Star musician arrives at "climate change" conference in high style - HUMAN EVENTS
As I said above, this is nothing new. Every “climate change conference” is obscured by a massive cloud of exhaust fumes, as the fleets of luxury jets and beautifully appointed stretch limousines descend upon the gathering. Exotic, expensive foods are frequently flown in for the grandees, and you can bet your bottom carbon credit they’re not delivered in solar-powered whirlygigs.
Professor Allen is refreshingly honest about the true feelings of the cult. Important People who Really Care can belch out all the carbon they want, especially if they chant the appropriate magic spells and recruit more worshippers to placate the Angry Sky Gods… and, of course, increase the wealth and power of their high priests.
Germany Stalled on the Expressway to a Green Future | JunkScience.com
Germany’s energy revolution has hardly begun, but it’s already running out of steam. There is a lack of political decisiveness and companies are complaining of a dearth of incentives to invest billions in necessary infrastructure. Progress or no progress, taxpayers continue footing the bill.
Extreme Weather During Hansen’s Coldest Year Ever | Real Science
Hansen’s handcrafted US temperature graph lists 1917 as the coldest year ever, almost 2.5C colder than 1998. According to Hansen’s CO2 religion, the weather must have been very cool and stable during 1917.
How a Cookstove Becomes a Carbon Credit
However, the reputation of these types of projects has suffered in recent years due to allegations of double-counting by both the organizations that buy the stoves and the organizations that deliver them. Market participants have been subject to tough questions about how many of the delivered stoves are actually in use, how many actually replaced a dirty charcoal stove instead of another cooking implement, and how long the stoves actually stay in use. Are the credits still being counted long after the stove has been abandoned? These questions mostly plague the voluntary market, where there are many standards, but little overall regulation.
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