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Thursday, November 17, 2022

Net Zero Watch: US and EU refuse to commit to climate loss and damages reparations

 





In this newsletter:

1) US and EU refuse to commit to climate reparations that would leave them legally exposed to endless compensation demands 
AFP, 16 November 2022
 
2) Rich nations are trying to hit pause on climate reparations demands
CNN, 16 November 2022



3) China tell COP27: We need more coal and won't make Europe's mistakes
Bloomberg, 15 November 2022

4) Fossil fuels phase-out hits fresh delays, poor nations’ resistance
The Indian Express, 13 November 2022
 
5) COP27: India thwarts attempt to club it with historical CO2 emitters
The Hindu, 14 November 2022
 
6) Green Britain: Millions face poverty and destitution
Reuters, 16 November 2022
 
7) Green Britain: Oil and gas producers may no longer invest in UK over windfall tax
Aberdeen Live, 15 November 2022
 
8) Chris Mitchell: Journalists blind to facts as climate pantomime rolls on
The Australian, 13 November 2022
 
9) Alexandra Marshall: This is war: Renewables vs the West
Spectator Australia, 14 November 2022
  
10) Dominic Lawson: If broadcasters fail to challenge the hysterical claims of the eco-zealots, they might as well join them on the M25
Daily Mail, 14 November 2022
 
11) And finally: The sinister attempts to ‘decolonise’ mathematics
The Spectator, 13 November 2022

Full details:

1) US and EU refuse to commit to climate reparations fearful it could leave them legally exposed to endless compensation demands 
AFP, 16 November 2022
 


The United States and the European Union have dragged their feet, fearful that setting up a financial facility could leave them and other rich nations legally exposed to open-ended demands for compensation.

Negotiators at COP27 climate talks in Egypt prepared Tuesday (15 November) for a looming showdown over how – and how quickly – to funnel funds to developing countries battered by deadly and costly climate impacts.

The issue of “loss and damage” has been inching its way toward the heart of the multilateral climate agenda for decades, but only this year made it formally onto the negotiating table as the battle lines between rich polluting nations and vulnerable developing countries harden.

The G77+China block of more than 130 developing nations called in a position paper for a special fund “for assisting developing countries in meeting their costs of addressing non-economic and economic loss and damage” caused by extreme weather disasters and rising sea levels.

The need for such “loss and damage” financing, which has emerged as a make-or-break issue at UN talks in Sharm el-Sheikh, is “urgent and immediate,” the largest negotiating bloc at the talks said.

Countries least responsible for planet-heating emissions – but hardest hit by an onslaught of storms, heatwaves and droughts – have been pressing wealthy nations for financing for decades.

The issue has grown ever more urgent in recent months as nations have been slammed by a crescendo of disasters, such as the massive flooding that put a third of Pakistan under water in August and caused up to $40 billion in damage.

How much money would be put into the fund, and where it would come from, were left unsaid, but the G77+China called for the facility to be ready for approval at next year’s COP28 in Dubai.

The United States and the European Union have dragged their feet, fearful that setting up a financial facility could leave them and other rich nations legally exposed to open-ended demands for compensation.

In its own “talking points” published on Tuesday, the EU recognised “the need and urgency” for loss and damage funding, and that “current financing mechanisms are not able to cover all necessary actions.”

But rather than creating a new facility in Sharm el-Sheikh, they favour the launch of a time-bound process to explore a “mosaic of solutions”.

Up to now, the US and the EU have suggested that expanding current channels for climate finance might be a more efficient approach than creating a new one.

Against the backdrop of an unmet promise by rich nations to provide $100 billion a year starting in 2020 to help the developing world green their economies and adapt to future impacts, poor nations are wary of a new timetable.

“They’re afraid they are being taken for a ride,” said a senior negotiator working on the issue.

A third document released Tuesday, prepared by two ministers from Germany and Chile tasked with shepherding talks on loss and damage financing, puts all the options on the table.

It also points to strategic wording that could become the basis of a compromise – a call for a two-year process to determine future “funding arrangements”, which may or may not include a stand-alone facility.
 
2) Rich nations are trying to hit pause on climate reparations demands
CNN, 16 November 2022



Protesters at the UN climate summit this week are pressuring the world's wealthiest countries to "pay up" on a loss and damage fund, which would help vulnerable countries recover from climate disasters.

The past week has given the world a glimpse of what climate-vulnerable countries have long known: while rich countries bend over backwards to pledge their support for climate action, they are far less enthusiastic when it comes to forking over the cash.

At the UN’s COP27 climate summit, the United States, the European Union and the United Kingdom are united against establishing a new fund this year to help the world’s developing nations – which have contributed little to the climate crisis – recover from climate disasters.

Developing a so-called loss and damage fund is a key issue at COP27, and “the litmus test for success” of the summit, said Erin Roberts, a climate policy researcher and founder of the Loss and Damage Collaboration.

As it stands, developing countries – which have for years pleaded for loss and damage funds – are facing disappointment.

With only three days of negotiations left, a sense of frustration is spreading through the Red Sea resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh where the conference is taking place. Activists are staging daily and increasingly angry protests outside the negotiation rooms. On Saturday, in what was the biggest protest of the summit so far, hundreds marched through the sprawling conference venue, demanding rich countries to get their act together and “pay up.”

But that message is not breaking through in high-level negotiations.

An EU source directly involved in the negotiations at the summit told CNN on Tuesday that the bloc doesn’t believe there should be a binding agreement on a new loss and damage fund before the details of how it would work are agreed on.

The source added that the EU believes the COP27 agreement could include an agreement that work needs to be done on the issue and a solution should be found by 2024.

Similarly, the UK government submitted a document to the conference saying it wants to establish a “process” that would lead to a concrete solution in 2024 at the latest.

In 2021, storm-ravaged Ragged Island in the Bahamas successfully developed a solar-powered microgrid that was designed so that the next time a storm hits and takes down the power system, the lights remain on for residents.

US senior administration officials have only committed to having a conversation about loss and damage but have not gone further to explain what kind of fund they would ultimately support. They, too, see 2024 as the deadline for an agreement on loss and damage, but do not support the proposals put forward so far, concerned it could open up developed nations to legal liability in the coming years.

Pressed on what kind of loss and damage fund the US would be open to, officials have repeatedly declined to say. And they want to take the next two years to hammer those questions out, rather than come to an agreement this year.

A spokesperson for US climate envoy John Kerry did not respond to a request for comment.

The push for delay by some of the world’s richest countries means those that are worst impacted by climate change are already bracing for disappointment.

“I don’t want to leave COP27 empty handed,” Shauna Aminath, the Maldives’ minister of environment said an event at the conference on Tuesday. “Agreeing to work on something that will be established in 2024 is leaving empty handed.”

Full story
 
3) China tell COP27: We need more coal and won't make Europe's mistakes
Bloomberg, 15 November 2022

"We don’t want to be like Europe and transform at the cost of energy security."












China’s plans to add to its world-leading fleet of coal power plants are a short-term Band-Aid to address energy security concerns and don’t represent a shift in emissions policies, according to members of the team representing the nation at the COP27 summit.
 
New plants are being planned to address a spate of high-profile electricity shortages in recent years while providing a buffer to global energy markets that have become more volatile following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, according to interviews with three of China’s delegates at the climate meeting in Egypt. 

In the long run, electricity market reforms and massive investments in renewable power and energy storage will eventually curb and curtail coal use, allowing the country to hit its targets of peaking emissions by 2030 and zeroing them out by 2060, they said.

The strategy underscores China’s desire to avoid the kind of energy crisis facing Europe, but it has set off alarm bells for climate scientists who say the fuel needs to be phased out by 2040 to avoid the worst effects of climate change. 
 
“We need an energy transition that’s high-quality and secure so it can be sustained,” said Li Zheng, a climate change and energy professor at Tsinghua University. “We don’t want to be like Europe and transform at the cost of energy security. They are now declaring that they are taking a step back in order to take two steps forward later.”

The climate researchers downplayed the size of the expansion, saying the country’s total coal capacity wouldn’t change much because of simultaneous retirements of older plants. Earlier this year, an executive from China’s top energy engineering firm said he expects the nation to approve 270 gigawatts worth of new plants through 2025, more than the entire fleet in the US. 

Coal has long been China’s mainstay fuel and still accounts for about 60% of the country’s power generation. But its role is shifting, with planners increasingly seeing it as backup for the country’s rapidly growing army of wind turbines and solar panels, said Wang Zhongying, a senior energy researcher with the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s economic planner. 

Full story
 
4) Fossil fuels phase-out hits fresh delays, poor nations’ resistance
The Indian Express, 13 November 2022

Targets to phase out fossil fuels, especially for developing nations, will never be achieved unless the technology and funding for renewable energy are provided at a heavily subsidized cost, preferably zero cost.

A week into the Climate negotiations at Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt and there is consternation among civil society groups and green commentators about the record number of lobbyists from fossil fuel companies and interests who have infiltrated the conference.

An advocacy group Global Witness estimated that there were 636 of them, 25 per cent higher than the previous World Conference in Glasgow last year.

This is sheer irony. COP27 – or the Conference of Parties committed to reverse Climate Change – has pledged to phase out the use of fossil fuels. Yet you have hundreds of executives representing polluting companies tagging on to national delegations with free access to crucial negotiations. Gazprom of Russia, and Exxon, are all there.

The strange scenario reflects the immediate crisis in Climate negotiations. On one hand, the Ukraine war has created a huge energy crisis. On the other hand, oil and gas companies are making billions of dollars in windfall profits as energy costs spiral. The developed world is suddenly going slow in phasing out oil, gas and coal. The big sufferers in the new turmoil are the developing nations wanting to know why they should accept climate targets that deny them access to their own coal and oil assets.

After experiencing years of Climate Change havoc, world leaders had broadly committed to phasing out fossil fuels to reduce greenhouse gas emissions related to burning coal and oil to generate energy. The process has however been slow with renewable energy like solar, wind and biofuels growing to just 28% of the energy pie, from 20 per cent in a decade – from 2011 to 2021.

New boost for coal

The Ukraine war and the energy crisis have given a new boost to coal-based power plants. Coal energy generation has risen 1 per cent till August this year, and is today the world’s biggest source of electricity. Coal consumption has surged in Europe to replace shortfalls in hydro, nuclear and Russian gas.

The developed nations have provided nearly USD 700 billion in subsidies for coal, oil and gas production in 2021, according to Climate Policy Factbook released days ago by BloombergNEF and Bloomberg Philanthropies.

Sample this: The UK government last October had rejected the development of the Jackdaw gas fields in the North Sea due to environmental concerns. It has now approved fresh plans by Shell to develop the offshore region to increase gas output so as reduce reliance on Russian oil and gas.

But even as consumers pay back-breaking prices for gas and fuel at the retail pumps in Europe and the US, the big oil companies have been making windfall profits not seen in over a decade. Recent third-quarter results show ExxonMobil pulling in nearly $20 billion in profit. Chevron USD 11 billion, Shell USD 9.5 billion, and BP 8.5 billion. Saudi Aramco reported USD 42 billion profit this quarter.

This is not ‘phasing-out’ fossil fuels, it is not even ‘phasing-down’ production – the compromise term used in the Glasgow Climate talks; it is ‘phasing-up’. It’s the simple law of capitalism. The investment follows if money is to be made. For instance, the commitments by automakers to shift to electric vehicles (EVs) by 2030 might not materialize as the world’s biggest carmakers plan to build about 400million more diesel and petrol cars than what is sustainable to contain global heating.

North-South divide

This brings us to the final point. While the West is busy turning on emergency measures to exploit oil and gas to face the energy crisis, the developing world is supposed to fall in line and implement targets to phase-out fossil fuels drawn up at Climate Change conventions. This will never happen as the costs are too high for the poorer countries.

One of the oil lobbyists at Sharm El-Sheikh, Dr Omar Farouk Ibrahim, representing the African Petroleum Producers Organization, quite frankly admitted he was there at the Climate talks to influence negotiators to support the development of oil and gas in Africa. He said there were 600 million people across the continent who don’t have access to electricity.

Dr Ibrahim’s argument is Africa cannot forgo its large fuel reserves for the mirage of renewable energy and funds from the West which may never come. Similarly, will India, which today imports 85% of its petroleum needs, be willing to forego a major oil and gas find in say the K-G basin?

Targets to phase out fossil fuels, especially for developing nations, will never be achieved unless the technology and funding for renewable energy are provided at a heavily subsidized cost, preferably zero cost.

Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley quite frankly told the rich nations at Sharm El-Sheikh that their prosperity was built on exploiting cheap coal and oil since the Industrial Revolution of the 19th Century. It was at the expense of the poor; and now the poor nations were being forced to pay again, as victims of climate breakdown that they did not cause. In a one-sided world, It is difficult to see how fossil fuel phase-outs can be successful in the near future.
 
5) COP27: India thwarts attempt to club it with historical CO2 emitters
The Hindu, 14 November 2022












Supported by other developing countries, India blocked an attempt by rich nations to focus on all top 20 emitters of carbon dioxide during discussions on the 'Mitigation Work Programme' at the ongoing U.N. climate summit in Egypt, sources said on Monday.

During the first week of the climate talks, developed countries desired that all top 20 emitters, including India and China, discuss intense emission cuts and not just the rich nations which are historically responsible for climate change, they said.

There are developing countries in the top 20 emitters, including India, that are not responsible for warming that has already occurred.

According to the sources, India pushed back the attempt with the support of like-minded developing countries, including China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan.

The "MWP should not lead to the reopening of the Paris Agreement" which clearly mentions that climate commitments of countries have to be nationally determined based on circumstances, India and other developing countries reportedly said.

At COP26 in Glasgow last year, parties acknowledged that a 45% reduction in global CO2 emissions by 2030 (as compared to 2010 levels) is required to limit average global temperature rise to 1.5 degree Celsius.

Accordingly, they agreed to develop a Mitigation Work Programme (MWP) to "urgently scale up mitigation ambition and implementation". Mitigation means reducing emissions, ambition means setting stronger targets and implementation means meeting new and existing goals.

Coming into COP27, developing countries had raised concerns that rich nations, through the MWP, will push them to revise their climate targets without enhancing the supply of technology and finance.

In the run-up to COP27, India had said the MWP cannot be allowed to "change the goal posts" set by the Paris Agreement.

"In the Mitigation Work Programme, best practices, new technologies and new modes of collaboration for technology transfer and capacity building may be discussed fruitfully," the Union Environment Ministry had said.
 
Full story
 
6) Green Britain: Millions face poverty and destitution
Reuters, 16 November 2022












BURNLEY, England, Nov 15 (Reuters) - Skipping lunch each day and watching television in blankets to keep warm is not how Ann and Keith Hartley envisaged their retirement in Burnley, the northern English town hit hardest by Britain's cost of living crisis.

Now in their 70s, the Hartleys are even rationing cups of tea in the face of soaring energy bills, driven higher by the Ukraine war, and double-digit inflation in the shops.

While millions in Britain face a difficult winter, the Centre for Cities think tank says the nearly 95,000 residents of Burnley are most exposed to the shockwaves ripping through the economy.

Burnley's rows of 19th Century terraced houses, built during the Industrial Revolution, are some of the most energy-inefficient homes in Britain.

People here also face the highest effective rate of inflation in mainland Britain, according to Centre for Cities, as they spend more of their income on essential goods which have seen the sharpest increases in prices.

Consumers in Burnley saw prices rise 11.7% in the year to September, the think tank estimates, compared with 10.1% nationally, and 9.1% in London.

With Britain sliding into what is expected to be a prolonged recession, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's government will announce a raft of tax rises and spending cuts on Thursday that it says will ultimately deliver a quicker return to economic growth.

But few households are looking that far ahead. The Hartleys get by on a combined pension of just over 1,000 pounds ($1,173) a month.

"I don't know if it's because we're that much older, but we've both noticed it. It's terribly cold. We've cut it down to roughly two meals a day," said Ann Hartley, 71, a former personal assistant.

Other generations in Burnley are also feeling the screw tighten financially.

Wendy Pollard, 42, a self-employed bookseller and a mother of two, expressed shock that she was now paying for bread and milk out of savings built up to take her children on holiday.

"Who actually thought five years ago that you would be sitting, shivering on a settee with a hot water bottle, trying to work out the best and most efficient way of drying your washing?" she said.
 
Pollard's sense of disbelief is shared by many who struggle to reconcile Britain's status as the world's sixth-largest economy against the fact so many face destitution.
 
Full story
 
7) Green Britain: Oil and gas producers may no longer invest in UK over windfall tax
Aberdeen Live, 15 November 2022












Offshore Energies UK, the oil and gas sector's trade body, said its members were shocked at reports that Chancellor Jeremy Hunt was planning to raise the windfall tax to 35%

Oil and gas producers could be driven out of investing in British waters, including the North Sea, if Chancellor Jeremy Hunt imposes a 35% hike on the windfall tax.

Offshore Energies UK (OEUK) said its members were concerned about the proposed increase and said operators were already paying a 40% tax rate on profits from oil and gas production. This was before an additional 25% levy was imposed earlier this year.

According to OEUK, if the UK Government added another 10% to the levy, it would push the rate to 75%, meaning that producers would have to reconsider billions of pounds worth of investment.

Ahead of this Thursday's autumn statement, an OEUK spokesperson said about the reports of a 35% levy: "We're completely taken aback by this, coming just days before the chancellor gives his fiscal statement.

"Our industry plays a critical role in providing reliable and responsible supplies of energy to the UK - with all the benefits that brings in generating taxes, secure energy and jobs.

"Imposing sudden extra taxes will make it even harder for these companies to invest in UK energy production - both the gas and oil we need today, and the wind, hydrogen and other low-carbon energies we need to reach net-zero by 2050.

"Driving investment out of UK waters into other countries will increase reliance on imported energy, reduce the tax flow to the Exchequer, and make it even harder to increase our domestic production of lower-carbon energies.

"We need a diverse range of offshore operator and supply-chain companies with the skills and people to build the low-carbon energy future we all want to see.

"It deeply concerns us that that the complexity of the UK offshore energy sector is not being considered when we are on the cusp of such an important transition."
 
8) Chris Mitchell: Journalists blind to facts as climate pantomime rolls on
The Australian, 13 November 2022





Journalists who have followed the United Nations torturous path towards a global climate change deal have known for years its real bottom line is wealth transfer from the First World to poorer nations.

Political manipulation of the science by the UN was discussed in this column on October 23. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s AR6 report, released before last year’s Glasgow COP26, actually presented less scary scenarios than AR5 but was sold by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, a former Socialist Party Prime Minister of Portugal from 1995 to 2002, as “code red for the planet”.

This column has long argued forecasts of imminent climate emergency are not supported by the IPCC’s assessment reports and are about using fear to create political and media consensus. It all looks ever more silly as countries are urged at COP each year to make ever earlier commitments to net zero emissions of CO2 and each year the world burns ever more fossil fuels.

It should be obvious to all but the most naive catastrophist journalists that national leaders, presiding over a 6 per cent rise in global emissions this past year, don’t actually believe in an imminent emergency. Nor will many national leaders fall for the reparations line that is being repackaged as “loss and damage” payments at this year’s COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.

Even former Tory PM Boris Johnson, who risked his prime ministership and his country’s economic security in the name of climate action, has said the UK does not have the financial resources to pay reparations to low-income countries affected by climate change, according to a report in the London Financial Times on November 7.

But there’s a better reason for scepticism about “loss and damage”. The Daily Telegraph in London the same day reported: “China has emitted more carbon dioxide over the past eight years than the UK has since the start of the industrial revolution. Between 1750 and 2020 the UK emitted 78 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide … compared with China’s emissions of 80 billion tonnes since 2013.”

This newspaper’s environment editor Graham Lloyd described the real UN climate agenda in 2011 when reporting that year’s COP17 in Durban, South Africa, ignominiously dubbed “Flop 17”. Lloyd wrote that much of the Durban conference looked like “an exercise in extravagant foreplay with a very messy ending”, until the situation was rescued by a commitment from developed countries for a $US100bn a year fund “to finance mitigation and adaptation in the developing world”.

Nothing much has come of that; hence the focus in Egypt. Most journalists, especially those at the ABC and Guardian Australia, refuse to call all this out for the diplomatic pantomime it is. Yet the general public is starting to understand fossil fuels are not being abandoned in most countries and the UN’s preferred power sources – wind and solar power – are not proving cheap or reliable.

RN Breakfast host Patricia Karvelas seemed surprised by the point former Energy Security Board chair Kerry Schott made during an on-air interview last Monday morning. Karvelas wanted to discuss Schott’s proposed appointment by Grok Ventures’ Mike Cannon-Brookes to the board of AGL, which Cannon-Brookes hopes to wean off fossil fuels earlier than present management plans.

Asked by Karvelas to comment on a warning the previous week by AGL chair Patricia McKenzie that closing all the company’s generators early would destroy the reliability of the electricity grid because replacement capacity cannot be built in time, Schott said: “Well I think it may not be possible but I think we’ve got to try.”

This column, looking at Cannon-Brookes’s bid for AGL at the time, interviewed Schott last February. She said intermittent wind and solar could only be firmed by building thousands of kilometres of new poles and wires across the continent so power could be fed to major population centres from wherever the sun was shining and the wind blowing. That network infrastructure would need to be backed up by billions of dollars of new pumped hydro projects because batteries only harmonise the network and cannot yet store power for long periods.

It’s time journalists reported what is really happening. Copenhagen Consensus president Bjorn Lomborg in this newspaper on October 1 wrote: “Even the Biden administration expects the world in 2050 to be dependent on fossil fuels for 70 per cent of energy.

“Rich countries are showcasing the policies to avoid. Germany is on track to spend more than $US500bn ($A770bn) on climate policies (per year) by 2025, yet has managed to reduce fossil fuel dependency from 84 per cent in 2000 to only 77 per cent today.”

Wind and solar account for about 10 per cent of global power supply despite global investment of about $US1 trillion in such renewables every year.

So what does the future hold for the climate and for the business of climate reporting? In the digital age it is a business strategy aimed at securing clicks from vulnerable young media consumers who have not seen and read all the doomsday scenarios for 30 years and understood they never arrive.

For the real climate, warming oceans will increase evaporation and rainfall, but the IPCC is clear no single weather event can be attributed directly to climate change. Tropical storm data shows cyclones and hurricanes are becoming less frequent in the Pacific and Atlantic. Some evidence suggests such storms may be becoming more powerful.

Weather patterns such as this country’s east coast La Nina since 2020 will come occasionally but always have done. The La Nina events from 1954-56 and 2010-12 killed more in floods than this La Nina.

Global temperature sits about 1.2C above the pre-industrial era, which also coincided with a little ice age.

Evidence suggests temperatures were higher during the Medieval Warming and the Roman Warming. Latest research suggests climate is less sensitive to CO2 than previously thought. Media consumers seldom see these facts.

The world will need to build for resilience, but no serious scientist expects a climate emergency by 2030: the IPCC has essentially abandoned the scam RCP8.5 warming scenario upon which that scare campaign was based.

Coal and gas will continue to be burned in advanced countries, we will continue to export both because our fuels are cleaner than those extracted elsewhere but Australia will lose almost all of its domestic manufacturing industry, which will move to countries with lower emissions standards as we drive towards more renewable, less reliable power.

The political right here will be disappointed because Australia will never go down the nuclear path, even though it should.

But Australia will continue to export uranium to countries that see the obvious benefits of clean, emissions-free, baseload power.

Finally, while Australia will most likely pay climate bribes to Pacific Islands, the public will eventually find out what the ABC Fact Check unit confirmed in December 2018: most island nations in the Pacific are growing rather than shrinking. Don’t expect ABC reporters to admit that or to challenge Pacific Island leaders complaining about CO2 but taking Chinese money when China is the biggest contributor to global emissions.
 
9) Alexandra Marshall: This is war: Renewables vs the West
Spectator Australia, 14 November 2022



 








The future of renewable energy is laid out before us, bound by inevitable consequences and engineering restraints. It is a failure of concept, buoyed by trillions of dollars in public money and the artificial destruction of its market competitors. The result is an energy crisis which is hastening the end of virtue-seeking energy systems that have benefited nobody except crafty investors and billionaire green playboys.
 
The public will pick up the bill for their hubris, as is always the case with political errors. Australians have been left sitting at the table with the scraps of the meal that was ‘renewable energy’ – bones picked clean by bankers, mining giants, bureaucrats, and diplomats.
 
State Premiers lie whenever they describe solar and wind as ‘cheap energy’, conveniently restricting their costings to the initial construction of the project while ignoring the required backup battery farms, re-wiring of the grid, and cyclic nightmare of the ‘rip out and replace’ reality of technology with a 20-year lifespan. Experts call this ‘re-powering’. Normal people call it madness.
 
This delusion is how we end up with the embarrassing antics of Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk declaring Brisbane Airport will be running on ‘100 per cent’ renewable energy for the bargain deal of $4.5 billion – except for the planes, of course. And no, the airport is not going to operate on an isolated renewables-only grid to prove the point. Are you crazy? What if the wind died in the middle of the night?
 
The ABC are too friendly with green ideology to ask the obvious question: why are the Pacific Islands and other third-world despots asking for billions in reparations while selling their fossil fuel and rare earths assets under the table to the world’s largest polluter, China? Or the follow-up: what happens if we end up at war with China over Taiwan and they won’t sell us any solar panels? Or the follow-up to the follow-up: will Australia be able to defend the Pacific with a ‘made in China’ sticker on our power grid?
 
It is a contradiction that speaks to profit, not apocalypse. The insulting paternalism of Labor’s attitude toward ‘those poor people’ on ‘sinking flooded islands’ leaves Australia as a victim of politicians who are more concerned with ‘looking good’ and shaking all the right hands at the United Nations than taking care of the Australian people, whose money they throw away like confetti at the monstrous wedding of globalism and eco-fascism.
 
As the human population grows, civilisation requires an energy grid with a dense fuel source – something that takes up as little of our productive land as possible. Covering river deltas and prime agricultural fields with solar panels and wind turbines is the work of morons who have confused steel bird mincers with chapel steeples. These are not monuments to the Green religion, they are symbols of inexhaustible human idiocy that will be rusting long after the climate apocalypse fails to manifest.
 
Why must we be polite about the vandalism of Western Civilisation? Why do conservatives tolerate the gutless, mute, spineless, and soulless Liberal Party playing along because they are too embarrassed to apologise for trying to gain political traction from the same green fibs as Labor?
 
Climate Change has drifted into a religion of convenience – an ‘Edenism’ that ignores basic geological history and makes unkeepable promises about the fate of humanity. We have transferred our personal fear of mortality onto the Earth, terrified of a terra hellfire (or is it another Noah-style flood?) instead of the metaphoric flames of the old religions.
 
The planet is not a sentient being, it is a self-destructive rock that cares very little for our survival and would sooner hurl an asteroid or open a flood basalt rift than thank us for the sacrifice of university virgins.
Try telling that to a screaming activist glued to a Renoir with bits of horse and petroleum…
 
Instead of transferring the innards of third-world mountains to Australian landfills – or listening to scientists talk about melting wind turbines down into gummy bears for our children to eat – why not skip to the end?
 
The answer to our energy woes was revealed last century – a solution so simple, clean, and practical that its existence threatens the survival of all other energy sources. Nuclear. With billions of years in fuel reserves, nuclear will outlive humanity.
 
It doesn’t matter that the argument in favour of nuclear is unshakable, whether you believe in the apocalypse or simply want to restore light to the West, nuclear must first win the culture war that was started by jealous fossil fuels companies and is being continued by renewables barons.
 
Full post
 
10) Dominic Lawson: If broadcasters fail to challenge the hysterical claims of the eco-zealots, they might as well join them on the M25
Daily Mail, 14 November 2022



 







We are all, I'm sure, grateful to the tiny organisation known as Just Stop Oil for suspending their disruption of the M25.

Above all, it will come as a relief to those using London's orbital motorway for getting to the work that feeds their families, and to the essential services for whom it is a vital speedy route to hospitals.

I am in neither of those categories. But I am still relieved that (at least until their next stunt) I won't have to see television news presenters treating the occasionally hysterical young demonstrators as if they were unchallengeable experts on the risks of climate change.

Perhaps the only one who showed any exasperation, last week, was the Sky News presenter Mark Austin, when he pleaded with one Indigo Rumbelow to 'please stop shouting at me'. She was, too. Though in his position, I would have been more discomfited by the wide staring eyes of the fanatic, which she also displayed.

Throughout the interview, the experienced presenter kept asking the activist whether she thought the nature of the Just Stop Oil protests was damaging the group's message. But he never questioned any of her assertions.

Bizarre

So when Rumbelow declared that the Government's decision to license more drilling in the North Sea (mostly for gas) 'will kill millions of people', his response was: 'Yes, but what about your tactics?'

'Yes, but …'? How about: No, the British Government will not kill 'millions of people' as a result of such prospecting. It might, however, lead to fewer old people freezing in their homes.

But this is all about 'the children'. Or, as Rumbelow put it to Austin: 'Do you love your children more than you love fossil fuels?' This was followed by the even more bizarre question: 'Would you like to destroy much of life on Earth, including everything you know and love?'

It would have been interesting to see what would have happened if Austin had responded: 'Indigo, please tell me where the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change actually says that life on Earth will be destroyed by global warming?'

Because the IPCC has never claimed that, or anything remotely like it. Nor does it say 'we are going to plummet towards total destruction', as his interviewee exclaimed, again without contradiction.

Similarly, the IPCC does not claim that 'all our liberties are at risk' because of global warming. But that's what Rumbelow — yet again not challenged — told the viewers of the Sky News Hour.

A similar encounter took place on Newsnight between the normally razor-sharp Victoria Derbyshire and another young Just Stop Oil demonstrator, Phoebe Plummer. This student had gained the desired attention a few weeks ago when she threw a can of Heinz tomato soup at Van Gogh's painting Sunflowers in the National Gallery: a terrible waste of perfectly decent soup.

Ms Plummer's line was to take the Government's allegedly inadequate response to climate change as a personal affront, saying it was 'an act of betrayal against me' and that 'civil resistance is the only chance to ensure I have a future'. And she went on to say that 'the renewable future is not happening in policy . . . which is murderous'.

If Ms Plummer were one of Derbyshire's usual guests, I would have expected the presenter to say something like: 'What are you talking about? This country has invested countless billions in wind power and has all but eliminated coal from the energy supply mix.

'Our CO2 emissions, per capita, are the lowest level since the 1850s. What about China, which is increasing its coal production, and now burns more of the stuff than all the other countries in the world put together?'

Instead, after Newsnight's guest had finished her tirade about how the British Government had destroyed her future and been engaged in deliberate mass killing (she presumably sees herself as one of those due to be 'murdered'), Derbyshire just said, in the deeply respectful tone usually accorded by interviewers to victims of real crimes: 'Phoebe Plummer, thank you so much.'

Full piece
 
11) And finally: The sinister attempts to ‘decolonise’ mathematics
The Spectator, 13 November 2022
 
John Armstrong
 
Mathematicians in British universities are now being asked to ‘decolonise’ the curriculum.















This autumn, the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education (QAA) – an independent charity which reviews university courses – launched a consultation that urged universities to teach a ‘decolonised view’ of mathematics.  
 
It is easy when you work at a university to roll your eyes at this sort of thing and play along. But as a mathematics academic, I felt it was my duty to challenge this unscientific proposal. This week I published an open letter to the QAA criticising their consultation and was delighted that a number of high-profile professors and mathematicians from minority groups agreed to add their signatures.  
 
The fact is that colonialism is irrelevant to the validity mathematics. The Mayan civilisation was doing sophisticated mathematics in the Americas long before Christopher Colombus arrived on the continent.   

So where does the idea of ‘decolonising’ maths come from? The academic theory of decoloniality states that as well as colonising the world physically, Europeans have dominated the world by promoting the ‘European paradigm of rational knowledge.
 
The irony is that this statement seems itself to be racist. There is nothing particularly European about rational knowledge. Maths has always been an astonishingly international pursuit. The digits 0123456789 we use today were first written in India and inspired by Chinese mathematics. They were popularised by Persian and Arab mathematicians and then made their way to Europe via the Moors’ conquest of Southern Spain. Admittedly the Moors’ conquest of Spain was a form of colonialism, but apparently not the type of colonialism we are meant to be interested in.  
 
Those who adhere to decoloniality don’t think they’re being racist. This is because, strange as it may seem, they don’t believe rational knowledge is superior to other kinds of knowledge. In this world view it is not insulting to suggest non-Europeans prefer ‘other ways of knowing’ to rationality and science.  
 
The QAA themselves don’t explain what decolonising means. That’s presumably because they imagine it is just a buzzword that means being anti-racist and are unaware of its philosophical baggage. They do give one example of how we should decolonise mathematics, saying:   
 
‘Students should be made aware of problematic issues in the development of the [maths] content they are being taught, for example some pioneers of statistics supported eugenics, or some mathematicians had connections to the slave trade, racism or Nazism.’  
 
The issue is that they don’t ask us to focus on any other aspect of the history of mathematics. What about the German mathematician Emmy Noether, who was persecuted by the Nazis, or Alan Turing’s role in their defeat? The QAA’s guidance would lead to a skewed perspective on history seen entirely through the lens of decoloniality. The history of mathematics is not an essential part of a mathematics degree, but if we are going to teach it, it should be taught properly. That would mean teaching our students how to think like historians and how to critique theories such as decoloniality rather than simply accepting them as fact.  

Doubtless the QAA is asking us to embrace the theory of decolonisation with the best intentions. There are genuine issues around race that mathematics needs to address. For example, we don’t have as many black maths lecturers as we should. But I haven’t seen a shred of evidence that this is because we don’t talk about Nazi mathematicians often enough.  
 
Embedding decolonisation into mathematics is the most objectionable feature of the new proposals, but it is symptomatic of a more general trend by the QAA to centrally dictate what we should teach.The QAA’s benchmark document that defines the common mathematics curriculum has grown in length by 50 per cent in just three years, but not because of any radical shift in the nature of the mathematics. Instead there has been a been a decision to introduce teaching on diversity, sustainable education and entrepreneurship into every university course. But by requiring that all subject areas include these topics, the QAA is homogenising university teaching and diminishing true diversity of thought.  
 
This top-down approach is antithetical to the academically led approach that should be the hallmark of higher education. We have brilliant researchers eager to teach students who are passionate about the subject. It is a wasted opportunity to have brilliant mathematicians teach racial politics, a subject far from their areas of expertise and interest. In practice, the QAA’s proposals will most likely lead to universities developing one-size-fits-all courses to be used across all disciplines. Since such courses must cater to all possible students this is likely to lead to a dumbing down of education.  
 
Some universities have already rolled out such centrally-designed diversity courses and this has revealed an additional risk. These courses make attractive targets for activists who wish to embed their views in the curriculum. As one example, one such diversity course at Kent university requires all students to affirm that ‘sex is, in fact, a diverse, multi-expressive form of identity and a full spectrum.’   
 
We can no longer assume that maths, science and statistics will be immune from such activism. In New Zealand the school chemistry and biology syllabus has been decolonised and now invokes the concept of mauri, or life force, to give the atomic theory a new spiritual dimension. This is because of a central diktat that Maori knowledge must be given equal status to other forms of knowledge, including science. Activists also have statistics in their sights. One academic review of school statistics textbooks ‘with a theoretical framework of queer theory and critical mathematics’ notes disapprovingly that ‘pregnancy was used frequently in problems involving females/women.’ The UK Office for National Statistics has already succumbed to such ideas, proposing that respondents should be allowed to self-identify their sex in the 2021 census.  
 
The solution to this is surely to return to the basic principles of academic freedom and governance that have historically defined our notion of the university. The curriculum should not be dictated by governments or quangos. Nor should it be controlled by student activists or by university managers. It should be determined by academics based on their research experience and intellectual expertise. The science curriculum should be scientifically led, the philosophy curriculum should continue to question the nature of knowledge, and mathematicians should be allowed to teach mathematics free from political interference.  

John Armstrong is Reader in Financial Mathematics at King's College London.

The London-based Net Zero Watch is a campaign group set up to highlight and discuss the serious implications of expensive and poorly considered climate change policies. The Net Zero Watch newsletter is prepared by Director Dr Benny Peiser - for more information, please visit the website at www.netzerowatch.com.

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