Six weeks ago, the BBC’s climate soothsayers were gazing into 2025 with their trademark blend of gloom and green idealism. Their January 7 piece, “From Trump to a ‘Game-Changing’ Lawsuit: Seven Big Climate and Nature Moments Coming in 2025,” sketched a year of UN lawsuits, lofty CO2 targets, and global summits—all set to “shift the dial” on warming. They gave Trump’s return a nervous glance, hinting his Paris exit might “hinder climate action,” but banked on technocrats and NGOs to keep the faith. Then the Trump juggernaut roared in, flattening their predictions in under two months. Now, with NGOs in the crosshairs, the rubble’s still smoking. What a difference six weeks make.
However, some experts say momentum is now on the side of the energy transition despite any actions Trump will take. “The result from this election will be seen as a major blow to global climate action,” Christiana Figueres, the former UN climate chief, told the BBC in November. “But it cannot and will not halt the changes under way to decarbonise the economy and meet the goals of the Paris Agreement.”
Global economics have changed significantly since Trump was last president, says Stientje van Veldhoven, regional director for Europe at the World Resources Institute (WRI), a non-profit based in Washington DC, and former environment minister of the Netherlands. “Whereas eight years ago, the economics worked against [the clean energy transition], now they very much start to work in favour of it. That is one thing that has really changed.”
Step one: the BBC’s pre-election bubble. In early January, they listed seven “big moments” for 2025—Trump’s term as a minor snag, followed by a UN climate court case, G20 greenwashing rules, UK CO2 cuts, Brazil’s COP 30, Arctic talks, and some tech fluff. They hedged on Trump, clinging to China’s renewable hype and Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) as lifelines. NGOs, those tireless peddlers of climate dogma, lurked in the background, funded by agencies like USAID to amplify the narrative. The BBC figured the machine would chug along, Trump or not.
Step two: Trump swings the axe. By January 20, 2025, Inauguration Day ink still wet, Trump unleashed chaos. He re-ditched the Paris Agreement, declared an “energy emergency” to greenlight oil and gas, paused offshore wind, and froze IRA funds. But the real kicker? He’s targeting the NGO pipeline. Word’s out that Trump’s team is slashing climate propaganda budgets, especially to those previously depended on the now defunct USAID, which had funneled millions to groups preaching doom and pushing renewables. The BBC’s mild worry about “hindered action” didn’t foresee this bulldozer tearing up the roots.
Step three: AR7 talks collapse. Last week, the U.S. bolted from the IPCC’s Seventh Assessment Report (AR7) negotiations—a body blow to the climate science cartel. The BBC had pinned hopes on AR7’s 2028 release to keep the pressure on, but Trump’s crew smelled more alarmist tripe and walked away. Without U.S. cash and clout, the IPCC’s scrambling. NGOs that lean on these reports for fundraising? They’re sweating now, with USAID’s spigot gone.
Step four: NGOs take the hit. Here’s where it gets juicy. USAID and similar agencies have long been ATMs for NGOs—think Greenpeace, WWF, or lesser-known outfits lobbying for net-zero. Trump’s killing that gravy train, redirecting funds to energy independence over climate sermons. The BBC’s “big moments” relied on these groups to grease the wheels—lobbying for that UN lawsuit, hyping COP 30, guilt-tripping G20 stragglers. Without U.S. dollars, their megaphone’s muted. The impact’s seismic; propaganda doesn’t run on fumes.
Step five: global plans crumble. The UN climate lawsuit? Dead in the water if Trump tells the International Court of Justice to shove it—and he will.
Expected in early 2025, the ICJ ruling would be non-binding but could be cited in climate court cases around the world.
“Although non-binding, ICJ advisory opinions carry significant moral and legal weight,” says Setzer. “This advisory opinion has the potential to establish a global benchmark for climate accountability and reinforce the connection between human rights, sustainability, and environmental protection.”
The UK’s 81% CO2 cut by 2035? A quixotic quest when America’s drilling, not decarbonizing. Brazil’s COP 30? A tropical talk shop without U.S. heft or NGO hype. The G20’s greenwashing crackdown? Toothless when the world’s second-biggest emitter opts for coal and crude. The BBC didn’t game out a Trump who’d choke the NGOs keeping this circus afloat.
Step six: the green dream stalls. Biden’s IRA was the BBC’s ace—billions in clean energy handouts to outlast Trump. Nope. His 90-day funding freeze is a prelude to gutting it, with cash flowing to pipelines, not windmills. Solar and wind firms are jittery, their stocks wobbling as subsidies vanish. NGOs pushing renewables as gospel? They’re scrambling for new sugar daddies as the checks bounce. The BBC’s January vision didn’t account for a Trump who’d kneecap the whole ecosystem—propaganda and all.
This is a front-row seat to a rout. Six weeks ago, the BBC thought 2025 was set for climate crusaders—lawsuits flexing muscle, summits preaching unity, NGOs amplifying the panic. They didn’t see Trump’s juggernaut coming, least of all his aim at the NGO cash cow. From Paris to AR7, from USAID to COP 30, he’s not just slowing the train—he’s dynamiting the tracks and torching the wreckage. The BBC’s crystal ball? Smashed. The view of the debris? Priceless.
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I am more worried about the BBC promoting drag queens as good Mothers on the children’s channel CBeebies. Their climate nonsense if just a joke now.
Who is Barbra Banda? Meet BBC Women’s Footballer of the Year who was withdrawn from tournament due to ‘high testosterone’
It’s a man’s world
The BBC are considering a revamp of Top Gear. This time round, specialising on driving instructors giving instructions to their favourite group of non white men.
The number plate with the letters AA and squiggly Arabic script plus the use of cars with no brake peddles tells who is its target audience…..
The BBC’s climate alarmism is a complete joke but they no longer allow conventional humour to be broadcast.
Why are we forced to pay for these wreckers of safe society?
In two words
status quo
“Down Down, Deeper and down” 🙂
On your Paper Plane
The BBC is beyond saving and its latest Hamas propaganda didn’t go down well.
Charles:
I note…
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It’s visible to everyone, well, it’s visible to me.
I can see it too. It even has subscription plans for WUWT. How interesting.
Well, that bug was unexpected. Another task to deal with today.
At least you can rely on us….
Almost as strati puts it, we aim to please.
I am a premium subscriber and the post ended early “Now, with…” (i.e., I think I only saw a snippet),
Trump may – through sheer happenstance – sort out the whole renewable energy fiasco, but the damage he is doing to America’s interests overseas is massive.
Very much a two edged sword.
Compared to the UK kneel to China that’s funny.
You mean Trump’s plans to beggar his neighbors, induce unemployment elsewhere with tariffs while US unemployment is lower than everyone else’s, that stuff ?
Consumer sentiment just dropped in the US, a Trump recession is looking more probable.
Upsetting the socialists who are running other countries into the ground, doesn’t damage America’s interests.
Elaborate. Is this in comparison with the previous administration? The Obama administration? Bush?
maybe “American” interests overseas … but those “American green energy interests” are not the same as AMERICAS interest …
Definitely need more fire and brimstone as the faithful are wavering and thinking impure thoughts-
One in six energy bosses think the world can achieve Net Zero by 2050
If it’s Pope Ratzinger the Second ordering a V8 in the Popemobile I’m calling it-
First electric “Popemobile” from Mercedes-Benz | Mercedes-Benz Group > Company > News
Mercedes-AMG commits to next-gen V8 | The Courier Mail
Once the BBC lost any remaining sense of balance it should have been closed down permanently for breaking its Charter. Unfortunately the UK has brainless politicians and net zero leadership which why we are charged so much for sweet FA across most everything.
I’ll have you know your elites are so brainy they have to wrap them to keep them in-
‘These people are idiots’: Ilhan Omar blasted for mocking Americans
Now repeat after them…the science is settled…the science is settled…
Scientists discover unexpected decline in global ocean evaporation amid rising sea temperatures
Science is NEVER settled. Repeat until learned.
The BBC is similar to NASA in its own way – a tool of government
BBC should remodel itself to reflect it’s new charter and change it’s name to HPBC – Hamas Public Broadcasting Corp. It’s already got Hamas reporters working for it, I wouldn’t mind so much but I’m paying for them without any way of boycott.
More good news. The CAGW clowns are campaigning against CO2, CO2 can not cause catastrophic global warming. The whole sorry mess depends on corrupt governments financing lies, pushing useless renewables and mandating their citizens to do things they don’t want to do and are not necessary. Reel in the government and this whole stinking mess goes away.
The UN/IPCC has been the main sponsor and director of the climate madness.
They even changed the meaning of the word “climate” to mean “around 30 years of weather” without telling the billions of people that learned climate meant “thousands to millions of years of weather” that they were and had changed the meaning of the word “climate”.
Defund the BBC. Anti British and now a real left wing propaganda tool for Hamas. Their climate nonsense is the tip of the iceberg.
Charles, I love the step by step analysis leading to the final defenestration! Well done!
If these various groups and agencies are totally dependent upon taxpayer dollars redirected by government, are they really “Non-governmental agencies”?
Be nice if Trump put on a real climate debate,the one that the Manns of the world say we had and is over.
Consumer sentiment in the US dropped this week due the increased likelihood of a recession with high tariffs and other administration policies leading to higher inflation and higher interest rates.