The Carbon Bureaucracy Nobody Voted For

By Aiden Buzzetti

Most Americans have never heard of the International Organization for Standardization.

That is exactly how its architects prefer it. While Washington debates energy policy in public, a quieter project is underway in Geneva, one that could reshape how American companies produce energy and what it costs them to do it, without a single public vote being cast, a single hearing being held, or a single elected official being consulted.

Last September, the ISO announced a strategic partnership with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol to “harmonize” global emissions accounting standards. The GHG Protocol was developed by the World Resources Institute and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development, two organizations funded by the full cast of progressive philanthropy, including Bloomberg Philanthropies, the MacArthur Foundation, and several European governments, to be the world’s dominant framework for corporate carbon reporting.

The partnership’s stated goal is to combine the ISO’s technical standards with the GHG Protocol’s corporate and supply chain frameworks into one unified system. This could embed a global emissions reporting regime developed by international bureaucrats into American regulation..

ISO standards are technically voluntary, but there is a well-established process by which ISO standards move from suggestions to requirements. Government agencies often incorporate them into regulations. Federal programs, procurement rules, and even contracts can all require accreditation consistent with specific standards. The ISO itself acknowledges that standards frequently become de facto legal requirements once incorporated into law or referenced in commercial agreements.

The GHG Protocol framework has a specific flaw that makes this coercive practice particularly dangerous for American industry. It measures emissions in aggregate, meaning a company that doubles its oil and gas production while cutting its emissions per barrel in half looks worse than a company that simply produces less. There is a bill in Congress, the PROVE IT Act, that has begun to push back on this by requiring intensity-based comparisons across countries. The intensity measurement evaluates output per unit of production, not the aggregate output, but the international bureaucracy is moving in the opposite direction. This hurts our domestic producers.

In addition, the GHG Protocol requires companies to estimate and report emissions from their entire supply chain: suppliers, transportation networks, product end use, and customer activity. Tracking emissions across networks a company does not own or control requires extensive modeling, third-party verification, and reporting infrastructure that large multinationals can absorb and small manufacturers cannot. Capital that could fund a new facility, hire more workers, or develop cleaner technology is redirected into compliance bureaucracy under this scheme. Ultimately, those costs show up in our energy prices.

What makes this especially troubling is the opacity of the process behind it. The ISO does not publicly disclose how national standards bodies vote. It does not release committee working documents or the names of the individuals driving these decisions. The people writing the rules that could shape American energy policy are deliberately shielded from public scrutiny. When the Trump administration moved to withdraw from more than sixty international organizations that had become vehicles for ideological overreach, the ISO was not on the list. It should be on the radar.

Theodore Roosevelt, whose legacy the Bull Moose Project takes seriously, had a clear view on the relationship between American resources and the American people. He wrote that “if we of this generation destroy the resources from which our children would otherwise derive their livelihood, we reduce the capacity of our land to support a population.” He was warning against short-term exploitation. But the principle runs the other way too. Allowing unaccountable foreign institutions to constrain how America develops its own resources, in service of a framework funded by progressive foundations and European governments, is its own form of failure. It is a failure of foresight, and it is a failure of sovereignty.

The United States has every right to develop and adopt transparent, scientifically grounded emissions reporting standards through its own democratic processes. What it should refuse is the laundering of activist policy preferences through international standards bodies designed to make those preferences look technical and inevitable. The GHG Protocol is not neutral. It is an advocacy framework, and the ISO partnership is an attempt to give it the kind of institutional permanence that will survive any single administration.

The SEC, the EPA, and Congress should be paying close attention to where this leads. The people who would bear the costs of this regime, workers, manufacturers, consumers, energy producers, deserve a say in how these standards are built.

Aiden Buzzetti is the President of the Bull Moose Project.

This article was originally published by RealClearEnergy and made available via RealClearWire.

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Sweet Old Bob
April 10, 2026 10:13 am

ISO: FAFO !

mleskovarsocalrrcom
April 10, 2026 10:47 am

The Marxists have infiltrated the US district Federal courts. Bankrolled NGOs that challenge our way of life. Started organizations and given them powers normally associated with legislation. All of this has been done outside of Congress and with people they appoint, not voted for by the people as in a Democratic Republic and all this totally supported by the MSM. And we are sleeping all through it. If we don’t wake up soon we will be like the EU, UK, and all the other Marxist controlled countries. Conspiracy theory? We are watching it happen. That’s why Trump is being attacked from all sides, he’s doing something about it. He may be stumbling and bumbling but his intentions are clear. There won’t be a carbon tax in the US under his watch.

Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
April 10, 2026 11:48 am

Well said. And true. The U.S. is in danger of becoming radical, Leftwing Europe.

If Kamala Harris were president we would already be there. Our Democrats, along with the Europeans, would tremble in fear at the nuclear weapons of the Mad Mullahs of Iran.

This world would be so much different, and so much more dangerous, with just this one change.

Kamala said yesterday that she is going to run for president in 2028. About 75 million extremely ignorant people voted for Kamala last time.

Kamala must be the most unqualified presidential candidate in history. So why would 75 million people vote for this moron? Somebody told them this was a good idea. Who could tell 75 million people this was a good idea?

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 10, 2026 12:25 pm

The US has temporarily stopped its leftward lurch. After the midterms, the only thing that will get done is impeachment hearing after impeachment hearing. Maybe MAGA can win in 2028. Let’s hope so.

1saveenergy
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 10, 2026 12:34 pm

[“About 75 million extremely ignorant people voted for Kamala last time.“]

And the other side would probably say …

‘About 77 million extremely ignorant people voted for Trump last time.’

So that means from the 211 million registered voters in the United States, you only have 59 million knowledgeable, informed people, just over 1/4.

That’s a sad indictment of your education system.

Reply to  1saveenergy
April 10, 2026 5:42 pm

The people who voted for Trump were the smart ones.

One of the most significant figures of the 21st Century. A GameChanger. He put the United States back on the map.

And Trump destroys the Socialsts fevered dreams and so they hate him for it.

The Left will just have to get used to it, as they have at least three more years of a Republican president, and not just any Republican president.

Anyone who thinks Kamala would make a good president is divorced from reality and have no business voting in our elections, as they can’t tell the insane from the sane.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 10, 2026 1:02 pm

‘Kamala said yesterday that she is going to run for president in 2028.’

She’ll have to win a primary this time. Good luck!


April 10, 2026 10:50 am

“but the international bureaucracy is moving in the opposite direction”

Good opportunity for Trump to use some more profanity. I found it amazing that the left was horrified of his recent profanities- forgetting that almost everyone uses profanity when only their friends are listening- and, that they fail to appreciate how some profanity at the right moment can be effective at making it clear what you really think. Too much polished Ivy League language won’t do that. Also, the left didn’t seem nearly as horrified when the IRGC massacred tens of thousands of its own people.

April 10, 2026 10:52 am

It was the Bill Clinton administration that tossed the previously excellent Mil-Standard definitions and replaced them with ISO standards. No ISO certifications, No government contracts.

KevinM
Reply to  doonman
April 10, 2026 11:34 am

How many of the MIL- or ISO- have been updated in the last 20 years?
In certain branches of engineering, the standards are still 30 y/o documents printed on paper in 3-ring binders.

Scissor
Reply to  KevinM
April 10, 2026 12:51 pm

ASTM standards are reviewed at least every 5 year.

April 10, 2026 10:55 am

Seeing that old B&W photo at the top of this story reminded me that- in case some of you don’t know this- if you feed such a photo to an AI, it can colorize it beautifully. I’ve now done this with ChatGPT several times- with old family photos from more than a century ago. I was truly amazed at the quality. Small details which I didn’t notice in the B&W now stand out nicely. I plan on moving to a video version of AI once I decide which one- that’s a confusing decision- but, with the video versions, such old photos can come alive, at least for a few seconds- the people will smile, blink their eyes, etc.

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 10, 2026 11:53 am

Do you pay to get that?

Is there a Free AI?

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 10, 2026 3:03 pm

Most AI companies have a free, light version- then various paid versions. The free version of ChatGPT can make images for you and do tricks like colorizing B&W photos. After I used the free version for a week or two, it offered me a free month of the $20/month version which added some fancy features, like doing programming for you and a few others. At the time I took up that offer, it was going to offer it’s video tool called Sora. But right at that time, the company (OpenAi) decided to terminate Sora and I was very disappointed but I continue to use it until that free month is over. If you’re using the free version, you are limited to 3-4 images per day. With the paid versions you can make all you want. I hesitated for a long time as I thought I’d have to download software which I don’t care to do given that so much software can mess with your computer- but for most of the AI programs you don’t download them, you work on their web site but you can then download to your computer or “device” any images or any other work it does for you. I’m still a neophyte on this but I feel like a kid in a toy store with it. Many people here are advanced users- and they are using the full array of options. Since I still want to play with the video tools, I’ve also started using Gemini which is offered by Google- still the free version which also doesn’t offer the video tool- until you get a paid version.

Ex-KaliforniaKook
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 10, 2026 12:24 pm

Wow! Sounds like the pictures shown in the Harry Potter movies!

SxyxS
April 10, 2026 11:03 am

A core part of globalism is about standardisation(and AGW is part of the game),
and it is for sure just a coincidence that the European UNO headquarter Palais des Nations,
is located in Geneva,
just as the 2nd of the 3 big institutions to standardize the planet ( as seen during Covid) is also located in Geneva = WHO.

Following the ever same globalist pattern: if the origin/base of a globalist approach can neither be located in NY nor London it can usually be found in the 3rd huge money hub = Swiss,
where the 3rd and biggest standardisation hub is located – BiS.

Reply to  SxyxS
April 10, 2026 1:16 pm

Wait, are we now against standardisation too?

cotpacker
April 10, 2026 11:28 am

The total integrated “carbon” burden of products is an interesting academic concept, but the modeling involved is inexact and speculative. Centralized wind, solar and EVs would not be low impact if properly evaluated over the life of the system. The groups pushing for the potential standard are a sure sign that an attempt is being made to game the system to mandate a controlled economy.

India, China and developing countries in Africa, Asia and South America are members of ISO bodies, along with the G7 and G20 group. I expect that those nations will not want to cripple their path to economic development (although the Davos types will try to bribe them). I feel sure that US would currently block acceptance of an emerging standard within our regulations, but that would certainly change when Democrats regain power. Perhaps the political winds will shift in Europe when the effects of Net Zero intersect with another major power failure or the collapse of the German manufacturing sector becomes undeniable.

KevinM
April 10, 2026 11:31 am

ISO9000 standards are a requirement for most US factory situations. If they start to include carbon accounting – are there factory jobs that have not been exported yet?

Ex-KaliforniaKook
Reply to  KevinM
April 10, 2026 1:18 pm

China stands ready to fill the gap!

Reply to  KevinM
April 10, 2026 1:22 pm

That wouldn’t be in ISO9000. And is seems like it’s mostly streamlining things that already exist like Scope 1-3 emission reporting.

April 10, 2026 11:39 am

“Last September, the ISO announced a strategic partnership with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol to “harmonize” global emissions accounting standards.”

Instead, let’s adopt DAVE’s Greenhouse Gas Protocol. Pretty simple.
Section 1. No tracking or accounting of emissions of CO2 or any other IR-active trace gas shall be required anywhere on Earth for any product or service.
Section 2. For any claims of “climate” harm from such emissions, which emissions themselves are not in dispute, the claim must be printed out and promptly disposed of by shredding so as not to add absurd costs to products and services worldwide.

There.

One more thing. There is a bit of irony on the ISO front. There is an ISO document that parallels the JCGM 100:2008 “Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty in Measurement”. I asked Google about this.

Yes, ISO/IEC Guide 98-3:2008 is identical in content to the JCGM 100:2008 document. Both documents represent the same authoritative guide on the expression of uncertainty in measurement (GUM), with JCGM 100:2008 serving as the source document adopted by the ISO/IEC.”

If the ISO truly understood the implications of their own standard, the entire exercise of “climate” modeling would be exposed as pointless and circular in respect to the projection of climate outcomes from various scenarios of CO2 emissions.

Pat Frank was NOT WRONG about this in his 2019 paper.
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/earth-science/articles/10.3389/feart.2019.00223/full?fs=e&s=cl

KevinM
Reply to  David Dibbell
April 10, 2026 12:00 pm

Great point! Standardization bodies pushed difficult guidelines (for yesteryear) on producers because they were supposed to do that. What happens when they push similar standards on “science”.

Rud Istvan
April 10, 2026 12:42 pm

Not as concerned about this as perhaps some. Three reasons.

  1. ISO is technically voluntary.
  2. EPA abolished the endangerment finding, altho that fight isn’t over.
  3. Under Trump—and hopefully his successor—the Washington bureaucracy won’t be able to sneak ‘ISO+GHG’ in thru the regulatory back door.
Reply to  Rud Istvan
April 10, 2026 1:52 pm

It seems this EPA action to amend/suspend the requirements of its own GHGRP (Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program) has not been finalized yet. Let’s hope they put it to bed, and keep it there. I commented on the proposed action here.
https://www.regulations.gov/comment/EPA-HQ-OAR-2025-0186-0286

April 10, 2026 1:02 pm

Most Americans have never heard of the International Organization for Standardization.

Most americans never heard of the metric system either. :p

Rud Istvan
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 10, 2026 1:35 pm

Not funny, and wrong.
I have complete sets of both English and metric mechanics tools because both are needed depending on what you are working on. Any hands on even part time (me) mechanic does. My compact AWD farm tractor was sold by Ford (it is blue) but made in Japan by Kubota with a Yanmar diesel engine—same 3 cylinder metric diesel as on my US made Hunter 35.5 sailboat. All metric—in rural Wisconsin. My 1100cc Honda Shadow motorcycle was made in Marysville, Ohio but is all metric because also designed and engineered in Japan.

Scissor
Reply to  Rud Istvan
April 10, 2026 2:10 pm

I recently took a part a Ford 4 cylinder engine that was made by Mazda. It had a mixture of Imperial, metric bolts and nuts in addition to a few E-Torx and 5 lobe bolts.

Tool makers are happy. Wrenches in Britain are actually Spanish.

hdhoese
Reply to  Rud Istvan
April 10, 2026 6:55 pm

That’s all very true, decades ago there was interest in the US moving to the metric system. It has informally in many respects so it requires an educated, responsible person to know at least a little about both systems, especially if they travel to countries with the metric system. Let’s give MUR an exam to check education, responsibility also for bringing up the question. 

Bob
April 10, 2026 1:54 pm

The owner of the small company I worked for decided we needed to become ISO compliant. I never heard of ISO. I looked up ISO and of course there were pages of positive things supporting ISO. Even back then I knew you had to go several pages into an internet search to find both sides of an issue so I kept going. Eventually I found negative or not so positive articles. I went to the owner and suggested she look into ISO more thoroughly. She basically told me to go back to work and do my job. We became ISO compliant and she made sure I had a hand in instituting it. What a nightmare. My boss didn’t do things half assed she went all in. In my opinion it was a useless exercise adding one more layer of people who didn’t know anything about our work to answer to. To my knowledge the companies who assured her that they would buy from us if only we were ISO certified didn’t. What a mess.

Scissor
Reply to  Bob
April 10, 2026 2:16 pm

It doesn’t matter if your products suck, as long as you follow well-documented processes to make them.

JonasM
Reply to  Scissor
April 10, 2026 6:03 pm

I was going to comment similarly. One of the ISO standards, 9000, 9001, whatever, requires you to set and use quality standards. It doesn’t mean you have to have a quality product, just that you track and measure it. What a waste…