Guest essay by Eric Worrall
Christopher Booker, one of Britain’s most prominent climate skeptics, has written a brilliant expose about the shambolic leadup to the Paris COP21 conference. One of the most striking features of Booker’s expose, is just how little money countries have pledged towards the “$100 billion” green fund.
According to the Australian Financial Review;
At the end of this month 40,000 politicians, officials, green activists, lobbyists and journalists from 195 nations will converge outside Paris – at Europe’s largest airport reserved only for private jets – for a conference they hope will change the world.
Their declared aim is to agree on a treaty that commits to such a massive cut in greenhouse gas emissions that the earth’s temperature is prevented from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius higher than when the climate began naturally warming again two centuries ago.
The chief obstacle to such an agreement is exactly the same as it was at Kyoto in 1997, and at that last mammoth conference at Copenhagen in 2009, which so signally failed to get Kyoto renewed. The vast majority of countries have argued all along that, if man-made CO₂ is causing a problem, the fault lies with those “developed” nations that became rich before everyone else by burning fossil fuels to power their industrial revolution.
It is therefore up to the developed countries of the West to make the most drastic cuts, leaving the still “developing” nations to catch up. They say they are prepared to make some contribution to reducing CO₂, but only if they are paid to do so out of a $100 billion a year “Green Climate Fund”, financed by the rich countries that originally created the problem.
…
And what about that Green Climate Fund, supposed by 2020 to be dishing out $100 billion every year to help developing countries to “adapt to climate change”? Firm pledges received so far total just $700 million, leaving $99.3 billion still to go.
…
Read more: http://www.afr.com/comment/climatechange-treaty-will-be-flop-of-the-year-20151101-gkod0l#ixzz3qJ4qIZNu
Obviously $700 million is a lot of money – but consider the cost of hosting the great Paris climate Jamboree.
40,000 politicians and flunkies, being hosted for a week 11 days. I’m assuming they won’t be going for the budget end of Parisian accommodation, and no doubt enterprising Parisian hoteliers will be putting their prices up, in anticipation of the expected influx of guests. So lets allow $1000 / night, for 7 nights.
That immediately puts our budget up to 40,000 people x 11 nights x US $1000 = $440 million dollars.
Of course, we have to add meals to the total. I’ve been to Paris, you can order a decent meal for a restaurant for about US $40, but we know these conference types on an expense account are unlikely to opt for the budget option. Many of the delegates will be armed with big expense accounts, which their host countries will expect them to use to win influence for their agenda. So I don’t think its unreasonable to suggest meals will cost an average of US $500 / day / person.
Cost of food: 40,000 x 11 days x $500 = $220 million dollars.
Then of course there is the cost of flights. This is a little harder to pin down, but its reasonable to assume airlines will see an opportunity to make a quick profit, from such a large influx of people, and that many of the delegates will be arriving on private jets from remote locations. Even if you can’t swing your own private jet, if you have enough pull to get a seat at the COP21, it seems unlikely you will be travelling cattle class.
Shall we say an average of $2000 / delegate, to fly to and from Paris?
Cost of flights: 40,000 x $2000 = $80 million dollars.
And of course, there is the cost of limousine hire. Limousine drivers, like everyone else, will undoubtably charge a premium from their well funded conference clients.
Say $800 / day / delegate
Cost of limousines: 40,000 x 11 x $800 = $352 million dollars.
Finally, there is, how shall we put it, entertainment. France prides herself on her social liberty, the social acceptability of transactional activities which are sometimes frowned upon in stricter countries. What happens in Paris might stay in Paris – but the cost of any nocturnal journeys of personal discovery will undoubtably make its way onto various taxpayer and donor funded expense accounts.
Lets assume that only 10% of the delegates decide to partake on any single night. I think it reasonable to assume that they are unlikely to choose the budget option, so lets say a rather conservative $1000 / night.
40,000 x 11 x $1000 x 10% = $44 million dollars.
There are other costs, such as the cost of hiring the conference facilities – but I doubt that comes to much, compared to the other expenses I’ve identified – lets say $10 million.
Total cost: $1146 million
Its possible some last minute pledges, possibly from delegates who have been especially well lubricated with the most sophisticated entertainment facilities Paris can offer, may drive the green pledge commitment total up a little. On the other hand, perhaps I have underestimated some of the costs – the excitement of all that frantic late night negotiation might drive delegates to expensive excesses far beyond my rather conservative estimates.
And of course, even firm pledges of green cash may wither, if other parties hesitate to fulfil their pledges, or if a change of government forces a reassessment of the budget options.
If you accept my model parameters, it seems no exaggeration to suggest that the cost of hosting the Paris COP21 party conference may match or exceed, the actual money raised for any UN green fund.
EW – The official dates of the Paris conference are November 30th to December 11th, so the calculation has been updated to use 11 days rather than 7 in the costings…
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Probably will generate more CO2 than it cuts also.
No need to argue about various estimates of costs for the Parisite Climate Coven. According to this item in eenews, the balance between dream/nightmare and reality will come from “private financing”.
http://www.eenews.net/tv/videos/2040/transcript
[begin quote]
International:
CCAP’s Helme discusses need for private financing to meet Paris goals
OnPoint
Aired: Wednesday, October 14, 2015
Video_asset_5335_medium
How will private-sector investments factor in to the overall success of December’s anticipated Paris climate agreement? During today’s OnPoint, Ned Helme, president of the Center for Clean Air Policy, discusses the financing framework that will be needed to ensure the goals of a Paris agreement are met. He also talks about the role of coal internationally and how its expanding use in some countries impacts efforts to reduce emissions.
[. . .]
Ned Helme: Well, you know, the biggest piece to me is the breadth of activity. One hundred fifty countries, almost 90 percent of the emissions are in. You know, we wanted it back in the Copenhagen days, you know, five, six years ago. We wanted all the countries to join together and rise up and we couldn’t do it, and now you’re seeing it. Everybody’s in. Everybody — you know, a dime or a dollar, but everybody’s in to this deal. And we’re seeing some very bold plans. I mean, Brazil has an absolute target tougher than the United States’ target. Would you have ever predicted that five years ago? I mean, they’re saying 37 percent below 2005 by 2025. Our target is 26 to 26 by 2030 below 2005. So you know, it’s a new world out there. India, the one who’s dragged its feet the most over all these years, saying 40 percent of our energy will be non-fossil by 2030. That’s quadruple how much they have today. I mean, and this is a country that’s growing, that’s got to use coal and so on — amazing.
And then you look at the little guys, you know? Morocco — 32 percent, big renewables, Laos doing all this stuff, local stuff with forestry, 30 percent reduction. It’s spread and there’s a real sense, a palpable sense that everybody’s on board. And I think they’re beginning to see this as an opportunity not just to do greenhouse gases but also sustainable development, health, other things. So that’s the story line. It really is exciting.
[More tub-thumping]
Ned Helme: Well, I think the key is, you know, the way the French have built this. You’ve got the announcements from other countries and those kinds of things. You’ve got a separate effort where private sector’s coming in and making their announcements. You’ve got the cities playing in this. You’ve got sub-nationals playing. So — you’ve got the pope and the religious movement behind this. So a huge set of forces helping us set a real political agreement, OK?
[. . .]
You know, 10 years ago solar was too expensive. Today it’s firing off crazy in California, unbelievable the penetration. That same opportunity is out there for developing countries.
Everyone should read the COP21 text. Please read it, or even just scan the 34 pages.
http://unfccc.int/files/adaptation/application/pdf/mechanical_light_editing.pdf
This is sovereign nation suicide. The UN couldn’t organize a piss-up in a brewery and yet they want to run the world.
Very scary.
Here in and Ireland we’ve had a few exceptionally mild days during the last few days of October and the start of November – after a pretty normal Autumn thus far.The reaction from the media and CAGW supporters has been predictably hysterical and disproportionate. The usual wild claims of records being shattered – a DJ on Radio 1, a state run radio station in Ireland, claimed that yesterday was ” the hottest day in November in Ireland in history”.
This kind of weather is being considered,needless to say, as climate with all kinds of commentary on it being ‘freakish’, ‘bizarre’ and above all ‘unprecedented’. As I pointed out to a CAGW believer friend, if this weather is so unprecedented how come it has a name – ‘Indian Summer’.
In any event I have no doubt that this brief spell will be clutched to the breasts of true believers and produced as ‘evidence’ at some point in Paris. Particularly if the conference coincides with a cold snap which if Al Gore is present it almost certainly will!
You call breaking the all time record for November “exceptionally mild”? The all time record for November has been broken, so why is saying that a “wild claim”? http://www.irishtimes.com/news/environment/balmy-start-to-november-sees-record-temperatures-1.2414099
A temperature of 20.1 degrees, recorded in Dooks, Co Kerry, on Sunday is the highest temperature ever recorded in Ireland for the month of November.
Temperatures in parts of the State on Sunday were more than 10 degrees higher than the average for this time of year.
The previous record high for November was 20 degrees, recorded in 1946 on the 4th of the month at Rathfarnam Castle, a spokeswoman at Met Éireann said.
You call that “records being shattered”?
How far back is “all time”?
http://afloat.ie/resources/organisations/met-eireann-irish-meteorological-service/
And the accuracy is? Don’t you just love seeing those records being “broken” by a tenth, a hundredth or a thousandths of a degree with measurement uncertainty of one degree or more. Ah well, the ski hills in the mountains around here will be open next week; Mount Rainier in Washington State got 13.5 feet of snow this week, California Sierra Nevada resorts were expecting 2 feet this past weekend. Instead of worrying about COP21, I may go skiing in all the CAGW that is falling. Winter Storm Warning west of Calgary, Alberta.
http://calgaryherald.com/news/local-news/snowfall-warning-issued-for-k-country-and-canmore
http://snowbrains.com/noaa-california-storm-upgraded-up-to-24-of-snow-forecast-today-tomorrow/
Chris says:
You call breaking the all time record for November “exceptionally mild”?
Yes. For the past 150 years the planet has been in a true “Goldilocks” climate, with exceptionally benign temperatures. Throughout the geologic record it is almost impossible to find a century-long time frame where global T has flutuated as little as 0.7ºC. That is as close to ‘flat’ as you will ever see.
But your mind has been colonized by the ‘dangerous AGW’ scare, so rather than accept our good fortune, you wring your hands in mental agony.
Too bad you can’t think for yourself. The climate alarmist clique has your mind under their control, and they’re leading you around with an invisible ring in your nose.
Good boy! You’re their perfect eco-parrot: “…breaking the all time record!! EEEK!“
Carry on…
clipe – the UK has broken its all time record for both July and November this year. I think that is highly unusual – perhaps you do not. I agree that the November all time record was broken, not shattered.
Chris
Records are made to be broken.
http://media.twnmm.com/storage/21840523/15
Toronto airport records go all the way back to 1937.
Notice how the coldest winters are occurring now in this age of “global warming”? What were the Irish doing in 1946?
Again, how old is the record?
Directors of Met Éireann, 1936-present
1936-1948 Austen H. Nagle
1948-1964 Mariano Doporto
1965-1978 P.M. Austin Bourke
1978-1981 P. Kilian Rohan
1981-1988 Donal L. Linehan
1989-2009 Declan J. Murphy
2009-Present Liam Campbell
the UK has broken its all time record for both July and November
===============
all time? sit at a cafe on the sidewalk and watch the girls walking by. the longer you watch, on occasion a girl will come by that is prettier than all you have seen so far. does this mean that girls are getting prettier with time, or that the time you have been watching is getting longer?
here is the problem. you think temperatures are going up, just like girls are getting prettier, without stopping to consider that what is actually changing is the length of time you have been watching.
Sorry, guys, I’ve decided to “climate change” and become a believer. Anyone know the best way to get a free ticket to Paris COP 21?
Until these hypocrites practice what they preach and use some form of web conferencing for their meetings so they can reduce their carbon footprint and donate the money saved to developing countries, I have no interest in listening to what they have to say.
Let’s see 40,000 attendees, 195 countries, that is 205 people per country for this useless and wasteful (other than for producing numskull green talking points) event.
And I thought being green meant not being wasteful of resources…silly me.
I guess it’s the old “do as I say not as I do” for this new enlightened climate change movement.
I think the hotel numbers are over-estimated as many of the European delegates can spend their nights at home.
http://blogs.new.spectator.co.uk/2015/02/how-green-and-how-peaceful-really-is-greenpeace/
If they used flying cars for COP21 they could halve the expenses of air travel and limos.
Here is all you need to know about the mee4tings in Paris:
The Night They Invented Champagne
… “Will Paris COP21 cost more to host than it raises in Green Pledges?”…
It doesn’t actually matter whether it does or not. It has already cost around 150m, which is 150m that we now can’t spend on real good works….
One of the most striking features of Booker’s expose, is just how little money countries have pledged towards the “$100 billion” green fund.
And this is why ‘Paris’ will fail like all the others. Once the ‘Nations’ realise that there will be no ‘box of free Western money’ they will be on the first plane home to build more Hotels and Airports on their ‘dangerously exposed’ Islands.
Pants on fire in Paris. Just watch them all run as it becomes clearer that there will be no free cash. So much for halting CO2 emissions. It was never about CO2, just ‘free’ money for all.