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.
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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.
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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 Canada’s 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 it’s 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, that’s 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.
“Sierra Rayne (@rayne_sierra) says:”
June 8, 2014 at 7:41 pm
@davidmhoffer: “Well that’s an opinion piece, hardly proof.”
Oh, it is proof all right. Direct press releases and public statements by Harper himself and his Minister of the Environment constitute proof, except maybe to the Harper-ites (aka, fake conservatives).
@herkimer: “Harper is doing what is necessary to market that oil.”
You are right. He’ll say anything to please his oil lobby masters. He’s just a one-trick pony, and a puppet oil lobbyist — which is why he is neither a true conservative nor a good prime minister.” ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Here is a prime example of the L.I.V. (low information voter) in Canada. It is likely that their only source of information is the CBC. Clearly no understanding of economics/economy, politics, and pretty much everything else. It is advisable to seek all sources for information, even if it is distasteful.
For example, I listen to the CBC for the comedy. Very informative (in a negative forcing kinda way), but very funny for it’s delusion and short sightedness.
davidmhoffer: I know this may be a difficult concept for you, but Harper will say and do anything to get KXL approved, including hoisting carbon taxation on the Canadian taxpayers to do so (aka, throwing them under the bus to get his little pipeline approved). The pipeline should be approved, but with absolutely no conditions. I’m not willing to pay further carbon taxes (beyond what Harper has already given us) and a higher cost of living just to try and get KXL approved. That ain’t conservatism by the CPC, it is liberalism, and if I wanted liberalism, I’d just vote for the LPC or NDP and get my entitlement goodies along with it.
Riddle me this: why are Harper and his environment minister publicly, repeatedly, and very emphatically congratulating Obama on his new climate regulations? and even encouraging Obama to go further, while also stating that Canada will go further on its AGW-hysteria induced GHG reduction strategies? Why? Why is the Canadian oil and gas industry calling for carbon taxation themselves? Why?
I’ll answer the question for you. They just pass the carbon tax on to consumers, so they could care less about it for the most part, especially if in their overall strategy it means a net profit increase by allowing them increased export opportunities. But the strategy is terrible for the Canadian energy consuming public, and it sure ain’t a conservative strategy — which is expected, since the oil industry in Canada is dominantly liberal anyway, not conservative.
Well, I wouldn’t go so far as to say it has anything to do with “fairness”. They are simply moving the jobs there for the sake of it. But they ARE building power plants in those countries hand over fist and there is no push-back to using nuclear there, either. Only in “developed” countries is there massive resistance to nuclear. And that is for really no reason. If you look at the safety record of nuclear, it is just amazing. We had a worst case scenario with Fukushima, THREE reactors of 1960’s design in various stages of melt. Nobody dead, nobody injured. Chernobyl death toll so far — 64 people. Organic veggies killed more people in 2011 ( German sprouts and Colorado cantaloupe) than Chernoby, Three Mile Island, and Fukushima combined.
Here are the bottom 4 “emerging” economies of the top 20.
Philippines
GDP growth, 2013 to 2017: 20.4%
200 MW coal plant inaugurated in the Philippines
Meralco to build 300 MW coal fired power plant in the Philippines
Conal Holdings plans $1bn coal, hydro plant investment in the Philippines
Aboitiz’s Therma South to build 300 MW coal plant in Davao City, Philippines
Morocco
GDP growth, 2013 to 2017: 27.7%
Morocco plans $1.5 bln power station
Morocco receives $187m loan from Islamic bank for gas power plant
Mitsubishi to supply steam turbines for Morocco coal plants
Hungary
GDP growth, 2013 to 2017: 15.6%
Russia to invest $14bn in Hungary nuclear power expansion project
Siemens awarded Hungary power plant contract by E.ON
Ukrainian-owned gas provider to build Hungary’s biggest power plant
Swedish technical consulting group SWECO designs CHP plant in Hungary
Mitsubishi & Sumitomo bag CCGT Danube deal in Hungary
Alpiq to build 400 MW CCGT plant in Budapest, Hungary
Brazil
GDP growth, 2013 to 2017: 22.3%
Westinghouse forms business unit to develop nuclear in Brazil
Brazil cuts high electricity costs to boost economy (what is happening to US rates?)
Alstom renews contract to service power generation equipment in Brazil
Brazil adds 280MW of thermo power to grid
Brazil to offer nuclear energy tax incentives
Mexico
GDP growth, 2013 to 2017: 17.5%
Alstom, Isolux sign contract to convert power station in Mexico to fire petroleum coke
Toshiba to supply steam turbines for thermal power plant in Mexico
GE natural gas-fired turbine in Mexico to use chiller plant
Iberdrola to build & operate natural gas-fired power plant in Mexico
davidmhoffer says:
June 8, 2014 at 4:48 pm
the Harper government is mostly just sucking up to Obama to try and get the Keystone Pipeline approved.
Katou says:
June 8, 2014 at 5:34 pm
I see Mr. Harper is in lock step with the Obamanater vilifying Russia over the Ukraine crises that was cause by Washington’s meddling
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The underlying issue here is oil in the Artic, and the need for the USA to have free access to Canada’s north for its own agenda.
Tim Ball says:
The Supreme Court ruled on that case in 2007 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachusetts_v._Environmental_Protection_Agency). The Obama Administration didn’t start in 2009. Bush was still in office when the case was decided, so it was his Administration that lost the lawsuit.
Sorry to throw a few inconvenient facts in the way of your conspiracy theories.
Hey, at least they’re causing millions of excess deaths among the world’s poorest, who can barely feed/shelter themselves even before we hike up the energy costs.
Or maybe that’s a benefit to the Malthusians.
I don’t think most people fully understand how profound are the effects our political economy shifting towards public employment with unfunded retirement pensions. The pensions are growing, the number of people receiving pensions are growing, they’re retiring earlier, they’re living longer, they’re getting cost-of-living raises that outpace GDP growth, and they’re organized to enhance these benefits even more via politics, and they’re predisposed to want the social safety net to also embrace these features, so there are commonalities, less adversity and animosity from private sector retirees. One day soon, if we keep on this path, we won’t be able to afford teachers, police, firefighters, meat inspectors, customs agents, and a standing voluntary professional military, because all the money needed to pay them will instead be going to retired teachers, police, et. al. To paraphrase Barbie, maintaining limited government via a Constitution is tough.
Thank-you Dr. Ball. I must admit to originally believing that humans had a considerable amount to do with Climate Changes that we have seen over the past hundred years or so. That was up until about three to four years ago, then I began to appreciate Dr. Ball’s informative views. Since that time, I have done some research to investigate some long-term climate records (yes there are some still remaining, though Dr. Ball is correct, much of the long-term data is being lost or compromised), to see for myself what has transpired over the past century. I analyzed some long-term data (away from urban heat island influences). I did not find any significant human signal in the data (see http//www.bcclimate.com). The major influences to the the long-term record had to do with features such as the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), and I believe our own Sun. And contrary to the global warming advocates, that human endeavours are the major climate forcing, I now do not concur! I think that recently the emphasis has shifted from warming, largely induced by the Sun, and the recovery of Earth from the Last Ice Age, as well as the Little Ice Age, to no further warming, perhaps even to a slight cooling. I have been attempting to get this message across through letter writing to newspapers, but to no avail. There is a definite reluctance to even print letters such as mine. Contrary to the present situation, where scientists such as Dr. Andrew Weaver, and others. in their arrogance, continue to ignore the facts and scientists such as Dr. Tim Ball and Dr. Roy Spencer, the tide does finally appear to be changing. This may not be realized for a few years yet, that is if the current prediction of a strong El Nino holds true. But shortly thereafter, the relatively minor roll of man in this issue will finally be revealed. Rod Chilton, climatologist.
@crosspath,
Both the World Bank and Obama have said they will not fund fossil power in the developing world, so exactly how is the UN and the west trying to raise the developing world from poverty…. With sunbeams, unicorn farts, and pixie dust?
“Sierra Rayne (@rayne_sierra) says:
June 9, 2014 at 7:48 am
davidmhoffer: I know this may be a difficult concept for you, but Harper will say and do anything to get KXL approved, including hoisting carbon taxation on the Canadian taxpayers to do so (aka, throwing them under the bus to get his little pipeline approved). The pipeline should be approved, but with absolutely no conditions. I’m not willing to pay further carbon taxes (beyond what Harper has already given us) and a higher cost of living just to try and get KXL approved. That ain’t conservatism by the CPC, it is liberalism, and if I wanted liberalism, I’d just vote for the LPC or NDP and get my entitlement goodies along with it.
Riddle me this: why are Harper and his environment minister publicly, repeatedly, and very emphatically congratulating Obama on his new climate regulations? and even encouraging Obama to go further, while also stating that Canada will go further on its AGW-hysteria induced GHG reduction strategies? Why? Why is the Canadian oil and gas industry calling for carbon taxation themselves? Why?
I’ll answer the question for you. They just pass the carbon tax on to consumers, so they could care less about it for the most part, especially if in their overall strategy it means a net profit increase by allowing them increased export opportunities. But the strategy is terrible for the Canadian energy consuming public, and it sure ain’t a conservative strategy — which is expected, since the oil industry in Canada is dominantly liberal anyway, not conservative.” ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I don’t even know where to begin with this post post. It is completely opposite from reality. I think I would like Sierra to post some links to substantiate this comment.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/06/10/australia-and-canada-decide-to-take-a-path-of-climate-realism/
Much of this is known but not written down,, so thanks.Tim.
However, i am mildly critical of the emphasis on individuals rather than ideas; on personal foibles and individual behaviour rather than ideologies, institutions and commercial interests.. The period Tim describes was one of much green enthusiasm (and also fear), to which politicians and hence bureaucracies had and did respond ..in order to get votes and jobs and approval. All bureaucracies – like other institutions – want to grow . Of course,Tim is right in that bureaucracy (especially at UN at U supported by Greenpeace et al..) used the climate threat to further their power over people and gain resources for development, especially at the international level. (See book by me and A Kellow on International Environmental Policy: Interests and the failure of the Kyoto Protocol. (2002 Elgar)
What a wonderful pollutant is CO2! It moves across all political boundaries but come/came from the ‘rich’ you could fleece for ‘development’ ; it could be measured when emitted and inside products (embedded carbon!), as well as in fuels. Certain fuels for which ‘clean alternatives’ already existed became ‘clean’ and ‘good’, but in the late 1980s had to call for protection in order to survive cheap oil and gas..the oil crises had ended! etc.. Air pollution control and modelling had already been well rehearsed for acid rain, and emission reduction has become a branch of innovation.. So decarbonisation became a further and very powerful stimulus for much technological innovation as well as regulation by ‘economic instruments’ and now ‘nudging’ -, getting the social sciences in on the act.
Isn’t that what capitalism needs? Creative destruction? Somebody has to pay for it of course. And it wasn’t the polluter! The investors in green energy , and in clean this and the other (all of course sustainable) ,are now the main believers in the warming threat; and of course those politicians who must respond to voters.
The green lobby is now wealthy and well organised., Science hasn’t been that important for a long time, it is used as a fig leaf for policies that are widely approved of, by now, among many industries and investors; the big science bodies make the right noises in return not only for enormous funding but also for reputation as honoured advisors, publishers and consultants to bureaucracy,….here Tim is quite right. Serious funding and status issues at stake. Science has been bought or ‘captured’, but when has it not?
This is all part of the bigger picture.