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Vatican’s Green Archbishop: Denying Man-Made Global Warming Is Heresy

Vatican’s Green Archbishop: Denying Man-Made Global Warming Is Heresy

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

The Pope’s statement regarding global warming “must be considered magisterium – it is not an opinion.”

ROME, Italy, July 19, 2017 (LifeSiteNews) – The head of the Vatican’s Pontifical Academy of Sciences has again inferred that denial of the controversial concept of manmade climate change equates to flat earth mentality.

“From the scientific point of view, the sentence that the earth is warmed by human activity is as true as the sentence: The earth is round!” said Archbishop Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo.

The archbishop has been a consistent and zealous promoter of manmade climate change as a non-negotiable Church issue, despite the status of care for the environment as a prudential matter.

Climate change ideology continues to be contested as a ploy perpetrated with manipulated data by the left to enact environmental regulations and taxes.

Even so, Archbishop Sorondo dismissed deniers of climate change in a recent Vatican Radio interview as “a small, negligible minority.”

The interview conducted in German contained the headline: “Vatican: ‘Climate change is a fact,’” and centered on reception of Pope Francis’ eco-encyclical Laudato Si’ two years after its release.

Archbishop Sorondo went on in the interview to say that human-affected climate change was considered science. He added that the pope not only has the right but also the duty to rely on science in addition to doctrine and philosophy in seeking out truth.

If the pope expresses himself on such a subject, then this was not arbitrary, he said, as the pope’s words are not restricted to the area of ​​”doctrine of faith and morals.”

The pope makes use of the truths of science or philosophy to not only explain to man how to get to heaven, said the archbishop, but also what he must do on earth.

All human activities have to do with ethics, the Argentinean archbishop said, so they are already within the jurisdiction of the pope.

Archbishop Sorondo is a close adviser to Pope Francis and the Chancellor of both the Pontifical Academy of Sciences and the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. He has repeatedly welcomed pro-abortion and population control advocates to the Vatican for conferences under the pretext of the climate issue.

Last month, just before President Donald Trump announced the U.S. would pull out of the controversial Paris Climate Agreement, the archbishop likened climate ideology skeptics to flat-earthers as well.

Withdrawal from the Paris accord “would not only be a disaster but completely unscientific,” he said.

“Saying that we need to rely on coal and oil is like saying that the earth is not round,” Archbishop Sorondo stated. “It is an absurdity dictated by the need to make money.”

He has also repeatedly made the claim that those who don’t subscribe to the manmade climate change theory are in some way subsidized by the oil industry. He did so again in the Vatican Radio interview.

“Of course, some sectors that depend on the oil lobby — including some Catholic institutions! — do not agree with Laudato Si’,’” the archbishop stated. “And with this they are causing serious damage, because the climate is deteriorating — even the opponents of climate change will be among their victims, in the short or long term.”

Archbishop Sorondo drew a heated reaction at a December 2015 conference in Rome on Laudato Si’ by claiming that the pope’s pronouncements on  global warming expressed in his document are magisterial teaching with the same gravity as the Church’s teaching on abortion.

The archbishop had tried to float the idea then as well that climate change, then generally still labeled global warming, was a non-negotiable moral issue.

After asserting in his address that global warming was caused by human activity and twice claiming that Pope Francis’ teaching on it via Laudato Si’ was magisterial, other panel presenters at the conference challenged Archbishop Sorondo.

Acton Institute founder and president Father Robert Sirico explained citing the Catechism that the Church’s mission was spiritual and not political, economic or social.

“The Church does not claim to speak with the same authority on matters of economics and science as it does when pronouncing on matters of faith and morals,” he said.

Later during the question and answer session when asked about the weight of the pope’s opinions regarding global warming in Laudato Si’, Archbishop Sorondo said the “judgment must be considered magisterium – it is not an opinion.”

Full story

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

July 20, 2017 at 04:59AM

Rupert Darwall: The Hinkley Point Fiasco Doesn’t Bode Well For Brexit

Rupert Darwall: The Hinkley Point Fiasco Doesn’t Bode Well For Brexit

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

Whatever one’s views on Brexit, the poor judgement displayed on Hinkley, particularly that of the Chancellor, suggests that Britain can’t but be heading for a bad Brexit deal.

Figures published this week suggest that households could end up paying eight times more for the Hinkley Point nuclear power station than was originally estimated four years ago. This should have come as no surprise. Last month, a devastating report by the National Audit Office (NAO) laid bear the full horror of this policy fiasco, for which the Treasury shoulders much of the blame.

Given that Chancellor Philip Hammond is now trying to take the de facto lead on Brexit, alarm bells should be ringing. The poor judgement that led the Government to rubber- stamp the disastrous Hinkley deal only last September is all but certain to lead to a bad Brexit deal.

Britain’s pro-nuclear policy was set out in a 2008 white paper, since when, as the NAO pointed out, the economic case for nuclear has deteriorated. Estimated construction costs have increased, while low-carbon alternatives have got cheaper (although the Government at last recognises that their intermittency means their costs are higher than they appear), and the price of fossil fuels has fallen. The Government agreed the key commercial terms of the Hinkley deal with EDF in 2013. But the significantly lower fossil fuel prices now expected over the life of the deal mean that the cost of top-up payments that consumers will be forced to make to subsidise the plant will rise from £6 billion to £30 billion.

On its way to striking this parlous deal, the Government crossed every one of its red lines bar one. The team negotiating the agreement had been told to fix the strike price – the guaranteed price France’s EDF will get – at no more than £85 per MWh. The strike price ended up at £92.50 per MWh (indexed to inflation).

To cap the levies used to subsidise low-carbon investment, the Coalition put in place a Levy Control Framework to protect consumers and businesses from ever-rising energy costs. By September 2016, the forecast top-up payments for Hinkley alone would bust the limit on the total set aside for new nuclear.

The Government’s “strategic case” for going forward with the Hinkley deal was to open up a pipeline of nuclear investment, hoping to build two new reactors every three years. But because there’s no money left in the Levy Control Framework, the Government’s new line is that the framework doesn’t matter any more. What now matters is the level of the strike price – and that hasn’t changed.

This is politically and economically dangerous. It means the Government is perfectly content to lock British consumers into high and rising electricity prices, and is happy to ignore the impact on competitiveness. While our competitors benefit from lower fossil fuel prices, British firms will, post Brexit, be burdened with some of the highest energy costs in the world.

But what is most revealing about the Government’s lack of concern over energy costs is its assessment of what would happen if Hinkley were delayed. On its central assumption for future fossil fuel prices, a three-year delay would actually save consumers £800 million. When delaying a project saves money, the project economics are screaming that you’d be better off cancelling the entire thing.

When Greg Clark’s business and energy department (BEIS) used lower fossil fuel prices than its central assumptions – a plausible view, given the impact of fracking on US output – and using gas-fired power stations to fill the gap, consumers would save £4 billion.

The Government has yet to cross one last red line: the paying of a hefty premium to keep the project off the Treasury’s balance sheet. Back in October, the Chancellor observed that “we are going to have to invest eye-wateringly large sums of money—perhaps £100 billion—just to ensure that the lights stay on”. As Chancellor, Mr Hammond is in a prime position to cut these costs. But because he’s not signing the cheques, he appears indifferent to the plight of consumers and businesses. Instead, he advises people to use less electricity.

According to the NAO’s analysis, businesses and households will end up paying substantially more for Hinkley Point through their electricity bills than they would do as taxpayers. If the Treasury had agreed to purchase the power station under an “engineer, procure and construct” turnkey deal, the strike price would have been £11.50-£52.00, rather than the £92.50 actually agreed.

Worse still, there remains a real risk of the deal collapsing and needing a Government bailout. As the NAO notes, any further deterioration of EDF’s financial position could “escalate to a discussion” about its ability to fund construction, as happened with a number of previous mega-projects.

The most damning aspect of the NAO report, though, was what it revealed about the role of the Treasury. Perhaps it is not entirely surprising that BEIS officials, having invested a huge amount of effort in a flailing project, were reluctant to see the writing on the wall. Indeed, the NAO slammed the department for its failure to manage the conflict of interest of a consultancy advising its on the reasonableness of EDF cost estimates when the consultancy’s parents were engaged by EDF.

The Treasury, however, has overall responsibility for the country’s economic performance and is meant to be immune from project capture. In January 2013, the Treasury expressed concern about the costs of Hinkley compared with the alternative of gas-fired power stations. By August 2016, the Treasury recognised that although the value for money case had worsened, it was worth proceeding with the deal “due to the strategic and political implications of withdrawing”.

In other words, the Treasury knew that on the economics, Hinkley was a lousy deal but felt that Britain was, in some way, morally committed to a bad deal (even though it hadn’t been signed).

This was a bad call. Britain does not stand taller in the world by feeling compelled to sign a bad deal. Potential investors in future deals will not be impressed by a counter-party that signs a deal that everyone knows is heading for disaster. When it comes to looking after their own interests, other countries are not as craven. According to the FT, $47.5bn high speed rail projects with China have been cancelled or discontinued, including the $12.7bn high speed line between Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

Full post

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

July 20, 2017 at 04:28AM

How Capitalism Saved The Bees

How Capitalism Saved The Bees

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

A decade after colony collapse disorder began, pollination entrepreneurs have staved off the beepocalypse.

Photos: iStockPhoto; Illustration: Joanna Andreasson

You’ve heard the story: Honeybees are disappearing. Beginning in 2006, beekeepers began reporting mysteriously large losses to their honeybee hives over the winter. The bees weren’t just dying—they were abandoning their hives altogether. The strange phenomenon, dubbed colony collapse disorder, soon became widespread. Ever since, beekeepers have reported higher-than-normal honeybee deaths, raising concerns about a coming silent spring.

The media swiftly declared disaster. Time called it a “bee-pocalypse”; Quartz went with “beemageddon.” By 2013, National Public Radio was declaring “a crisis point for crops” and a Time cover was foretelling “a world without bees.” A share of the blame has gone to everything from genetically modified crops, pesticides, and global warming to cellphones and high-voltage electric transmission lines. The Obama administration created a task force to develop a “national strategy” to promote honeybees and other pollinators, calling for $82 million in federal funding to address pollinator health and enhance 7 million acres of land. This year both Cheerios and Patagonia have rolled out save-the-bees campaigns; the latter is circulating a petition calling on the feds to “protect honeybee populations” by imposing stricter regulations on pesticide use.

A threat to honeybees should certainly raise concerns. They pollinate a wide variety of important food crops—about a third of what we eat—and add about $15 billion in annual value to the economy, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. And beekeepers are still reporting above-average bee deaths. In 2016, U.S. beekeepers lost 44 percent of their colonies over the previous year, the second-highest annual loss reported in the past decade.

But here’s what you might not have heard. Despite the increased mortality rates, there has been no downward trend in the total number of honeybee colonies in the United States over the past 10 years. Indeed, there are more honeybee colonies in the country today than when colony collapse disorder began.

Beekeepers have proven incredibly adept at responding to this challenge. Thanks to a robust market for pollination services, they have addressed the increasing mortality rates by rapidly rebuilding their hives, and they have done so with virtually no economic effects passed on to consumers. It’s a remarkable story of adaptation and resilience, and the media has almost entirely ignored it.

The Bee Business

The chief reason commercial beekeeping exists is to help plants have sex. Some crops, such as corn and wheat, can rely on the wind to transfer pollen from stamen to pistil. But others, including a variety of fruits and nuts, need assistance. And since farmers can’t always depend solely on bats, birds, and other wild pollinators to get the job done, they turn to honeybees for help with artificial insemination. Unleashed by the thousands, the bees improve the quality and quantity of the farms’ yields; in return, the plants provide nectar, which the bees use to produce honey.

Honeybees are essentially livestock. Their owners breed them, rear them, and provide proper nutrition and veterinary care to them. Unlike bumblebees and wasps, honeybees are not native to North America; the primary commercial species, the European honeybee, is thought to have been introduced by English settlers in the 17th century.

Commercial beekeepers are migratory. They truck their hives across the country in tractor trailers on a journey to “follow the bloom,” stacking their hives on semis and moving at night while the bees are at rest. Most travel to California in the early spring to pollinate almonds. After that, they take their own routes. Some go to Oregon and Washington for apples, pears, and cherries; others to the apple orchards of New York. Some pollinate fruits and vegetables in Florida in the early spring, followed by blueberries in Maine.

Like any such transit project, accidents happen—as when one beekeeper, Lane Miller, crashed his truck in a canyon near Bozeman, Montana, in 2014. More than 500 hives—about 9 million sleepy, angry bees—spilled onto the roadway. “The bees were so agitated you could barely see the beekeepers or the wreckage itself,” said the local fire chief at the time. After 14 hours, hundreds of stings, and a crew of emergency beekeepers, the road finally reopened.

Still, the migration is mostly uneventful. After blooming season, beekeepers shift their focus from pollinating crops to making honey. Many commercial crops that require honeybee pollination, such as almonds and apples, do not provide enough nectar for the bees to produce surplus honey. So in the summer, beekeepers often head to the Midwest, where they essentially pasture the bees, turning their hives loose in fields near sunflower, clover, or wildflowers, which supply large amounts of nectar and allow the bees to make plenty of honey. When summer ends, the beekeepers truck their bees back south to spend the winter in warmer climates.

Some observers claim that this annual migration is contributing to colony collapse. As the food writer Michael Pollan put it in The New York Times in 2007, “the lifestyle of the modern honeybee leaves the insects so stressed out and their immune systems so compromised that, much like livestock on factory farms, they’ve become vulnerable to whatever new infectious agent happens to come along.” But it is precisely this modern-livestock lifestyle and the active markets for pollination services that have allowed non-native honeybees to flourish on our continent. They are the reason honeybee populations have remained steady even in the face of disease and other afflictions.

The Fable of the Bees

Before the 1970s, it was widely believed among academics that the pollination industry’s very existence was a problem. In a 1952 paper, the appropriately named economist J.E. Meade argued that honeybee pollination was an “unpaid factor” in apple farming, since orchard owners and beekeepers did not coordinate their production decisions. Both produce what economists call “positive externalities,” or spillover benefits for the other, causing inefficiencies. Since “the apple-farmer cannot charge the beekeeper for the bee’s food, which the former produces for the latter,” Meade believed that certain “subsidies and taxes must be imposed.” (Indeed, Washington established a honey price-support program in 1952 with the goal of promoting pollination. The program was briefly eliminated in 1996, but has since been resurrected.)

But then another economist, Steven Cheung, investigated how the honeybee pollination market actually worked. In a 1973 study, he found plenty of contracting between beekeepers and orchard owners to overcome the problem Meade had identified. All he had to do was open the yellow pages of the phone book to find listings for pollination services. “The fable of the bees,” as Cheung called it, was blackboard theorizing. Real-life farmers and beekeepers were solving this problem on their own.

Sometimes the farmers paid the beekeepers to pollinate their crops; other times the beekeepers paid the farmers for the right to place hives in their orchards. It all depended on which activity—pollination or honey production—generated more value in that instance. Sometimes the exchange involved both money and honey. Meade, meanwhile, had gotten his central example backward: Apple pollination does not yield much honey, so the beekeeper charges the apple farmer, not the other way around.

The details differ, but markets for pollination services clearly exist and work quite well. Today, commercial beekeeping is a $600–$700 million industry that spans all regions of the country. And now the beekeepers and farmers are working together to overcome another apiary challenge: dead bees. […]

A Cautionary Tale—for Journalists

If a beepocalypse was really upon us, colony numbers and honey production would be declining, the costs associated with rebuilding lost hives would be rising sharply, and the prices of the crops most reliant on honeybees would be rapidly increasing. Yet none of these appear to be the case.

Modern commercial beekeeping practices create real stresses on beekeepers and honeybees alike. But we shouldn’t exaggerate their plight or overlook how successfully they’ve adapted to a changing world. In the words of Hannah Nordhaus, author of the 2011 book The Beekeeper’s Lament, the scare stories surrounding colony collapse disorder “should serve as a cautionary tale to environmental journalists eager to write the next blockbuster story of environmental decline.”

Indeed, our obsession with honeybees may have distracted us from other, more important environmental concerns. Wild pollinators such as bumblebees, butterflies, and other native insects really do appear to be in decline, thanks to habitat loss and agricultural development. After all, unlike honeybees, there is no commercially minded beekeeper to look after them.

Earlier this year, one of those wild pollinators, the rusty patched bumblebee, was listed as an endangered species in the United States. Monarch butterflies appear to be getting more scarce as well.

But while the media declares disaster and the federal government attempts to create a “national pollination strategy,” commercial beekeepers have quietly rebuilt their honeybee colonies to even greater numbers than before colony collapse disorder began a decade ago. Instead of standing idly by while their colonies vanish in the face of disease or pests, these migratory beekeepers, with their trucks full of bees and honey, continue to ply the roads between various crops to provide the pollination services our modern agricultural economy demands—busy as, well, you know.

Full essay

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

July 20, 2017 at 03:58AM

Tourists shun Scottish regions hit by wind turbine ‘blight’ 

Tourists shun Scottish regions hit by wind turbine ‘blight’ 

via Tallbloke’s Talkshop
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Whitelee wind farm, Scotland [image credit: Bjmullan / Wikipedia]

Wherever onshore wind turbines are built there will also be networks of electricity pylons to carry the power away. Tourism is big business in windy Scotland.

A survey carried out on behalf of the John Muir Trust (JMT) found that 55% of respondents were “less likely” to venture into areas of the countryside industrialised by giant turbines, electricity pylons and super-quarries, reports The Times (via GWPF).

Just 3% said they were “more likely” to visit such areas, while 26% said such large-scale developments would make “no difference”. The poll has rekindled calls for Scottish ministers to increase protection for wild and scenic areas that, it is argued, will protect rural tourism businesses.


It follows a recent decision to approve the 22-turbine Creag Riabhach wind farm in Altnaharra, the first to win consent within a designated wild land area. Each turbine will stand 125m high.

JMT said the decision had “created uncertainty” over the protection of wild land. “As schools across England break up for the summer this week and many families flock to Scotland, we must remember that, for many, it’s the ability to enjoy being outdoors in Scotland’s unique, unspoilt natural landscapes that brings them north,” said Andrew Bachell, JMT’s chief executive.

“When a clear majority of people say they’d be put off visiting wild and scenic areas by the existence of large-scale wind farms, giant pylons, super-quarries and other developments, policymakers have to pay attention, before it’s too late.”

Source: Tourists Shun Scottish Regions Hit By Wind Turbine ‘Blight’ | The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)

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July 20, 2017 at 03:54AM