Saturday, 26 May 2012

The history of the UN led global warming circus


The Toronto Sun´s columnist Simon Kent has written an excellent brief history of the UN global warming travelling circus:
Which of the following major world cities and/or seaside resorts has NOT hosted United Nations climate change talks since the inaugural meeting way back in 1997?
Marrakech, Morocco; Bali, Indonesia; Lyon, France; Bonn, Germany; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Cancun, Mexico; The Hague, the Netherlands; Vienna, Austria; Montreal, Canada; Bangkok, Thailand; Barcelona, Spain; Durban, South Africa; Nairobi, Kenya; Milan, Italy; Kyoto, Japan and New Delhi, India.
Sorry, trick question. All have played host at some time to the 47 UN-funded get-togethers in the past 15 years.
I know, I know, it’s a tough job but somebody has to do it.
Here is a supplementary question: How many binding treaties have been ratified by all parties in the name of defeating so-called anthropogenic global warming in that time?
Not abstracts of intent or noble purpose like the Kyoto protocols. We’re talking binding agreements with enforceable penalties, measurable aims and deliverable achievements signed by every single nation on the planet from the richest to the very poorest.
How many? None.
That’s right, a big fat zero. Nada. Zip. Nil. Zilch.
Still, the talking goes on in some of the most desirable locations on earth.
Three and sometimes four times a year the great and the good of the global warm-monger industry meet to chatter and wag their fingers at major industrialized nations like Canada.
These unelected and unaccountable members of the UN ineptocracy were at it again last week.
In Bonn, Germany the latest meeting of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change ended Friday.
The fortnight-long get together was meant to develop a timetable for implementing the so-called “Kyoto 2” extension which Canada along with the US, Japan and Russia wisely announced they’ll ignore.
At the end of the meeting negotiators agreed that “progress had been made” and “important principles established’’ but really, they would have to meet again for more talks soon.
So next stop is Doha, Qatar for another round of debate, starting November 26.
At which point you could reasonably ask: What was achieved at Bonn besides abject inertia?
Not much. Just continuing division over how long the extended Kyoto protocol should operate, some very public squabbling over whose turn it was to chair the various sub-committees and an agreement to talk more about future agendas.
There was also the small matter of (ahem) money.
UN Climate Chief Christiana Figueres insisted it was critical the Bonn talks made further progress on how funds will be raised – extorted might be another apt word — from major industrialized nations and directed to poorer countries in the year’s after 2020.
This epic global fundraising will underwrite something called the Green Climate Fund, to be run under the paternalistic auspices of the UN.
The fund will need $100 billion a year from 2020 onwards to operate. No precise agreement at Bonn on how it would work, despite Christiana Figueres exhortations, just consensus that major developed and industrialised countries like Canada will have to foot the bill. So there.
All of which pretty much reflects the UN as it is today; a preening debating society that marries incompetence with good intentions, meddling with over-reaching ambition.
Read the entire column here
In a best case scenario the US Congress stops funding these useless climate clowns - the sooner, the better.  

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