fuqing-1. http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/NN-Fuel-loading-at-Fuqing-1-0506145.html
If China can build a Fuqing nuclear power plant, why can’t we? We have right now, I believe, four plants under construction — two in Georgia and two in South Carolina and another licensed but never completed plant in Tennessee that had been mothballed is being completed and brought on line. That’s it. There was one slated to go in Texas but they said they didn’t have demand for the power, yet this winter their grid nearly collapsed from demand.

June 8, 2014 10:30 pm

If the progressives were serious about REALLY reducing CO2 they would go on a global rampage against coal seam fires. Coal seem fires in India, China, Indonesia and the US produce as much CO2 as ALL of the vehicle traffic in North America. Putting those fires out would be equivalent to removing every car and truck from the road in the US and then some. It would require the development of new engineering practices and technologies, require international cooperation, but it would REALLY do something to take a huge amount of CO2 out of the air without impacting anyone’s lifestyle or increasing regulations AND it would save a huge amount of coal for future generations to use. And that is why it will never be done. Because this isn’t really about CO2.

otsar
June 8, 2014 10:34 pm

Katou,
You need to learn about Ukrainian history and present day Ukraine. Talk to some Ukrainians that have recently emigrated. You will learn that there are no simple explanations. The place is corrupt from top to bottom; it is a way to survive, things are the way they are because of the way they are. The suvival techniques were probably perfected during the time of the Kulak purges or even before. Anyone from the outside that thinks that they can get something for nothing will get nothing for something ( this includes Russia as they learned before with Stepan Bandera.) In addition they will be getting mixed up in a family fight- never an intelligent thing to do. The western Ukranians used outside money to get rid of Yanukovic. The important words are Western Ukranian and used.
Ms. Lagarde of the IMF is an intelligent person. If you look at her actions you will realise that she knows what will happen to IMF loans to Uraine unless many precautions are taken.
As for Crimea it has been a sore spot for Russia for a long time. Look up the charge of the light brigade, the battle of Balaklava, etc. The French, the Brits and the Turks have had their teeth broken in Crimea. Trying to do something with Crimea is the equivatent of grabbing the gonads of a grizzly bear and not expect a swift and decisive response.(the Ukrainians had threatened to expel the Russian fleet from Sebastopol upon the end of the lease. Probably the corrupt Ukrainian government wanting a lot more money, collided with the fact that Russia is stingy.)
You should also look up the Von Ribentrupp-Stalin treaty and how that affected the borders with neighbouring countries. I expect the neighbouring countries to start meddling before too long. Supposedly Hungarian passports have started to be issued to Hungarians speakers in Ukraine already (an illegal act in Ukraine.) Poland Next? In Poland Lviv is still Lvov, and the massacre of Poles is still remembered.
The Soviets ran Ukraine for about 70 years. Soviet means commitee in Russian. The place was run by commitees of bureaucrats governed by supreme commitees of bureaucrats (supreme soviets.)
In other words bureaucrats that only answered to themselves and planned everyting from the top down. If you defied the bureucrats, as did the Kulaks, you would end up as they did.
If you think native Canadians have had it bad with invaders read more Ukrainian history. Ukrain has been run over by just about any one going East or West: the Vikings, ghenghis and his boys, Napoleon, Mr. H, to name a few. The flavor of the soup is added to by each group of tourists, but it is still Ukrainian.

brent
June 8, 2014 11:12 pm

MERE MINISTERS ARE NO MATCH FOR MO OF THE JUNGLE
Thursday, May 19th, 1994
Maurice Strong’s jungle adventure lives.
The Hydro chairman won’t back down from his plan to investigate the purchase of thousands of acres of rain forest in Costa Rica.
Yesterday, he told reporters it would be “irresponsible” for Hydro not to consider buying a piece of the Central American jungle.
http://www.gwb.com.au/gwb/news/multi/strong.htm
ORDERS OF THE DAY
ONTARIO ENERGY BOARD
AMENDMENT ACT (ELECTRICITY
PRICING), 2003
Mr O’Toole: It’s a pleasure to listen to some of what the member from Eglinton-Lawrence said, but I’d take time to get prepared to respond, because in the articles I’ve referred to of Friday, December 5, I think it’s important to recognize this: “But a source close to the industry says senior management must accept” some “of the blame,” and I accept that as well.
“Back in the early 1990s, then-Chairman Maurice Strong” — appointed by Bob Rae — “pensioned off most of the engineers who knew how to run the plants.
“Three years ago, President Ron Osborne decided to drop Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd — which designed the CANDU reactors.”
I guess what I’m saying there is, when they went to recover the Darlington plant, none of the skilled people — they almost had to change the Income Tax Act and hire all those engineers and technical people back, exempting them from the rule that prohibits a pension as well as a salary from the same employer.
You know, I look at Bill 4, and the viewers there should know it’s a small, innocuous technical bill. But it says in many sections — I would refer a lot of people to 79.6. It allows the Ontario Energy Board to affix and approve new rates for transmission. We’re not talking about the generation-side cost.
You see, there’s the generation, the transmission and the distribution. We heard earlier, we know generation costs are going up; transmission costs are going up, it says right in section 79.6; and we know the LBCs are going to go up. You said it earlier; the parliamentary assistant said that in March 2004, as well as March 2005, they will be able to recoup profit — not a bad word — but up to, it’s my understanding, the point of 9%.
Of course the minister, by the way, reserves most of the control over the operations, and every article I’ve read said part of it has been the problem of people like Maurice Strong thinking the solution was buying a rainforest in Costa Rica. I mean, these guys were so disconnected, and I put to you I can’t wait, because I think there’s a big decision probably to be made, and we should watch if there’s a Liberal finance minister who becomes the head of Hydro One.
http://hansardindex.ontla.on.ca/hansardeissue/38-1/l014b.htm
Hon Mr Eves: I’m sure there are different individuals who have different ideas and opinions about what Hydro One is worth, either through an IPO or through other methods. I note that he’s quoting Professor Myron Gordon. He doesn’t talk about his former Bob Rae government’s good friend Maurice Strong — I believe you were the Attorney General in that government — and what his opinions are about the future of Hydro One. I thought you might want to mention him, seeing as how you people thought he was the person who should lead Hydro and you obviously value his opinion on the future of electricity in the province of Ontario. I find it surprising you didn’t quote him.
Mr Hampton: I’m more interested in Myron Gordon, who is a world-recognized expert. My point is, Professor Gordon says that Hydro One is worth at least $9.2 billion, and yet we know your government has been entertaining selling it off for $4 billion, possibly $5 billion. I want to know, where is your expert opinion that would support selling off one of Ontario’s most important public assets for basically half price?
As for Maurice Strong, yes, it was Maurice Strong’s opinion seven years ago that Hydro should be privatized. I was part of a government that said, “No, we’re not going to sell off Ontario’s most important public asset.”
The question for you to answer is, if Hydro One is worth $9.2 billion, why is your government entertaining offers to sell it for half price?
http://hansardindex.ontla.on.ca/hansardeissue/37-3/l002a.htm
Re-Energizing Ontario
The Empire Club of Canada Addresses (Toronto, Canada), 23 Apr 1993
As the Earth Summit at Rio de Janeiro last summer made clear, our present patterns of production and consumption are not sustainable. We are now caught up in a turbulent process of adjustment in which we must learn to cope with a whole new generation of challenges. Divisions between rich and poor are deepening, domestically and internationally
snip
On the issue of privatization, I would only say at this point that I see it as a means, not as an end in itself. In my view the real test of the efficacy of private ownership of all or any part of Ontario Hydro will be the degree to which this would ensure that the interests of its customers and of Ontario would be better served.
http://speeches.empireclub.org/60008/data?n=7

brent
June 8, 2014 11:28 pm

In the world of power politics, what goes around comes around
July 29, 2002
Back in 1994 Ontario Hydro Chairman Maurice Strong opened talks on buying 12,500 hectares (30,875 acres) of a Costa Rican forest in the face of the utility’s then $34 billion debt.
Strong, a Special Advisor to the Secretary General of the United Nations and President of the United Nations University for Peace in Costa Rica was appointed to Ontario Hydro by former Ontario Premier Bob Rae, who remembered him as a friend of his father’s and called him “Uncle Moe”.
Uncle Moe gets around and before joining Ontario Hydro. he had served as President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Petro Canada and earlier as President of Power Corporation of Canada.
Paul Desmarais is chairman of Power Corporation.
Prime Minister Jean Chretien’s daughter France, is married to Andre Desmarais, son of Paul Desmarais.
Ex-Conservative Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, now has been a lawyer and lobbyist for Power Corporation, which, together with Ontario Hydro and Hydro Quebec, recently formed the Hong-Kong-based ASIA Power Corp., to help China to develop its energy potential.
In the world of power, of both the energy and political breed,what goes around seems to come around.
Guess who’s recently been appointed to lead Ontario Hydro? Uncle Moe’s friend Bob Rae.
http://www.canadafreepress.com/2002/ed72902.htm

June 8, 2014 11:33 pm

crosspatch says:
June 8, 2014 at 10:30 pm
“If the progressives were serious about REALLY reducing CO2 they would go on a global rampage against coal seam fires.”
I used to live in Pennsylvania and remember hearing about the Centralia, coal seem fire. You’d think we’d have figured out how to put these fires out by now. Maybe when they expect heavy rain in the forecast, they could set up gutters to direct rain water in the fire holes.
“The Centralia blaze, still burning more than 50 years after it began, ranks as the worst mine fire in the United States. But it is by no means the only one. More than 200 underground and surface coal fires are burning in 14 states, according to the U.S. Department of Interior’s Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement.”
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/energy/2013/01/pictures/130108-centralia-mine-fire/

June 8, 2014 11:46 pm

I am trying to get back on topic here, (and please correct me if I am wrong please). As a long time observer as many Canadians are, from what I understand from Mr. Tim Balls article I may as well stay in bed rather then doing the volunteer work. Look It does not take much time to do them I agree but to read this article I wonder is this all for a waste? if some guy just turns it into a “model” ???.
I am (and my wife ) are flabbergasted.
@singint 5.01 pm
USA Presidential elections have no effect at all because the Bureaucracy “selects” it’s leader long before any election.(singint @5.01). That is so correct and so true, the life long bureaucrats (and their families and their network) have the reins. I have family that GLOAT on that little bit.

brent
June 9, 2014 12:01 am

The Second Colloquium on the Governance of Sustainable Development
Innovations in Governance for Sustainable Development
Summary of the second conference
December 14, 2004
The Civil Society in the Decision-making Process: the Canadian Example
Guest speaker: Elizabeth May
Executive Director of the Sierra Club of Canada
As outlined by Elizabeth May, as well as other speakers and writers, it is instructive to read Maurice Strong’s 1972 Stockholm speech and compare it with the issues of Earth Summit 1992. In 1972 and in 1992, Maurice Strong warned urgently about global warming, the devastation of forests, the loss of biodiversity, polluted oceans, the population time bomb. He invited to the conference the environmental NGOs, provided them with money to come, and invited them to become influential in the decision-making process and to continue informing the general public. After Stockholm, environment issues became part of the administrative framework in Canada, the U.S., and Europe.
Maurice Strong is also behind the Commission on Global Governance(CGG) whose goal is to strengthen “global civil society,” which, it explains, “is best expressed in the global non-governmental movement.” Today, many NGOs have consultative status with the UN’s Economic and Social Council. The CGG proposed that NGOs be brought formally into the UN system, be accredited to the General Assembly as “Civil Society Organizations” and convened in an annual forum ofcivil society.
http://tinyurl.com/2ojszc
Founex Conference, Stockholm etc
http://judithcurry.com/2014/04/26/stavins-and-tol-on-ipcc-wg3/#comment-534381

policycritic
June 9, 2014 12:49 am

Katou says:
June 8, 2014 at 9:09 pm
and
davidmhoffer says:
June 8, 2014 at 8:56 pm

Read moonofalabama.org

policycritic
June 9, 2014 12:55 am

otsar says:
June 8, 2014 at 10:34 pm

Edmonton, Alberta, is full of Ukrainians. In fact, all of Alberta is–outside of Calgary–along with French Canadians and Germans. Edmonton is affectionately known as The Chuk. So you’ve got oil and politics going on in Alberta right now, and Harper knows that.

Katou
June 9, 2014 3:08 am

otsar says:
June 8, 2014 at 10:34 pm
Katou,
You need to learn about Ukrainian history and present day Ukraine. Talk to some Ukrainians that have recently emigrated.
============================================
Thank you for trying to explain a very complicated Ukraine .I have done some looking into it .I would imagine that with the diverse peoples there ,you would get a different flavor from a immigrant from the east as per say the west .What got my goat about how the thing went down was that our 3 political parties stood side by side to acknowledge the Washington installed cou Govt . I kind of have to laugh at you saying Russia is stingy .How much money do they owe Russia for gas ? Ukraine is broke .They cant pay their bills and the loan they got from the IMF is not going to do it .
The corruption is still there as well .The majority in the east don’t want to be run by Kiev and are willing to fight to keep their culture . The best thing they could have done was to remain neural and do business with both the EU and Russia . The real reason why the US pulled off the move they did ,was to keep Russia contained and kick them out of the Crimea and from their warm water port .
Like you said ,Ukraine is a very complicated place and the people in Washington misplayed it . People like John Kerry saying that this is the 21st century and you done invade a country was one of the most hypocritical things he could have said after Iraq ,Afghanistan and all the other places they are involved in .The US don’t mind sending drones out and bombing wedding parties ,schools,hospitals and what not .They don’t mind releasing Terrorist either . I suppose NATO can use them like other terrorist to go to try and finish off Syria as well .
Yes Ukraine is a complicated place with a long complicated history and so are other countries .I guess the US would sooner see a bunch of rebels who execute innocent civilians in Syria then someone who has kept a certain degree of peace within the borders like Saddam was doing in Iraq .
I guess there is a technocrat controlling a bunch of bureaucrats trying to sell us their garbage and wanting us to lap it up and just trust them .No thanks .

Katou
June 9, 2014 3:24 am

policycritic says:
June 9, 2014 at 12:49 am
================
Thanks . There are so many small stories inside the situation there . I feel sorry for the people there .They may end up with a cold cold winter next season .I still don’t know how France and Germany are going to go . Failing to supply the ships wouldn’t really help their economy .Germany does a ton of business with Russia and China wants to partner with Russia to develop a high speed rail into Europe .With the US economy not looking very good and China and India emerging and agreeing to use their own currencies ,it doesn’t look good for the USD . I think there is going to be a bunch of chickens coming home to roost in the US ….not good

bobl
June 9, 2014 3:42 am

FRAUD
Ok, mods now I have your attention, there is a very interesting story on Bloomberg.com about the republicans going all out to make the EPA coal overreach an election issue at your upcoming senate election.
The story is at http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-06-05/republicans-plan-to-attack-over-epa-rules-in-fall-elections.html
The article indicates that the Presidents overreach on this issue does not have unanimous Democrat support, so now is the ideal time to go on the offensive to undermine it.
There is a followup story here
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-06-03/obama-officials-seek-democratic-support-for-epa-coal-rule.html
And here
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-06-05/republicans-can-t-block-epa-s-greenhouse-gas-rules-hoyer.html
We should have a discussion on this and how best to help US Republicans and dissident Democrats overthrow this travesty. Also, we should expose the likely outcome of the rules to the punters in the USA. Unlike the MSM WUWT has access to broad information from all around the world. The experience in Europe (and the UK) and in Australia shows just how much the little guy is going to be hit by what is effectively a CO2 tax. Can the average American afford an electric bill twice what it is now and about 3-10% increase in all energy intensive products ( eg such as aluminium, solar panels and fertiliser)
Anthony?

bobl
June 9, 2014 4:12 am

.
This idea that it’s all about wealth distribution has come up a lot, but you’re wrong. If it were about wealth and fairness, then they would be building fossil power plants in every underprivileged nation in the world, digging wells and providing jobs. The redistribution idea is just a feel good cover story. It’s not about that , it’s simply about money and power, the Socialists in control of the unelected UN bureaucracy want a world government run by them where noone is rich except for the party faithful, and everyone with a differing view is poor and powerless. This means the destruction of powerful capitalist entities that might oppose the plan, and the elimination of the concept of private property ownership. It’s right there in the UN declaration itself.
Agenda 21 ( the UN sustainability plan) is about bringing that to realisation.
Global warming and UNFCCC IPCC and cousins were about providing an excuse and funding of the program through UN run carbon trading, and mandatory Donations from signatories to the UN using the cover story of an imagined “Planetary emergency”. Signing onto UN global warming gives a slice of your national sovereignty to the unelected UN, it effectively allows the UN to dictate your nations energy policy. If you control the energy supply, you effectively control everything.
Like always, it’s about Power
Many do think that world government in peace and harmony would be a good thing, but I always ask them, suppose you don’t like your world government, where are you going to go?

tokyoboy
June 9, 2014 5:54 am

Dr. Ball: I learned many things while reading your fascinating book.
Thanks a lot.

JohnWho
June 9, 2014 7:03 am

“Opinion: Global Warming Claims Are Primarily And Deliberately A Product Of Bureaucratic Political Activity”
Is this really opinion, or fact?
Hmm…