Month: March 2017

G-20 Poised To Signal Retreat From Paris Climate Pledge

G-20 Poised To Signal Retreat From Paris Climate Pledge

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)http://www.thegwpf.com

Finance ministers for the U.S., China, Germany and other members of the Group of 20 economies may scale back a robust pledge for their governments to combat climate change, ceding efforts to the private sector.

COP21_End_day2scr

Citing “scarce public resources,” the ministers said they would encourage multilateral development banks to raise private funds to accomplish goals set under the 2015 Paris climate accord, according to a preliminary statement drafted for a meeting that will be held in Germany next week.

The statement, obtained by Bloomberg News, is a significant departure from a communique issued in July, when finance ministers urged governments to quickly implement the Paris Agreement, including a call for wealthy nations to make good on commitments to mobilize $100 billion annually to cut greenhouse gases around the globe.

“It basically says governments are irrelevant. It’s complete faith in the magic of the marketplace,” John Kirton, director of the University of Toronto’s G-20 Research Group, said in an interview. “That is very different from the existing commitments they have repeatedly made.”

Mnuchin’s Debut

The shift in tone comes as U.S. President Donald Trump’s Treasury Secretary, Steven Mnuchin, prepares for his first G-20 meeting, scheduled for March 17 to 18 in the spa town of Baden-Baden. While European nations including Germany have been at the forefront of combating global warming, Trump has called climate change a hoax.

The Republican president vowed during his campaign to “cancel” the Paris agreement but has said little about the deal since taking office. His cabinet members, meanwhile, have sent mixed signals. U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the U.S. should keep a seat at the table for international climate talks. Scott Pruitt, the head of the Environmental Protection Agency, on Thursday expressed doubt that humans were to blame for global warming and called the Paris agreement a “bad deal” for the U.S.

Several leaders of G-20 nations have expressed strong support for combating climate change and upholding the Paris accord since Trump’s election, including China and the U.K. The annual summit of G-20 heads of state is scheduled for July in Hamburg. It’s unclear what countries pushed for the new language in the finance ministers’ draft statement, which is likely to undergo revisions before being formally adopted.

The most notable element of the draft is what’s missing. The statement issued after the G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors meeting in July dedicated 163 words to the Paris Agreement, pushing nations to bring the deal into force, meet emissions targets and fulfill financial pledges. This current draft dedicates just 47 words to the agreement, focusing exclusively on development banks raising private funds, without mentioning government financial support.

Full story

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

March 10, 2017 at 07:37PM

Matt Ridley: From Russia to North Yorkshire, The Hidden Agenda Of Shale Opponents

Matt Ridley: From Russia to North Yorkshire, The Hidden Agenda Of Shale Opponents

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)http://www.thegwpf.com

I first visited a shale gas well in Pennsylvania in 2011 while writing a report for a think tank, the Global Warming Policy Foundation, founded by Lord Lawson, the former chancellor.

At that time, most energy analysts were still arguing that shale gas was a flash in the pan. I concluded that that was almost certainly wrong and that we were witnessing an energy revolution of huge significance.

And so it proved.

America went from importing to exporting gas. The shale boom pumped hundreds of billions of dollars into the American economy through domestic production and lower prices. The environmental problems were minimal.

President Obama’s Energy Secretary confirmed this in 2015, when he said: “I still have not seen any evidence of fracking per se contaminating groundwater.”

Over the past decade, America has cut its carbon dioxide emissions faster than any country, thanks almost entirely to the shale gas revolution. It did so while simultaneously bringing heavy industry back onshore, whereas we have driven it away.

Saudi Arabia tried to kill the shale drilling business in 2014 by flooding the market and cutting prices. It failed –the technology keeps improving and the break-even price gets lower and lower.

Last November, I was on a shale-oil site in Colorado watching the new quiet-fracking fleet do its work: an operation that takes about the same length of time as building a wind turbine and is as limited in area, but produces hundreds of times more energy and is about two per cent as prominent in height in the landscape when it is finished.

In 2011, I wrote that “shale gas faces a formidable host of enemies in the coal, nuclear, renewable and environmental industries – all keen, it seems, to strangle it at birth, especially in Europe”.

I was right about that too.

What was the reaction of the environmental movement to this gift from the gods? To oppose it with all its might, even at the cost of telling the truth.

This year, Friends of the Earth was forced by the Advertising Standards Authority to withdraw several misleading claims it had made about shale gas. It even resorted to arguing that sand is carcinogenic. It did not quite have the brass neck to complain about dihydrogen monoxide, which is injected in large quantities into shale gas wells – for those whose chemistry is rusty, that is H2O, or water.

Who is behind this anti-shale propaganda?

Let us look at who stands to suffer from a successful shale revolution here.

First, the subsidy-drunk renewable energy industry, still trying to justify things like burning American forests for electricity. The former Department of Energy and Climate Change chief scientist, the late Professor David MacKay, found that in particular circumstances, using wood pellets to ​generate electricity could have a carbon footprint almost twice that of coal and four times that of gas, and yet we subsidise foreign wood pellets and stand in the way of shale gas.

The second group with an interest in undermining British shale gas, apparently, is a foreign power. 

Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the former Nato Secretary-General, has accused Moscow of campaigning to undermine shale gas. Here is a quote from National Review magazine in 2015: “Russia has ramped up covert payments to environmental groups in the West. By supporting well-intentioned environmentalists with hard cash (often without their knowledge), Russian intelligence gains Western mouthpieces to petition Western audiences in its favour.”

Sure enough, the Kremlin’s mouthpiece, RT, Russia Today, has been broadcasting anti-UK shale propaganda on its “Keiser Report”, including the line that “frackers are the moral equivalent of paedophiles”.

The US Director of National Intelligence said very recently: “RT runs anti-fracking programming, highlighting environmental issues and the impacts on public health. This is likely reflective of the Russian Government’s concern about the impact of fracking and US natural gas production on the global energy market and the potential challenges to Gazprom’s profitability.”

This is what we are up against. We will be burning gas for decades to come under any policy. Even the National Grid’s extreme “gone green” scenario for future energy policy sees us burning almost as much gas in 2035 as we burn today.

But more than that, we have a huge chemical industry in this country, employing hundreds of thousands of people directly and indirectly. It needs methane and ethane, derived from natural gas wells, as feedstock. That industry will disappear rapidly if we do not exploit domestic shale. It has repeatedly warned us of this.

As the GMB union puts it, if exploratory drilling reveals a plentiful supply of UK shale gas reserves, “is it not a moral duty for Britain to take responsibility for providing for our own gas needs from those supplies rather than importing gas from elsewhere”?

Full post

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

March 10, 2017 at 07:37PM

DAILY MAIL HAS A THIRD GO AT SMART METERS

DAILY MAIL HAS A THIRD GO AT SMART METERS

via climate sciencehttp://climatescience.blogspot.com/

This piece is yet again on the issue of so-called smart electricity and gas meters. After this, surely no one will want to risk having one fitted. Even the "industry insider" said "The industry is frantically working to improve the technology, but we don’t yet have solutions for all the problems. We need more time. By rushing, mistakes will happen."

If they don’t have solutions why on earth are they rushing ahead. This is madness!

It is most ironic that this very week someone (presumably a government agency) has put out TV adverts extolling the accuracy of these meters.

Here is one.

Here is another in the same vein.

via climate science http://ift.tt/2jXH2Ie

March 10, 2017 at 05:00PM

Australia’s Power Policy FAIL: Runaway Renewable Energy Target Destroying Business, Industry & Jobs

Australia’s Power Policy FAIL: Runaway Renewable Energy Target Destroying Business, Industry & Jobs

via STOP THESE THINGShttps://stopthesethings.com

*** In the, ‘it seemed like a good idea at the time’ category, Australia’s Renewable Energy Target has turned toxic. Costly and pointless at the same time, the massive subsidies directed to wind and solar power have not only destroyed once affordable and reliable power supplies, they are inevitably destroying not just otherwise viable businesses, […]

via STOP THESE THINGS http://ift.tt/2kE7k62

March 10, 2017 at 04:35PM