Let’s do follow the climate money!

Climate Crisis Inc. gets billions to promote imaginary manmade cataclysm ā€“ but attacks realists

Paul Driessen

The climate crisis industry incessantly claims that fossil fuel emissions are causing unprecedented temperature, climate and weather changes that pose existential threats to human civilization and our planet. The only solution, Climate Crisis, Inc. insists, is to eliminate the oil, coal and natural gas that provide 80% of the energy that makes US and global economies, health and living standards possible.

Failing that, CCI demands steadily increasing taxes on carbon-based fuels and carbon dioxide emissions.

However, as Franceā€™s Yellow Vest protests and the latest climate confab in Poland demonstrated, the world is not prepared to go down that dark path. Countries worldwide are expanding their reliable fossil fuel use, and families do not want to reduce their living standards or their aspirations for better lives.

Moreover, climate computer model forecasts are completely out of touch with real-world observations. There is no evidence to support claims that the slight temperature, climate and weather changes weā€™ve experienced are dangerous, unprecedented or caused by humans, instead of by the powerful solar, oceanic and other natural forces that have driven similar or far more serious changes throughout history.

More importantly, the CCI ā€œsolutionsā€ would cause unprecedented disruption of modern industrialized societies; permanent poverty and disease in poor countries; and serious ecological damage worldwide.

Nothing that is required to harness breezes and sunshine to power civilization is clean, green, renewable, climate-friendly or sustainable. Tens of billions of tons of rock would have to be removed, to extract billions of tons of ores, to create millions of tons of metals, concrete and other materials, to manufacture millions of wind turbines and solar panels, and install them on millions of acres of wildlife habitats ā€“ to generate expensive, intermittent energy that would be grossly insufficient for humanityā€™s needs. Every step in this process requires fossil fuels ā€“ and some of the mining involves child labor.

How do CCI alarmists respond to these points? They donā€™t. They refuse to engage in or even permit civil discussion. They rant that anyone ā€œwho denies climate change scienceā€ is on the fossil fuel industry payroll, thus has a blatant conflict of interest and no credibility, and therefore should be ignored.

ā€œRebuttalsā€ to my recent ā€œWe are still INā€ article cited Greenpeace and DeSmogBlog as their ā€œreliable sourcesā€ and claimed: Iā€™m ā€œassociated withā€ several ā€œright-wing think tanks that are skeptical of man-made climate change.ā€ One of them ā€œreceived $582,000 from ExxonMobilā€ over a 14-year period, another got ā€œ$5,716,325 from Koch foundationsā€ over 18 years, and the Koch Brothers gave ā€œat least $100,343,292 to 84 groups denying climate change scienceā€ in 20 years, my detractors claimed.

These multi-year contributions work out to $41,571 annually; $317,574 per year; and $59,728 per organization per year, respectively ā€“ to pay salaries and overhead at think tanks that are engaged in multiple social, tax, education, medical and other issues ā€¦ not just energy and climate change.

But letā€™s assume for a moment that money ā€“ especially funding from any organization that has any kind of financial, regulatory or other ā€œspecial interestā€ in the outcome of this ongoing energy and economic battle ā€“ renders a researcher incapable of analyzing facts fairly and honestly.

Then apply those zero-tolerance, zero-credibility Greenpeace-DeSmogBlog-CCI standards to those very same climate alarmists and their allies ā€“ who are determined to shut down debate and impose their wind, solar and biofuel policies on the world. Where do they get their money, and how much do they get?

Billionaire and potential presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg gave the Sierra Club $110 million in a six-year period to fund its campaign against coal-generated electricity. Chesapeake Energy gave the Club $26 million in three years to promote natural gas and attack coal. Ten wealthy liberal foundations gave another $51 million over eight years to the Club and other environmentalist groups to battle coal.

Over a 12-year period, the Environmental Protection Agency gave its 15 Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee members $181 million in grants ā€“ and in exchange received quick rubberstamp approvals of various air quality rules. It paid the American Lung Association $20 million to support its regulations.

During the Obama years, the EPA, Interior Department and other federal agencies paid environmental pressure groups tens of millions in collusive, secretive sue-and-settle lawsuit payoffs on dozens of issues.

Then we get to the really big money: taxpayer funds that government agencies hand out to scientists, computer modelers and pressure groups ā€“ to promote global warming and climate change alarmism.

As Heritage Foundation economist Stephen Moore noted recently, citing government and other reports:

* Federal funding for climate change research, technology, international assistance, and adaptation has increased from $2.4 billion in 1993 to $11.6 billion in 2014, with an additional $26.1 billion for climate change programs and activities provided by the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

* The Feds spent an estimated $150 billion on climate change and green energy subsidies during President Obamaā€™s first term.

* That didnā€™t include the 30% tax credits/subsidies for wind and solar power: $8 billion to $10 billion a year ā€“ plus billions more from state programs that require utilities to buy expensive ā€œgreenā€ energy.

* Worldwide, according to the ā€œprogressiveā€ Climate Policy Initiative, climate change ā€œinvestmentā€ in 2013 totaled $359 billion ā€“ but this ā€œfalls far shortā€ of the $5 trillion per year thatā€™s actually needed.

The UNā€™s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change echoes those greedy demands. It says the world must spend $2.4 trillion per year for the next 17 years to subsidize the transition to renewable energy.

Bear in mind that $1.5 trillion per year was already being spent in 2014 on Climate Crisis, Inc. research, consulting, carbon trading and renewable projects, according to the Climate Change Business Journal. With 6-8% annual growth, weā€™re easily looking at a $2-trillion-per-year climate industry by now.

The US Government Accountability Office puts United States taxpayer funding alone at $2.1 billion per year for climate change ā€œscienceā€ ā€¦ $9.0 billion a year for technology R&D ā€¦ and $1.8 billion a year for international assistance. Total US Government spending on climate change totaled $179 billion (!) from 1993 through 2017, according to the GAO. Thatā€™s $20 million per day!

At the September 2018Global Climate Action Summit, 29 leftist foundations pledged to give $4 billion over five years to their new Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming campaign. Sea Change Foundation co-founder Nat Simons made it clear that this ā€œis only a down paymentā€!

And I get pilloried for working with organizations that received $41,571 to $59,728 per year from fossil fuel interests ā€¦ questioning claims that fossil fuels are causing climate chaos ā€¦ and raising inconvenient facts and questions about wind, solar and biofuel replacements for coal, oil and natural gas.

Just as outrageous, tens of millions of dollars are squandered every year to finance ā€œstudiesā€ that supposedly show ā€œsurging greenhouse gasesā€ and ā€œmanmade climate changeā€ are creating dangerous hybrid puffer fish, causing salmon to lose their ability to detect danger, making sharks right-handed and unable to hunt, increasing the number of animal bites, and causing US cities to be overrun by rats.

Letā€™s apply the Greenpeace-DeSmogBlog-Climate Crisis, Inc. standard all these organizations and researchers. Their massive multi-billion-dollar conflicts of interest clearly make them incapable of analyzing climate and energy matters fairly and honestly ā€“ and disqualify them from participating in any further discussions about Americaā€™s and the worldā€™s energy and economic future.

At the very least, they and the institutions that have been getting rich and powerful off the catastrophic manmade global warming and climate hustle should be cut off from any future federal funding.

Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT.org). He has written numerous studies and articles on energy, climate change, human rights and other topics.

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Mickey Reno
December 30, 2018 10:18 am

Paul, during the Obama years, I think you also need to count the money that went into the “Cash for Clunkers” program as a government subsidy for climate change, as the entire purpose was to remove older, dirtier cars from the highways. At least, in this horrible program, the focus might have been equally or slightly more focused on unburned hydrocarbon pollution as it was on CO2 emissions, and which should never be confused with actual pollution.

Adam Gallon
Reply to  Mickey Reno
December 30, 2018 11:54 am

Or just a subsidy for the car manufacturers?

Mardler
Reply to  Adam Gallon
December 31, 2018 4:10 am

AG: troll alert.

Sam Capricci
Reply to  Mickey Reno
December 30, 2018 12:13 pm

My nephew works as an auto mechanic in Georgia and he said that some guilty liberals would bring in their cars for the cash for clunkers and they were much nicer than what he was driving. But according to the rules he had to junk them with doing something to the motor to freeze it and then showing the trail all the way to the crusher.

Longer ago than that, just after Al Gore’s first movie I had a “conservative” D.O. friend I worked with who saw the movie and decided he was going to get rid of his little pick up truck. I asked him why, he said to get a more fuel efficient car to help save the world. I told him that if he was planning on trading it in he was only going to transfer his fuel inefficient car and end up creating demand for another car to be built which would add to the planet’s destruction. I then sent him quite a few links I had that showed how Gore’s movie was based on lies and a link I had to one story about how during our “warming” periods the ice caps on Mars were shrinking too so I asked him in the email if our destruction was solar system wide? He never spoke to me after that.

Roger Knights
Reply to  Sam Capricci
December 30, 2018 9:52 pm

Say, what’s happening to those Martian ICE caps lately?

Reply to  Mickey Reno
December 30, 2018 1:56 pm

Some may be interested in this website where the Rockefeller Bros have a website that lists their donations.

Cheers

Roger

https://thedemiseofchristchurch.wordpress.com/2015/08/15/the-rockefellers-who-they-fund-from-their-web-site/

Duncan Smith
Reply to  Mickey Reno
December 30, 2018 3:31 pm

It’s the “broken window fallacy”. Cash for clunkers just removed money from the system to replace cars that would be replaced anyway. Like paying people to part with their rotten bananas. Spending that money (all with dept money), could have done better things or just not spend it at all.

TheLastDemocrat
Reply to  Mickey Reno
December 31, 2018 9:41 am

Many of us are old enough to remember before cars had to pass emissions inspection.

Seeing those belching cars is pretty much a thing of the past. No need for cash for clunkers – we already got them off the road.

Dan Sudlik
December 30, 2018 10:23 am

Follow the money. Itā€™s always about the money.

Reply to  Dan Sudlik
December 30, 2018 1:12 pm

It’s not always about the money.

Although money can buy whatever
science opinion / conclusion one wants,
because many scientists have less integrity
than used car salesmen.

For leftists it’s all about the power
— controlling energy use allows
the government to control corportations
more than ever before.

For leftists, a “victory” is having at least
51% of the voting population
dependent on the government.

The socialism they love
will actually reduce the
amount of money in a nation
by slowing economic growth
and raising the unemployment rate.

2hotel9
Reply to  Richard Greene
December 30, 2018 1:51 pm

No, it is always about the money, the more some protest it is not the far more likely case it is.

Hivemind
Reply to  Richard Greene
December 31, 2018 3:27 am

Larry Niven wrote a science fiction story in which the Earth’s government became a power monopoly. Like a water monopoly (eg ancient Egypt), they can’t be changed from within because anybody that dissents will have no power (water) and therefore no ability to do anything.

We see the start of this happening today with the taxing of carbon dioxide emissions, tomorrow banning unauthorised emissions and in the future, no emissions will be permitted. If the wind isn’t blowing, your industry will be idle. The bad news? Power monopolies, like water monopolies, can never be overthrown. Once we allow this to happen, we can never recover.

Steve Taylor
Reply to  Hivemind
December 31, 2018 8:39 am
Reply to  Hivemind
December 31, 2018 9:17 am

“Never” is a strong word.

They probably can’t be overthrown, but over time they collapse like every other government program.

Ancient Egypt’s water monopoly served their fat pedophilic elitists for a thousand years or so — but then Egypt faded into the background for the next few thousand years.

Michael
Reply to  Richard Greene
December 31, 2018 9:38 am

Excellent synopsis, Roger. The Left is all about power, and utilizing that power to create more dependency on Government, thereby increasing the Left’s power to create evermore dependency.

December 30, 2018 10:25 am

As the writer says, “Just follow the money”. But it will not make any difference until the lights finally go out.

They have the Media on side, and enough politicians choose to believe, or so they say ?

MJE

markl
December 30, 2018 10:34 am

The Progressives have successfully made the paradigm that it’s OK to be funded by so called “Green” and “ecologically” oriented institutions supported by public and private donations and any disagreement with their ideology is not democratic. We need to change that paradigm to reflect reality.

Sheri
December 30, 2018 10:50 am

“Every step in this process requires fossil fuels ā€“ and some of the mining involves child labor.”

While discussing cobalt mining by 8 year olds in Africa, I had a commenter on another blog tell me this was training for adulthood, like “take your child to work day” here in America. They insisted all child labor was good because that’s how we progress and insisted that because America had child labor at one time, we must not complain when other countries do the same. This the mindset of some progressives. It’s moral and right to have 8 year olds mining cobalt with picks, shovels and pulling carts. It’s a most terrifying reveal of the evil these people will accept to avoid giving up their ecological “paradise” dreams.

Sam Capricci
Reply to  Sheri
December 30, 2018 12:14 pm

My nephew works as an auto mechanic in Georgia and he said that some guilty liberals would bring in their cars for the cash for clunkers and they were much nicer than what he was driving. But according to the rules he had to junk them with doing something to the motor to freeze it and then showing the trail all the way to the crusher.

Longer ago than that, just after Al Gore’s first movie I had a “conservative” D.O. friend I worked with who saw the movie and decided he was going to get rid of his little pick up truck. I asked him why, he said to get a more fuel efficient car to help save the world. I told him that if he was planning on trading it in he was only going to transfer his fuel inefficient car and end up creating demand for another car to be built which would add to the planet’s destruction. I then sent him quite a few links I had that showed how Gore’s movie was based on lies and a link I had to one story about how during our “warming” periods the ice caps on Mars were shrinking too so I asked him in the email if our destruction was solar system wide? He never spoke to me after that.

Sam Capricci
Reply to  Sheri
December 30, 2018 12:19 pm

While discussing cobalt mining by 8 year olds in Africa, I had a commenter on another blog tell me this was training for adulthood, like ā€œtake your child to work dayā€ here in America. They insisted all child labor was good because thatā€™s how we progress and insisted that because America had child labor at one time, we must not complain when other countries do the same.

By that logic then next time when a liberal says how much disparity there is in income between the US and developing countries you can point out to him/her that is training to learn skills that will eventually result in higher incomes later AND that at one time in our history we paid amounts like that too, so we must not complain when other countries do the same.

Gary Ashe
December 30, 2018 10:50 am

This ties in with Tims thread.

These anti-humanist ideologues separate humans from nature, they think and virtue signal about man being a cancer on the natural world.

They virtue signal about remaining childless to save ”mother more pain”.

The point of their existence is to further the species, to breed.
Without fulfilling their primary purpose for existence they become the selfish cancer on mother, they become the parasite, the cancer using up mothers ”precious” rescourses for no net return for mother.

They fail ”mother” as she produced them to reproduce.

Luckily enough this kind of evolutionary misfire takes care of its self.

BCBill
Reply to  Gary Ashe
December 30, 2018 11:47 am

A strange twist to the “we shall not reproduce” ethos is that these same people are generally in favour of migration from the poorer, and poorly governed parts of the world to the better managed parts. We are all to cut back on our consumption so that the world can have many more people living twelve to a room and eating beetle larvae. The end goal of the smaller carbon footprint seems to be to have more footprints. On the other hand, energy development and Western values in the lost countries might allow people to stay home, where they almost certainly would rather be, and live well with smaller families. Fortunately the latter is what is mostly happening in spite of the noble sacrfices of the childless west and their efforts to redistribute the world’s population.

Kevin Balch
Reply to  BCBill
December 30, 2018 12:44 pm

I remember when we were told to keep family size down to ā€œprotect the planetā€. Now these very same people tell us we need unlimited immigration from the third world to keep our economies growing and save our pensions. Even though they always sais that economic growth was also bad for the environment. Anything to move the ball down the field.

Ever notice that the issue of an immigrant from the third world moving to the US probably triples his ā€œcarbon footprintā€ is never considered?

BruceC
Reply to  Kevin Balch
December 30, 2018 5:59 pm

One of those is David Suzuki who has five children from two marriages.

Bill Murphy
Reply to  Gary Ashe
December 30, 2018 2:39 pm

RE: “They fail ā€motherā€ as she produced them to reproduce.”
Or… “The purpose of a zygote is to produce more zygotes.” The adult phase is largely irrelevant to Ma Nature, except as a convenient basket to store DNA until needed and, in some species, a protector of juvenile zygotes. That quote is, AFAIK, from Robert Heinlein. His prediction of “The Crazy Years” did not turn out exactly the way he envisioned it in the 1930’s only because it has turned out even more crazy than he imagined.

December 30, 2018 10:50 am

Most have forgotten the OPEC oil crisis of 1973. I was adult at the time and recall it clearly. Gasoline shocked at over 50 cents a gallon–and then went to a dollar! People ware restricted as to what days they could get gas, and long lines formed as gas stations.

The oil companies saw the end of easy oil AND INVESTED IN ALTERNATIVE FUELS such as wind and solar.

That is why we laugh at claims that we get our money from oil companies. That is why they do not defend fossils. They want a return on their other investments.

December 30, 2018 10:53 am

They only believe that people can be bought because they only truly know themselves.

It couldn’t occur to them that people only express an opinion for money if they had ever held a position honestly themselves.

Al miller
December 30, 2018 10:56 am

Excellent article Paul. This should be required reading!

D. Anderson
December 30, 2018 10:58 am

“Down that dark path”

Angela leads the way:

ā€œNation states must today be prepared to give up their sovereigntyā€, according to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who told an audience in Berlin that sovereign nation states must not listen to the will of their citizens when it comes to questions of immigration, borders, or even sovereignty.

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-12-27/angela-merkel-nation-states-must-give-sovereignty-new-world-order

markl
Reply to  D. Anderson
December 30, 2018 11:20 am

This won’t work. People are proud of their homelands. This why the UN is trying hard to dilute national identities through so called “immigration” which is in reality forced relocation under the pretext of being the humanitarian thing to do. If the UN spent half as much time trying to make the immigrants’ countries successful the world would be a better place for all. But then the “One World Government” would be unnecessary.

Reply to  D. Anderson
December 30, 2018 12:29 pm

It’s just a reaction to Brexit.

Greg Cavanagh
Reply to  M Courtney
December 31, 2018 1:02 pm

It’s hardly “just” a reaction.

She fully believes in the need for a one world government, and she is doing everything she can to bring the dream forward.

Zig Zag Wanderer
Reply to  D. Anderson
December 30, 2018 2:37 pm

Angela leads the way:

ā€œNation states must today be prepared to give up their sovereigntyā€, according to German Chancellor Angela Merkel

I thought they had already in the EU?

Bill Murphy
Reply to  D. Anderson
December 30, 2018 3:01 pm

Merkel was educated at Karl Marx University, Leipzig. Obviously some of the indoctrination she got there has stuck.

Mardler
Reply to  Bill Murphy
December 31, 2018 4:18 am

Merkel was a Stasi official.

2hotel9
Reply to  Mardler
December 31, 2018 6:48 am

And leftists throw a right and proper hissy fit when this fact is stated publicly.

Reply to  Mardler
January 2, 2019 1:40 pm

It is the third time in one century that a unified Germany brings total chaos and destruction to Europe. It is time to finish off this unholy unified state and it’s ilk, namely the EU, and restore Europe to what it was before the German unification, so before 1871.

D. Anderson
Reply to  D. Anderson
December 30, 2018 8:05 pm

We need to keep an eye on this because if they go down this road we may end up fighting the Germans. AGAIN!

Reply to  D. Anderson
January 2, 2019 1:34 pm

It’s called treason and the punishment in any civilized state is hanging or it should be.

Sommer
December 30, 2018 10:58 am

Following the money can be taken even deeper.

Research mafia connections to the wind industry.
Check out a recently aired ‘ Caravan to Midnight’ Episode 1014, where an undercover RCMP, now living in Hong Kong, exposes the connections behind the scenes and names names.
Follow the ‘reverse engineering’ work that crime investigator David Hawkins is doing with Jason Goodman on ‘Crowdsource the Truth’.

Peta of Newark
December 30, 2018 11:14 am

I’ll say it again -they are behaving exactly like drunks.
In fact, almost everyone is.

We all know how drunks argue and behave – you can not have any sort of sensible discussion with one.
They are belligerent, set in their opinions, loud & argumentative and utterly impervious to any change in whatever they may have made as an original assertion.
To maintain that they argue longer & louder, repeating repeating and repeating their original assertion.
Progress is slow to impossible.

If you/anyone makes the mistake of arguing, they will call on their friends (the consensus and authority figures) and if you really do push your point over theirs, they will become violent.
Physically in the pub/bar, verbally online.

Our modern sugar based diet is *entirely* to blame.
Sugar is a chemical brain depressant.
The saturated fat, now demonised, that it replaced is not.

Even before said sugar is washed down with alcohol and/or cannabis.
(Is it really true that over 16% of US residents are regular cannabis users? jeez)

Alcohol: How is that 20 milligrams per day of Prozac antidepressant can have an effect yet the ‘recommended’ 40 (girls) or 60 (boys) grams per day of a potent depressant 9alcohol) does NOT have any effect?

It’s *never* going to change, everyone is going to want to continue and as I already said, You Can Not Argue with folks using that stuff. It will get rough.

But, how about we have a system of Designated Drivers?
Someone who does not partake in mind bending chemicals and is thus safe to take either the Driver’s Seat and/or the Seat & Levers of Power?

Very easy to tell who will do the job. Tee-teetotallers, as per Mr Trump = easy
Sugar is also a mind bending drug – it is addictive and the addicts give themselves away by getting fat.
They become Apple Shaped
Boys will have waist sizes over 37 inches and girls over 35 inches.

The Designated Drivers are thus easily seen – to do the driving of Politics, Political advisers, Senior Civil servants, Scientists and other educators and Healthcare practitioners

We need people with clear heads and self confidence. Folks who know how to strike a deal/bargain, folks who will walk the walk. Folks who do not regard themselves as Captain Kirks while endlessly pass the buck, Brexit being a Perfect Example

Everyone else can carry on partying.

Its a thing called Division of Labour – been around since the time when bows & arrows a were invented – arguably even since when boys & girls were invented.

Peta of Newark
Reply to  Peta of Newark
December 30, 2018 11:33 am

PS Proof that it has gone wrong:

Abe Lincoln was “What sort of person and politician?”
Pretty decent? OK sort of chap? A wise and insightful politician?
He was 6 feet 4 inches tall and NOT a tall man amongst his peers.

Do we imagine that folks of that time were concerned about their diets to the extent we are now?

Average American male now = 5 feet 9 inches and US girls = 5 feet 3 inches.
Recall how the Japanese put ON that much height difference when they were given a lot more Sat fat vi the introduction of hamburgers into their diet following WW2

There’s a guy with the initials PE who might just have a word or two to say about that
maybe this whole Climate Change Thing is symptomatic of a much greater reality – a one that belligerent drunks will *never* accept to be happening?
I AM saying “almost everybody” present company included

(Did you just pull your stomach in……..)

MarkW
Reply to  Peta of Newark
December 30, 2018 2:16 pm

“He was 6 feet 4 inches tall and NOT a tall man amongst his peers.”

There’s an old saying:
You are entitled to your own opinions. You are not entitled to your own facts.

MarkW
Reply to  Peta of Newark
December 30, 2018 2:14 pm

Do you get paid every time you post this nonsense?

Reply to  MarkW
December 30, 2018 3:14 pm

MarkW

I used to think it was amusing.

Not any more.

2hotel9
Reply to  MarkW
December 30, 2018 3:23 pm

Can’t be much.

LdB
Reply to  MarkW
December 31, 2018 12:02 am

It’s comes across like the ravings of someone off there meds. Think it’s best we just look away.

Wiliam Haas
December 30, 2018 11:25 am

If people really thought that the use of fossil fuels is bad then they should stop making use of all goods and services that make use of fossil fuels, but no one is doing that. Based on the paleoclimate record and the work done with models, one can conclude that the climate change we are experiencing today is caused by the sun and the oceans over which mankind has no control. Despite the hype, there is no real evidence that CO2 from the burning of fossil fuels has any effect on climate. There is plenty of scientific rationale that the climate sensitivity of CO2 is zero. There are many good reasons to be conserving on the use of fossil fuels but climate change is not one of them. Even is we could somehow stop the climate from changing, extreme weather events and sea level rise would continue because they are both part of the current climate. We do not even know what the ideal climate is.

Pamela Matlack-Klein
Reply to  Wiliam Haas
December 31, 2018 10:04 am

The ideal climate must vary with the person experiencing it. People who live in the far north, for instance, dislike the much warmer temps farther south while those of us who have always enjoyed temperate to sub-tropical temps are very uncomfortable when it stays cool all the time. And by “cool” I am talking about below 50F during the day.

My personal Ideal Climate does not ever drop to freezing or below, and I can grow citrus, olives, plumaria, and proteas in the garden, unprotected, year-round.

Bruce Cobb
December 30, 2018 11:38 am

“Climate Crisis Inc.” LOL. Love it.

AJDrake
December 30, 2018 11:43 am

Thank you so much for this! I’m especially happy to see you clearly spell out the funding YOU receive.
Follow the money, indeed.

[It is quite easy to look at CFACTs funding. Mod]
http://www.cfact.org/about/#financial

RickPfitz
December 30, 2018 11:43 am

So what should we think of a well known international news organization that accepts “a special grant” from an activist organization to support its “distinctive approach to climate change reporting”? The BBC? No, The Christian Science Monitor that proudly announced its “collaboration” with the benignly named “Energy Foundation”–a progressive ā€œpass-throughā€ or ā€œbundlingā€ financing organization engaged in political activism (including the development and dissemination of ā€œeffective public narrativesā€ on ā€œdangerous climate changeā€ and renewables). https://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/upfront-blog/2018/0629/The-Monitor-s-collaboration-with-the-Energy-Foundation. I have been a reader/subscriber to the Monitor for 40+ years and have found its reporting generally inclusive of differing perspectives even where the subject is controversial. The glaring exception is its reporting on global warming/climate change where the “settled science” of CAGW is repeatedly promoted and the views of those who challenge the obviously preferred narrative are routinely excluded. It is more than sad to see a respected source to now compromise itself and palpably damage its credibility by accepting less than transparent funding from sources with a clear political agenda of specific coverage of a matter which has been highly politicized. At a minimum, the appearance of a conflict between supposedly independent journalism dedicated to including different perspectives on matters of significant public interest and an activist agenda is stark. I encourage those so moved to write the Monitor editor (sappenfieldm@csmonitor.com) and post comments on the Monitor’s Facebook Page to attempt to inject some realism into the Monitor’s coverage of this subject.

J Mac
December 30, 2018 11:47 am

Excellent expose’, Paul!
The enormity of this fraud makes me want to puke! It’s the greatest waste of personal and planetary resources ever, driven by a political and scientific fraud deemed essential to create the new socialist world order.

December 30, 2018 12:04 pm

Was Obama’s billion-dollar give-away (i.e., steal-and-give-away) to the UNFCCC Green Climate Fund included in the articles accounting?

December 30, 2018 12:14 pm

Worldwide, according to the ā€œprogressiveā€ Climate Policy Initiative, climate change ā€œinvestmentā€ in 2013 totaled $359 billion ā€“ but this ā€œfalls far shortā€ of the $5 trillion per year thatā€™s actually needed.

And I get pilloried for working with organizations that received $41,571 to $59,728 per year from fossil fuel interests

Hi Paul, you know what? I expect there’s more than a few people who don’t understand how much $350 Billion and $5 Trillion really is, so maybe writing down the zeroes would put some perspective on it:

Worldwide, according to the ā€œprogressiveā€ Climate Policy Initiative, climate change ā€œinvestmentā€ in 2013 totaled $359.000,000,000 but this ā€œfalls far shortā€ of the $5,000,000,000,000 thatā€™s actually needed.

Herbert
Reply to  steve case
December 30, 2018 2:31 pm

Steve,
An excellent point.
I am aware that in the past in the Australian State where I reside, the Under Treasurer ( bureaucrat) forbad the use of ā€œ a billionā€ or ā€œ billionsā€ in Reports to him and to the Treasurer ( politician).
The reason was the one you outline.The use of these terms devalued an understanding of how much money in actual dollars was being expended.
The public servants were required to say ā€œone thousand million dollarsā€ or ā€œsix thousand million dollarsā€ as the case may have been.
A Trillion dollars is incomprehensible to most people being $1 followed by thirteen noughts.
Wait while I check that!

Herbert
Reply to  steve case
December 30, 2018 2:38 pm

Steve,
Damn! A trillion is a million million so itā€™s 1 followed by 12 zeros.
Is there a mathematician in the house?

Bill Murphy
Reply to  steve case
December 30, 2018 7:31 pm

RE: “I expect thereā€™s more than a few people who donā€™t understand how much $350 Billion and $5 Trillion really is…”
In fact, there’s very few who really understand Billions or Trillions or who can comprehend any order of magnitude beyond a hundred thousand or so. And writing out all the zeros does little except cause their eyes to glaze over. A few years ago while watching a bank teller load her cash truck with $100 bills I came up with a thought experiment: how tall would a stack of $100 bills equal to the national debt be? A USA currency bill is 0.0043 inches thick so a stack…
6 foot (my height) = $1,674,418.60
$25 Trillion (current national debt) = A stack about 17,000 miles or 2/3 around the world.
$5 Trillion (what they want) = 3393 miles or about the distance from JFK New York to London Heathrow.
$359 Billion (spent in 2013) = 243.6 miles or slightly more than JFK to DCA (Washington National)
If those $100 bills were laid out end to end the lengths become, literally, astronomical with even the “far short” 359 billion reaching about 100,000 miles past the moon and the national debt almost to Venus at over 24 million miles.

Reply to  Bill Murphy
December 30, 2018 8:45 pm

I did that too, comes to a bin 200 ft x 200 ft x 200 ft x Think of Donald Duck and his Uncle Scrooge’s Money Bin packed tight with $100 dollar bills. I had originally thought it might fill the SuperDome, but that place really is big – But it would take seven of them to hold $21 Trillion in dollar bills.

Since people can relate to thousands, the $23 Trillion Dollar debt is about $180,000 per household in the United States.

December 30, 2018 12:24 pm

I still see lots of general descriptions of money being spent.

What I want to see is EXACTLY what the dollars are being spent on. EXACTLY what is the money buying? I cannot seem to find this information.

The basic answer to such a question seems to be a mystery. Does anybody know? Is the money just being used to spin wheels for a good cause without any real results?

$ 5 billion for a US/Mexico border-wall upgrade, all of a sudden, does not seem to be such a big spending deal. It’s more a question of spending priority, rather than a question of cost.

Reg Nelson
Reply to  Robert Kernodle
December 30, 2018 1:02 pm

To put things in perspective: California’s High Speed (capable) railway is now estimated to need $50 billion to complete. And given the history of the project, is far too low.

doug
December 30, 2018 12:34 pm

“Menlo Park, Calif.ā€•The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation announced today that it will donate $600 million over a five-year period from 2018-2023 to nonprofits globally working on solving climate change.”

Koch dollars disqualify scientists, Hewlett dollars don’t. Heat waves are climate, cold spells weather. Got it?

Moderately Cross of East Anglia
December 30, 2018 12:46 pm

We should be grateful to Paul for this expose. The amount of money powering the whole eco-scam is truly staggering and explains why so much vested interest is threatened by the climate realists. No wonder any attempt to promote truth is met with abuse, vilification and refusal to debate honestly. The follow up issue is that with this amount of money at stake just how large exactly is the hidden and doubtless vast corruption Involved? I think we could all take a good guess at some of that.

Farmer Ch E retired
December 30, 2018 12:48 pm

Paul,
Thanks for the analysis. You could add one or two graphs/bar charts showing the CCI financial donations compared with the climate realist donations as a picture is worth a thousand words.

2hotel9
December 30, 2018 1:07 pm

One word, RICO. “nuff said.

HD Hoese
December 30, 2018 1:27 pm

ā€œThey rant that anyone ā€œwho denies climate change scienceā€ is on the fossil fuel industry payroll, thus has a blatant conflict of interest and no credibility, and therefore should be ignored.ā€

So what whose payroll you are on. It is true that whoever pays deserves respect and value for their money. However, if you become a sycophant for something that you know is erroneous or at least a problem, you have sold your soul even worse. I knew lawyers, consultants and academics (outside of climate science) who have not only bent the truth but lied and defamed others. I recall one in a case who said that he had to be careful not to perjure himself. Too late, he did.

It is difficult to avoid becoming biased (group think), but the beautiful seeking of science (common sense) should always come back to haunt and ultimately offer more satisfaction in the long run. Thatā€™s the religion to be sought. No guarantees.

RicDre
December 30, 2018 1:32 pm

Somewhat off topic, but since we are (at least indirectly) discussing the IPCC, I noticed that the AR3 report is again available on the IPCC web site, but it appears that they did a stealth edit to the quote ā€œThe climate system is a coupled non-linear chaotic system, and therefore the long-term prediction of future climate states is not possible.ā€ changing it to ā€œThe climate system is a coupled non-linear chaotic system, and therefore the long-term prediction of future EXACT climate states is not possible.ā€ When I do a GOOGLE search on this quote it always comes back without the work “exact” in it. Does anyone have an old copy of the AR3 (also knows as TAR) report and can confirm what the original quote was?

December 30, 2018 4:06 pm

Laughably, despite all that money spent, the alarmists are panicking.

The IPCC has gradually reduced it’s catastrophic predictions of earth’s temperature Armageddon from 3Ā°C, to 2.5Ā°, to 2.0Ā°C, and now to 1.5Ā°C within the next 12 years.

Why?

Well it seems they are taking note of the observed temperatures Vs their alarmist predictions which have gone horribly wrong, but they’re not telling anyone they are taking note:

comment image

and even:

comment image

It therefore seems they are now at the point of no return, the “tipping point” in their terms. If the planet does exceed 1.5Ā°C warmer than 150 years ago and nothing happens, the public will be asking questions. Well, the French are asking them already, but I mean more of the public. In which case all the money and all the effort to mitigate a harmless amount of warming will have been wasted. The only thing left for them to do is say “well it’ll happen at 2Ā°C” at which point there will be a collective global splutter as their utter incompetence is revealed, again, but on a much grander scale.

On the other hand, if warming doesn’t reach 1.5Ā°C in 12 years time, they might claim the minuscule amount of renewable energy has been a great success and we should all plough on with it regardless of the consequences.

In which case some more astute members of the public may note that:

1. Atmospheric CO2 is still rising so shouldn’t that mean temperatures should be as well? In which case, is the CO2 warming theory wrong? and;

2. If they are right and that inconsequential amount of renewable energy has stopped AGW in it’s tracks, wouldn’t that mean that adding more renewables might make the world colder?

Now forgive me for having some faith in the public’s collective intelligence, but I don’t think they are dumb enough to swallow a 1.5Ā°C warming under these circumstances as credible.

So it seems the IPCC and it’s ilk are painting themselves into a corner here. They have promised global catastrophe beginning in 12 years time (well, the public probably see it as a global tsunami on the stroke of midnight 2030, something like the millennium bug) and nothing will have changed. Not a single sodding thing other than the world will have greened a bit more and there might be fewer extreme weather events.

Now, with a bit of luck and a following wind, Donald Trump may well be voted in for a second term and as his tenure as POTUS ends in, what, five and a half years time, he’ll be able to say to the American public “time is running out for the alarmists. With only 6 years to go until their “tipping point” nothing negative has happened to the natural world.”

Indeed, by that time, the Pause, may well be well and truly back and the world may be showing signs of cooling.

So yes, I think it will be a gunfight at the OK corral, and there will be many more members of the MSM beginning to ask some very awkward questions like, where’s the manifestation of these claims and, where the hell did all that money go?

I can’t help but wonder if we really are on the home run of climate change, and the alarmists have incompetently managed that situation quite by themselves.

kristi silber
December 30, 2018 6:18 pm

” The only solution, Climate Crisis, Inc. insists, is to eliminate the oil, coal and natural gas that provide 80% of the energy that makes US and global economies, health and living standards possible.”

Who are these people, “Climate Crisis, Inc.”? After a quick search, I could only find the appellation associated with Paul Driessen. So, assuming they are a fantasy created by him, they seem to have attributes that are a part of his fantasy.

I’m sure there are those who foolishly believe that it’s wise to eliminate oil, coal, and natural gas, but I’d like to see who they are in reality before believing Driessen’s claims about them, since seems to imply that we should all think such people are a significant voice in society. Either that, or (what I think is more likely) he wants people to believe this is so in order to lump all those together who think something should be done about climate change making it easier to vilify and ridicule them. When this happens on one side of the ideological battle, the natural response for the other side is to make similar exaggerated, dishonest, foolish claims about skeptics. What purpose does this serve but to spread ignorance and animosity? It’s all meant to enlist emotions in the controversy, rather than reason.

The same is true when talking about money. The GAO report discussed in the text is a good illustration. I noted in a comment on the post that first brought it up on WUWT that much of this funding is going towards technology like improvements to nuclear power and energy efficiency, hydrogen research and energy storage. Several of the science programs are useful not just to climate change study, but to weather forecasting and prediction of disastrous weather events. In other words, almost any program that could broadly be construed as addressing climate change was included in the totals, many of which did “double duty.” But that is not mentioned by those who wish to excite the ire of readers.

As for the contributions to green groups…so what? Does anyone expect Greenpeace to sit idly by while millions are spent lobbying Congress to distrust the thousands of researchers who believe anthropogenic climate change is real? Some people believe it’s a legitimate concern, and they are acting on that belief. Knowing how much propaganda is spread to convince the public that it’s BS, of course they are going to spread their own BS propaganda – that’s the way of politics these days. In public discussion of climate change, reason, science, and rational discussion take a back seat to propaganda and political partisanship. Truth and integrity are swamped by bias and enmity.

Perhaps the most telling evidence of this is the way in which many people accept scientific research not on the basis of its merit, but on whether or not it supports their ideology. Not only does it lead to unquestioning acceptance of IPCC claims, but also to those like, “There is no evidence to support claims that the slight temperature, climate and weather changes weā€™ve experienced are dangerous, unprecedented or caused by humans, instead of by the powerful solar, oceanic and other natural forces that have driven similar or far more serious changes throughout history.” All extreme views like these warrant skepticism.

Roger Knights
Reply to  kristi silber
December 30, 2018 10:10 pm

“I noted in a comment on the post that first brought it up on WUWT that much of this funding is going towards technology like improvements to nuclear power and energy efficiency, hydrogen research and energy storage. Several of the science programs are useful not just to climate change study, but to weather forecasting and prediction of disastrous weather events. In other words, almost any program that could broadly be construed as addressing climate change was included in the totals, many of which did ā€œdouble duty.ā€ But that is not mentioned by those who wish to excite the ire of readers.”

This is a vital lesson controversialists should learn: Don’t exaggerate. Opponents will refute them, and then make out that they’ve refuted the whole argument, non-exaggerated parts as well. IOW, think ahead and don’t lay yourself open to an opponent’s counterpunch.

Reply to  kristi silber
December 31, 2018 8:58 am

Iā€™m sure there are those who foolishly believe that itā€™s wise to eliminate oil, coal, and natural gas, but Iā€™d like to see who they are in reality before believing Driessenā€™s claims about them…..

Nicola Sturgeon and the rest of the insane Scottish Nationalist Party who want to have Scotland 100% renewable (despite that being impossible) and are already 50% of the way there (according to their fantastic claims which are nothing more than political propaganda).

kristi silber
Reply to  HotScot
January 1, 2019 11:39 am

HotScot,

Maybe you can find a better reference, but the Guardian says that Sturgeon want 50% renewables by 2030, and energy independence of Scotland. That is from a Sept. 9, 2018 article. Has she since then adjusted her claims and goals?

Even if what you say is true, that’s only Scotland, not the world.

December 30, 2018 7:06 pm

Perhaps the most telling evidence of this is the way in which many people accept scientific research not on the basis of its merit, but on whether or not it supports their ideology. Not only does it lead to unquestioning acceptance of IPCC claims,

Very true

but also to those like, ā€œThere is no evidence to support claims that the slight temperature, climate and weather changes weā€™ve experienced are dangerous, unprecedented or caused by humans, instead of by the powerful solar, oceanic and other natural forces that have driven similar or far more serious changes throughout history.ā€ All extreme views like these warrant skepticism.

Very dumb.
You just said that being skeptical of the former claims is equivalent to the foolishness of the former claims, which have not presented anything more than “after the fact therefore because of the claim” … “evidence” …
when most, if not all, of what in the past had been claimed Man’s CO2 should have caused by
now has NOT happened.

PS Vague claims of “there’s going to be storms” don’t count.

kristi silber
Reply to  Gunga Din
January 1, 2019 12:15 pm

Gunga Din,

“You just said that being skeptical of the former claims is equivalent to the foolishness of the former claims,” No, I didn’t.

I don’t know what you are referring to that “in the past had been claimed…” That could mean anything, including Al Gore’s ridiculous assertions.

Vague claims of the obvious don’t “count,” I would agree. But claims such as, “there will be a greater frequency of intense precipitation events” would count. Any change that is not explainable only by natural variation in climate forcings (solar, volcanic eruptions, cyclical ocean currents, etc.), but that is explainable if one also takes into account the increased CO2 emissions due to human activity would constitute evidence of AGW. Judging by available data, this would include at least part of the increase in temperature since mid-20th C – and if that is true, then Driessen’s claims is wrong. Even if the evidence is not conclusive, it’s still evidence – and even in that case, Driessen’s claim is wrong, since he says there is NO evidence. So it’s not “very dumb” to say what I did. What is dumb is to reject all evidence, whether conclusive or not. It’s also dumb to treat any prediction made by anybody at any time in the past as having equal weight (not that you do so, but some do) – and that includes the predictions/projections of the IPCC, since they are not given equal likelihood. It’s also not too bright to stick to one dataset, such as that of UAH, and reject all others when assessing whether there is evidence – they, too, have made errors and adjustments, and there is debate whether their current dataset is accurate.

In short, if one is going to claim skepticism, one should be equally skeptical of all claims, whether they fit one’s narrative or not. One would think this is obvious, but it’s not obviously carried out.

griff
December 31, 2018 1:06 am

In the interests of balance, we need to find out where all the climate money comes from.

where does the GWPF get its money from?

who funds Heartland (and why?)

A C Osborn
Reply to  griff
December 31, 2018 2:23 am

Griff, why would you be bothered about a couple of organisations of a few dozen people getting a few thousands of dollars when it has been pointed out that we are talking BILLIONS & TRILLIONS of dollars going to thousands of people wasted on CAGW.

Rhys
Reply to  griff
December 31, 2018 3:09 am

As for Heartland, they are a leading libertarian think tank that is mostly funded by small contributions from individuals interested in principle centered governance and limited government, basically the classical liberal philosophy.
The environmental portion is a quarter of their total output as they also advocate for free market solutions to education and health care.
Just for perspective, the tax subsidies Elon Musk alone received could fund the entire Heartland budget for 1,000 years or their budget for global warming issues for about 5,000 years.

2hotel9
Reply to  griff
December 31, 2018 6:46 am

Already been and is being done right now. Democrats in both Houses of Congress set this in motion in 2010 and it is ongoing. Nice try, griffie.

Reply to  griff
December 31, 2018 9:12 am

griff

Usual stupid remark from you.

The tragedy is that both sides of the debate aren’t funded equally.

Furthermore, where does government money come from, or Bloombergs money? Predominantly from the taxes or profits from people earning money thanks to fossil fuels.

Assuming you work for a living, I’ll wager every penny you make is thanks to fossil fuel.

Aynsley Kellow
December 31, 2018 1:10 am

Bloomberg has substantial holdings in natural gas, according to Naomi Klein – managed by fund managers. His net worth has increased by about $20b to total $50b. His donations to the Sierra Club have been a good investment.

troe
December 31, 2018 7:00 am

Skeptic Movie Review

Curiosity walked me into a theater showing “Vice” starring Christian Bale. AKA things to do on a gloomy Sunday afternoon sandwiched between work days. Getting a hair cut is okay, enjoying Kirin beer and a bowl of Gumbo is very good, paying $40 to see a movie about Dick Cheney while munching a bag of popcorn is unfortunately two steps forward one Maoist great leap back.

“Vice” is a sorta maybe biopic of former US VP Dick Cheney. This film is so well made and entertaining that it has garnered 9 Golden Globe mentions and considerable Oscar buzz. Imagine that. These storytellers are so good at their craft that they can make an entertaining movie out of a government officials life. Apparently the version shown to Golden Globe voters had all of those wonderful attributes. The version I saw was a long political screed blaming Cheney for changing Global Warming into Climate Change after focus grouping it, wild fires in California, refugees washing up on Europe’s coastline, being the PR man for ISIS, and harvesting a heart from an imaginary Iraq veteran.

Really the worst thing you can say about this movie is that it delivers exactly what you might think before seeing it. An unpretentious piece of agitprop. Straight tofu for the Leftist ethos shoved through a commercial sales channel. There was more talent involved in making the popcorn than the film. On the bright side the average age of the small sample size audience looked like an outing from the local pensioners home. Maybe it was a mixer for the last members of the CPUSA Browder faction.

Final thought: A pile of stuff is still a pile of stuff even if you polish it with a faux golden statute.

Pamela Matlack-Klein
December 31, 2018 8:39 am

Lately I have been bothered by the Green/Alarmists/CAGW Clowns use of the word, “Existential” and finally took the time to look up the actual meaning. To me, it mostly refers to Existentialism, that peculiar philosophy of the 20th C. Below is what Miriam-Webster has to say:

Question
The meaning of “existential”
Answer
Question

Please explain the usage of the word existential. I hear it frequently on the news and on talk shows. Dictionaries use “existence” in their definitions of this word. This does not help my usage. Help!

– Phil from the United States

Answer

The adjective existential is often defined as, ā€œof, or relating to, existence.ā€ However, as you point out, that doesnā€™t really explain the meaning of existential in most contexts.

Letā€™s try another approach, looking at how the word is most often used. Using a language corpus, I found that existential most often occurs in one of these phrases:

existential threat
existential questions
existential crisis

The first phrase, existential threat, is used in texts or discussions about politics, usually politics in the Middle East. In this context, existential is being used literally. An existential threat is a threat to a peopleā€™s existence or survival.

The second phrase, existential questions, references Existentialism, a 20th century philosophy concerned with questions about how and whether life has meaning, and why we exist. (For more information, look up Existentialism or the philosopher, Jean-Paul Sartre.)

The third phrase, existential crisis, is also a reference to Existentialism, but it is often used in a humorous or sarcastic way, to suggest that the person or people being described spend too much thinking about themselves and the meaning of their lives.

In sum, existential can be a reference to survival, or to the meaning of our lives, or used to poke fun at others who might take themselves a bit too seriously.

This was an interesting question, and I hope this answer helps a bit.

I think using it when talking about Climate Change is pretentious and adds nothing to the discussion.

John Chism
December 31, 2018 9:01 am

“Follow the money” Globally governments have funded the scientific community for over a century, that discoveries led up to what’s become the biggest Scam ever created. As you’ve pointed out Trillions of dollars (globally the USD is still what’s revered to) have funded the research that leans towards the evils of Fossil Fuels and subsequently the Carbon Dioxide it produces. This research gave governments the license to impose taxes in the narrative that the population will use less by the higher cost of energy. Then they created a series of Scare Tactics to impose more taxes on Fossil Fuels. By creating regulations to reduce emissions they increased the cost of Fossil Fuels without increasing the taxes, but now that increased the cost of energy more and the price distortions for products made or grown increased, that are taxed by percentage of a dollar and governments gets even more taxes.

Therefore, by funding the research with a few trillion dollars that demonized Fossil Fuels. The government’s have created the Biggest Scam ever. Because they get multiple trillions of dollars in revenue by the taxes they imposed on top of the price distortions they created. The added trillions of more dollars by creating the Renewable Green Energy Industries that requires more Fossil Fuels to create, erect and maintain them. With millions of New job’s created by these researchers and all the equipment that’s been developed and more equipment needed to do their research. Millions of more dollars are used and taxed by governments.

The Government’s created the issue’s and the Government’s are whom benefit the greatest from this Scam. “Following the Money.”

Reply to  John Chism
January 1, 2019 3:37 pm

Actually, that’s a really good point, John.

It hadn’t really occurred to me that it (Finking Feddie and his little cousins profiting handsomely from this scheme) has been going on that long.

But thinking back on it, they really have.

Mind if I steal that language, or at least some of it?

Dale
December 31, 2018 2:31 pm

If I were a CAGW alarmist, likely my first retaliation would be “Prove it!”
For this article to have real value, there needs to be a link/reference for each figure given. Otherwise, it’s not much better than the wild numbers thrown around by the alarmists.
Looking up the information yourself is not a reasonable option.

Johann Wundersamer
January 1, 2019 2:08 am

Every step in this process requires fossil fuels ā€“ and some of the mining involves child labor.

Child labor is a pending demand in economic critical times :

https://www.google.com/search?q=child+labor+Hallstatt+salt+mines&oq=child+labor+Hallstatt+salt+mines&aqs=chrome.

Johann Wundersamer
January 1, 2019 2:15 am

These multi-year contributions work out to $41,571 annually; $317,574 per year; and $59,728 per organization per year, respectively –>

These multi-year contributions work out to $41,571 daily ; $317,574 per year; and $59,728 per organization per year, respectively

Steve O
January 2, 2019 3:14 pm

How could one forget the money that is intended to flow from rich Western countries to nations who are too corrupt to have functioning economies of their own? I have become convinced that wealth transfers were the original reason for this whole concoction. Didn’t the original seed money for climate studies came from UN coffers at a time when they were seeking a way to justify wealth transfers?

I believe I can make a strong argument that the $2.4T boondoggle is just a bogey meant to make hundreds of billions in wealth transfers sound like a bargain, and that windmills and solar panels are just window dressing for the whole project. Tax increases, infrastructure spending, are regulatory expansion are proposed because that gets governments on board, and willing to sell the wealth transfers to their constituencies.