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Net Zero 2030 conference report: Too far, too fast!

In the video below, Michelle Sterling, communications manager of Friends of Science, shows how the claims and premises of the Net Zero 2030 conference are built on faulty and even false energy and climate assumptions.
Click on the image to see the YouTube video

A recent day-long conference hosted by the Canadian Climate Institute and the Net Zero Advisory Board proposed to offer Net Zero 2030 plans and programs “In Focus.”

In this video, Friends of Science Communications Manager, Michelle Stirling, who watched the day’s events, offers her insights and rebuttals to many claims made in the day-long presentation. In essence, the Canadian federal government is trying to go…”too far…too fast.”… Read more

Ottawa’s climate-change evangelism a threat to Canada’s energy security

The Canadian and U.S. governments continue to stifle production of oil and gas for domestic markets, never mind for increasingly desperate allies, at the cost of our national interest

By Derek H. Bur­ney, National Post, Oct. 19, 2022

Derek H. Bur­ney is a for­mer 30-year ca­reer diplo­mat who served as the Am­bas­sador to the United States of Amer­ica from 1989-1993

Shortly after sabotage operations blew ruptures in the Nord Stream pipelines from Russia to Germany, OPEC announced plans to reduce oil production by two million barrels per day. Both actions increased pressure around energy shortages, notably in Europe, where prices are already substantially higher than last year and are likely to get worse as winter nears.… Read more

IPCC’s future-climate scenarios are increasingly outdated, but scientists won’t rethink their assumptions

Science has momentum and that momentum can be hard to change, even when obvious and significant flaws are identified

By Roger Pielke, Jr., The Honest Broker, Nov. 30, 2020

2015 literature review found almost 900 peer-reviewed studies published on breast cancer using a cell line derived from a breast cancer patient in Texas in 1976. But in 2007 it was confirmed that the cell line that had long been the focus of this research was actually not a breast cancer line, but was instead a skin cancer line. Whoops. 

Even worse, from 2008 to 2014 — after the mistaken cell line was conclusively identified — the review identified 247 peer-reviewed articles putatively on breast cancer that were published using the misidentified skin cancer cell line.… Read more

Electric vehicles create more problems than they solve—and effect on climate is minimal

If every country met its 2030 targets for EVs, the effect on climate would be a reduction of .0002°F by the end of the century

By Bjorn Lom­borg, Wall Street Journal, Sept. 10, 2022

We constantly hear that electric cars are the future— cleaner, cheaper and better. But if they’re so good, why does California need to ban gasoline-powered cars? Why does the world spend $30-billion a year subsidizing electric ones?

In reality, electric cars are only sometimes and somewhat better than the alternatives, they’re often much costlier, and they aren’t necessarily all that much cleaner. Over its lifetime, an electric car does emit less CO2 than a gasoline car, but the difference can range considerably depending on how the electricity is generated.… Read more

The quiet desperation of woke climate fanatics

Behind climate fanaticism and narcissism lies an apocalyptic religion born from nihilism
Young fanatics smear Van Gogh’s Sunflowers painting with tomato soup as a form of climate protest. Fortunately, the painting has a glass cover and wasn’t damaged.

By Michael Shellenberger, Oct. 19, 2022

“The fiercest fanatics are often selfish people who were forced, by innate shortcomings or external circumstances, to lose faith in their own selves. They separate the excellent instrument of their selfishness from their ineffectual selves and attach it to the service of some holy cause.”

—Eric Hoffer, The True Believer

Over the last few weeks, climate activists in Britain have blocked highways (because cars emit carbon dioxide), poured milk onto the floors of supermarkets (because livestock emits methane), and thrown tomato soup at Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” (because climate change is more important than art.… Read more

Q&A with MLA John Rustad: Why I can’t support B.C. Liberal climate policies

Governments should not be promoting Net Zero policies, such as curbs on nitrogen-based fertilizer and reduction of cattle herds, that will make life less affordable for British Columbians

In mid-August, the B.C. Liberal Party expelled 18-year-veteran MLA John Rustad from the caucus for republishing a Tweet by climate realist Patrick Moore that did not support the party’s alarmist policies.

Rustad, born and raised in Prince George, was first elected in 2005 in the riding of Nechako Lakes. He has served as a Liberal cabinet minister for Aboriginal Relations and for Forests, Lands and Natural Resources. He has also been Official Opposition critic for Forests, Lands and Natural Resources.Read more

Climate policy, not climate change, threatens global financial stability

Exploding energy prices are creating a wave of bankruptcies in Europe. North America will follow if we continue our suicidal economic efforts to promote green energy

By Joseph C. Stenberg, Wall Street Journal, Sept. 9, 2022

Let’s come right out and say it: Anyone who still thinks climate change is a greater threat than climate policy to financial stability deserves to be exiled to a peat-burning yurt in the wilderness.

Lest you’ve forgotten, the world’s central banks and other regulators are in the middle of a major push to introduce various forms of climate stress testing into their oversight. The Federal Reserve, Bank of England and European Central Bank, among others, want to know how global temperature variations a century hence might weigh on Citi’s or Barclays’ or Deutsche Bank’s capital and risk weightings today.… Read more

West on the road to energy ruin

It’s easy to blame Russia’s Putin for the current energy crisis. In fact, the U.S. and Europe brought the crisis on themselves through poorly thought out ‘green’ energy policies

Emmet Penney, The Spectator, Oct. 10, 2022

Since the beginning of the Ukraine war and the sanctions it triggered, energy prices have skyrocketed. But are the high prices really Putin’s fault? He didn’t sanction himself, after all. It’s the West that chose to cut itself off from the Russian fossil fuels upon which it had come to rely.

So what are the origins of the current energy crisis? When did it really begin?… Read more

Ottawa’s ban on plastics means more landfill waste, lower air quality, and higher carbon emissions

Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault’s ban is supposed to be based on ‘scientific’ evidence. In fact, the evidence points the other way: his attack on disposable plastic items, like forks and checkout bags, not only won’t reduce pollution, it will mean more pollution. But, for the Liberals, this is progress!

Peter Shawn Tay­lor, National Post, Oct. 12, 2022

You might remember that famous scene from the 1967 movie The Graduate. Dustin Hoffman’s anxious adult-in-waiting Benjamin Braddock is trapped at a dull graduation party when family friend Mr. Mcguire leans in to offer some advice. “I just want to say one word. Just one word.… Read more

Net-Zero buildings by 2050? Dream on, Ottawa

To meet the federal government’s goal of a net-zero economy by 2050, virtually all homes would need to have heat pumps or similar technology. This would require retrofitting more than 400,000 homes per year — more than 1,000 every day.

By Charles De­land, National Post, Oct. 11, 2022

The federal government’s Emission Reduction Plan, which it published in July, calls for economywide greenhouse gas reductions of 40 to 45 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030. In particular, it projects emissions from homes and commercial buildings that will fall 37 per cent from 2005 levels. Judging by reasonable estimates of what it would take to achieve this, however, that goal appears wildly unrealistic.… Read more