IPCC Head: Expensive Energy Will Make Us Rich!!! | GlobalWarming.org
Global warming alarmists steadfastly refuse to consider the costs and benefits of climate change mitigation despite (or perhaps because of) evidence that expensive-energy policies to fight global warming are worse for human welfare than rising temperatures. Whenever a reputable economist states the obvious-that “greening” the global economy is expensive and difficult-environmentalists respond by noting that an economist is not a climate scientist, and the science is settled, because there is a consensus. The environmentalist’s riposte is gibberish, of course, but it has the effect of subtly smearing the aforementioned economist and obscuring the economic consensus that climate change mitigation is economically harmful.Rajendra K. Pachauri: Information from Answers.com
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How would Mr. Pachauri know? He is neither an economist not a climate scientist. In fact, he is a railroad engineer by trade, which, evidently, is a suitable background for the head of the world’s preeminent body of global warming scientists.
Pachauri was educated at La Martiniere College in Lucknow[2] and at the Indian Railways Institute of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering in Jamalpur, Bihar.Manufacturers go Judas: 1.5% of allowances is the new ‘30 pieces of silver’ « Green Hell Blog
He began his career with the Diesel Locomotive Works in Varanasi.
Pachauri was awarded an MS degree in Industrial Engineering from North Carolina State University, Raleigh, in 1972, as well as a PhD in Industrial Engineering and a PhD in Economics. The thesis titles or the year of award of the two doctoral degrees he has stated he received from North Carolina State University are not known in public at present.
Here are the Judases that are willing to betray America to the Marxist-Socialists for an extra 1.5% of Waxman-Markey’s free allowances[Will a Chinese robot get that "green" job that you were promised?] - NYTimes.com
Take, for example, photovoltaic solar panels — the most common form of solar technology. As Roger Efird, the managing director of the United States branch of Suntech, the China-based solar energy firm, the process of making these cells is already largely automated.
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