Unreliable, Unaffordable, Unwanted Wind Turbines…They’ve got to go!

Parker Gallant Uncovers the Hidden Costs of Ontario’s Insane Wind Power Policy

turbines ontario

Ever tried to imagine hell on earth?

Ever imagined a nightmare turned to reality?

Then you’ve probably landed in Ontario.

Ontario is the place where the most bizarre energy policy in the world has seen thousands of giant fans speared into the backyards of homes – in the most agriculturally productive part of Canada. When we say “bizarre” we mean completely bonkers.

Canada has one of the “cleanest” power generation mixes on the planet, with the vast bulk of its electricity coming from zero emissions sources such as nuclear and hydro.

Ontario energy mix 2013

As Professor Ross McKitrick explains in this post, Ontario has built a policy that sees wind power (when the wind is blowing) “displace” emissions free hydro at enormous cost to power consumers and taxpayers.

And then there’s the colossal human impact of plonking thousands of turbines as close as 550m from hundreds of homes (see our posts hereand here).

image

Adding to the lunacy is the fact that wind power outfits are guaranteed to reap fat profits despite market conditions.

Where the wholesale market price for power in Ontario is between $30-50 per MWh, wind power generators pocket a fixed price of $135 MWh – even if there is absolutely no market for it and the Province literally has to pay neighbouring US States to take it.

Parker Gallant – a former banker – is out to ensure that Ontario’s power consumers and taxpayers are aware of just how ludicrous its energy policy has become.

Parker Gallant: the cost of curtailing wind is borne by all

Parker has been busy letting everyone know about the the hidden financial costs of Ontario’s wind farm fever.

Late last year the Ontario Energy Minister said that the cancelling a gas plant would cost the people of Ontario no more than the price of a cup of “Timmies”: coffee brewed up by Canada’s favourite coffee franchise, Tim Horton’s.

A few weeks back, during a windy weekend, Ontario was “blessed” with an abundance of wind power – which – on the first pass – cost it $135 per MWh in guaranteed payments to wind power outfits. But – because what was produced was excess to requirements – Ontario’s taxpayers were stung a second time for the cost of paying New York and Michigan and Quebec to take it.

The total cost was hardly small change – whether measured in cups of coffee or hard cold cash. Here’s Parker doing the sums.

Another expensive weekend, thanks to Ontario wind farms
Parker Gallant
7 October 2014

On the weekend just past, October 4 and 5, wind turbines in Ontario once again proved they can produce lots of electricity—when demand for power is low. At the same time, they drove down the hourly Ontario electricity price (HOEP) and played a role in generating lots of power that was then exported to our neighbours at a substantial cost to Ontario’s ratepayers.

Total demand for electricity on October 4 was 393,816 MWh (megawatt hours); 18.1% (71,328 MWh) of it was exported. In the process of exporting the HOEP generated a negative “weighted average price” of minus 32 cents a MWh. Ontario paid our neighbours to snap up our excess power which presumably included all of wind’s production of 32,958 MWh. Ontario’s ratepayers picked up the tab which for wind power alone ($135.00/MWh + .32 cents = $135.32 MWh) was $4,459,877.

Sunday, October 5 wasn’t much better: total demand was 379,656 MWh and 66,408 MWh (17.5%) was exported at a negative “weighted average price” of minus $2.64 a MWh. Wind production for that day was 30,359 MWh and we must assume it again played a role in driving down the HOEP. So, those wind exports alone cost Ontario’s ratepayers $4,181,649 ($135/MWh + $2.64 = $137.24 MWh).

Ontario ratepayers picked up the tab of approximately $8.6 million for those two days. That $8.6 million would be equivalent, to paraphrase our Energy Minister Bob Chiarelli, the price of a “Timmies” coffee for Ontario’s 4.6 million ratepayers.

If one also includes the $7 million or so that the other 75,000 MWh exported cost it becomes two “Timmies”! Add in the price of the steamed off power from Bruce Nuclear, payments to the gas plants for idling, to OPG for the Atikokan biomass plant and their spilled hydro, to the NUG (non utility generators) contracted parties, the weekend probably hit the ratepayers with total costs well over $20 million.

If that happened every weekend the cost would be equivalent to the cost of moving a couple of gas plants! Lots and lots of Timmies.

When will Ontario’s Energy Minister, Bob Chiarelli wake up and smell the coffee?

This story was also picked up Sun News – aptly describing Ontario’s wind turbines as a money pit. Here’s an interview between journalist Jerry Agar and Parker Gallant, that was aired on October 8. The transcript follows…

**********

Jerry Agar: So over the weekend, this one just past it was proven in Ontario, that by golly those big wind turbines can pump out some power so Parker Gallant is here. So this is all good news?

Parker Gallant: Well not really Jerry, no because when they were pumping….

Jerry Agar: Are you going to be grumpy about this?

Parker Gallant:  I am, that’s my usual ploy isn’t it?

Jerry Agar: I see.

Parker Gallant: Yes they were pumping out out the power, but we didn’t need it so that meant we had to export it. As a result of that it drove down the wholesale price so we were paying New York and Michigan and Quebec to take our excess power.

Jerry Agar: I see, so when we export power – we don’t sell it, we pay people to take it from us.

Parker Gallant: You’ve got it.

Jerry Agar: Are we making it up in volume – I mean – how exactly does that make any sense?

Parker Gallant: It doesn’t make any sense and that’s certainly been my efforts is to make the Ministry of energy aware of that. We shouldn’t be handing out any more wind turbine contracts because we don’t need the excess power.

Jerry Agar:: Well what was the point of even producing power then?

Parker Gallant:  Well, there was a lot, believe it or not, there was a lot of wind turbine developers in that same weekend, that were paid for not producing power. That’s on top of those that were paid for producing the power.

Jerry Agar: Just a minute, I want to add this up. We were paying people not to produce power then we were producing power and we were paying people to take that power.

Parker Gallant: You’ve got it.

Jerry Agar: All right. This from the government that spent $1 billion not building a power plant.

Parker Gallant: That’s right, or moving a power plant.

Jerry Agar: Yes, yes. Now the government got re-elected.

Parker Gallant: I know. Its unfortunate but.

Jerry Agar: We live in a world we could never have imagined.

Parker Gallant: No we can’t.

Jerry Agar: So then what’s the addiction to these wind turbines if in fact they were pumping out power, and they were reducing our cost because hey they turn around and around for free apparently with wind power, it would all be great.

Parker Gallant:  it would be yeah, but we don’t offer, we don’t get competitive contracts. We just simply say we are going to pay you $135 a MWh four 13 1/2 cents per kilowatt hour
if you throw up a wind farm. You know that makes…

Jerry Agar: So for the producers it’s a no lose situation.

Parker Gallant: It’s a no lose situation. Exactly. They get paid whether they produce power or they don’t produce power as long as that wind turbine up, and they don’t actually produce power,
they still get paid.

Jerry Agar: But we don’t need the power. So what are we building them for?

Parker Gallant: Well, I don’t know. Perhaps to green the province, to save the planet from climate change. I mean that seems to be the objective.

Jerry Agar:  Its ideological?

Parker Gallant: Yes it’s very ideological.

Jerry Agar: Because it’s certainly not economical.

Parker Gallant: No it doesn’t make any economic sense and of course they never did a cost benefit analysis.

Jerry Agar: There is another issue here. Do you give credence to those people who actually say that living next to them is damaging?

Parker Gallant: Oh definitely. I’ve met people that have lived next to them and are forced to move out of their homes. There is a percentage of the population – there was a study just came out of the UK I believe that says that a certain percentage of the population will be affected by the infrasound, the noise that we can’t hear, that’s emanating from these wind turbines throughout the province.

Jerry Agar: It doesn’t bother everybody?

Parker Gallant: No it doesn’t bother – its like (sea sickness) …

Jerry Agar: So I’d go and it would bother me but it wouldn’t bother you.

Parker Gallant: That’s correct. Yes. There’s a percentage of the population, so 5 to 15% that will be affected. Autistic children are very much at risk when they live near a wind turbine.

Jerry Agar: Really?

Parker Gallant: Yes.

Jerry Agar: Okay but there’s never any consideration. This government  has, I would use the word foisted these things on communities. They haven’t even asked the community. They haven’t even had the deference to go to the Mayor – much less the local citizens.

Parker Gallant: No. That’s true. The Green Energy Act gave the provincial government all the powers to be able to put these wind turbines up no matter where, just as long as they meet the setback requirements and you know the minimum standards that they set under the Green Energy Act.

Jerry Agar: There are more being built. Construction of a giant wind turbine project in Huron County will go on. The judge denied the work stoppage proposed by local residents.

Parker Gallant: The judge did not grant the stay that the citizens had brought to stay motion before the courts to basically stop the construction. But there is still an appearance that will be coming up in the Superior Court of Ontario. So that means that if the citizens win in the Superior Court, the developers will have to remove and decommission those wind turbines. So why they’re taking the chance is beyond me, except maybe they get them in before the cold weather season hits.

Jerry Agar: You know, this is one of those situations I believe where the mass of the population in urban areas here in Toronto, where you and I are right now, love these things, because they love that greenie idea, but they don’t live next to them.

Parker Gallant: No they don’t. Well a lot of people in the green movement will say “Oh we live next to one” because there is one at Exhibition Place.

Jerry Agar: The thing barely turns.

Parker Gallant: It barely turns and it doesn’t provide any power. And it’s mostly all…

Jerry Agar: Not hooked up? A show thing?

Parker Gallant: It’s sort of hooked up. It really is a show thing. If you go back …

Jerry Agar: And nobody lives there anyway.

Parker Gallant: Yes, no, right.

Jerry Agar: All right. But if they went and stuck one right next to one of the condo buildings, although I don’t know if you will be able to fit one in now in down town Toronto. They will feel differently about it.

Parker Gallant: Yeah, I thought they should mandate putting 49 metre blades on top of the buildings that they’re allowing to be built here. The condo buildings. And maybe we could generate some power because they would be way up there in the higher atmosphere and….

Jerry Agar: And then your condo could just jiggle you to sleep. That would be nice. All right, thanks very much.

Parker Gallant: Well thank you Jerry.

Jerry Agar: I don’t know if you made us feel better but thanks for the information.
Sun News

Toronto turbine at Exhibition Place

Parker then knocked up this spreadsheet itemising the total cost of paying neighbours to take Ontario’s excess wind power.

Ontario’s expensive electricity week: what could $44M have bought?
Ontario Wind Concerns
13 October 2014

Blowing Ontario’s ratepayer dollars Money lost in just one week could have paid for 580 nurses

So far this October, Ontario’s electricity sector has been blowing our money away at an awesome pace.

Scott Luft, whom I admire for his ability to assimilate comprehensible data, posted on Tumblr some disturbing information about the first 10 days of electricity production (and curtailed production) in Ontario. Because the fall means low demand for electricity, our current surplus energy supply (principally, wind, solar and gas) was curtailed to the extent that it cost ratepayers $20 million, while the HOEP (hourly Ontario energy price) generated only $8.2 million. That $20 million of curtailment cost will find its way to the Global Adjustment (GA) pot and onto ratepayers’ bills.

I took a different route and looked at the cost of Ontario’s exports for the week of October 3rd to October 9th —those numbers are also disturbing. During those seven days, Ontario exported 399,048 MWh (megawatt hours) which was 15.7% of total Ontario demand. Wind turbines generated and delivered 184,204 MWh, which was surplus to our needs and probably exported. The money generated via the HOEP from all of the export sales was $56,300 or 14 cents a MWh. Wind turbines produced just $15,164 and we sold that production for just 8 cents a MWh.

To put this in perspective, the exported production’s cost all-in (contract value per MWh + regulatory + transmission + debt retirement charge) averaged $110/MWh, according to the latest monthly IESO Market Summary August 2014 report’s findings. Using $110/MWh the 399,000 MWh exported in those seven days hit Ontario’s ratepayers with about $44 million (less the $56,300) via allocation to the GA—that will show up on the electricity line on our bills.

Wind generation alone at the contracted rate of $135/MWh cost ratepayers $24,900,000 plus another $5 to $6 million for their curtailed production, according to Scott Luft. That $30 to $31 million plus the cost of steaming off Bruce Nuclear, paying idling gas plants, etc., and the additional cost of solar generation, would confirm the $44 million is a reasonable estimate.

What has Ontario missed out on by having ratepayers subsidizing those exports by $44 million for those seven days?

  • the annual salary of 293 family physicians, or
    580 nurse practitioners, or
  • repairing all the Toronto District School Board’s school roofs, or
  • one and a half days of interest on Ontario’s public debt, or
  • all of Ontario’s 301 MPP salaries for a full year, or
  • 40 MRI machines, or
  • 100 months of mortgage payments on the empty MaRS Phase 2 building, or
  • increasing funding for autistic children by 30% over current levels.

Just a few examples of how the wasted subsidy money that cost each Ontario ratepayer $10 for just one week could have been used!
Parker Gallant

Canadian Nuclear Association claims wind energy isn’t green

By John Miner, The London Free Press

Samsung's South Kent wind farm seems to surround the 401 looking west from Kent Bridge Road. Mike Hensen/The London Free Press

Samsung’s South Kent wind farm seems to surround the 401 looking west from Kent Bridge Road.

I’m green and you’re not.

​The battle to be embraced as the best environmental choice for Ontario’s electricity supply is getting down and dirty.

Fed up with the wind farm sector enjoying what it considers an undeserved reputation as a pristine energy supplier, Canada’s nuclear industry has launched a public relations assault against wind.

“Wind power isn’t as clean as its supporters have claimed. It performs unreliably and needs backup from gas, which emits far more greenhouse gas than either wind or nuclear power,” said Dr. John Barrett, president and CEO of the Canadian Nuclear Association, in an email to The Free Press.

The Canadian Nuclear Association hired Toronto-based Hatch Ltd., a global consulting an engineering firm, to compare wind farm and nuclear energy.

Hatch reviewed 246 studies, mostly from North America and Europe,.

Their 91- page report released last week concludes that wind energy over the life time of an installation produces slightly less green house gas than nuclear and both produce a lot less than gas-fired generating plants.

But Hatch says it is an entirely different picture when wind energy’s reliance on other generating sources is considered.

The engineering firm calculates wind turbines only generate 20% of their electrical capacity because of the times when the wind isn’t blowing.

When gas-fired generating stations are added into the equation to pick up the slack, nuclear produces much less green house gases, the Hatch study concludes.

Its analysis is for every kilowatt-hour of electricity produced nuclear power emits 18.5 grams of greenhouse gases. Wind backed by natural gas produces more than 20 times more – 385 grams per kilowatt hour.

“We wanted a real-world, apples to apples comparison of how nuclear, wind and natural gas power plants generate greenhouse gases while producing electricity,” Barrett said.

The nuclear industry attack on wind might not be a welcome message for the Ontario Liberal government that has justified its multi-billion dollar investment in Southwestern Ontario wind farms on the basis it is providing green energy.

But it is a position that resonates with Ontario’s anti-wind farm movement.

“We share their concerns on this issue and have been speaking about this for years. We have taken advice from engineers in the power industry, who say that wind power cannot fulfill any of the environmental benefit promises made for it, because it needs fossil-fuel backup.,” said Jane Wilson, president of Wind Concerns Ontario.

On the other side of the debate, the Canadian Wind Energy Association said it has had an opportunity to review the Hatch study.

It said there is no surprise that when wind and natural gas generation are paired that the mix creates more greenhouse gases than nuclear. But when wind is paired with other potential electricity suppliers the results are different.

“Realistic, alternative scenarios see wind energy partnered with hydroelectric power, varying mixes of emerging renewable energy sources like solar energy, and the use of energy storage and demand side management.

“Unfortunately, by choosing to focus on only one scenario, the study failed to consider a broad range of equally or more plausible scenarios for the evolution of Canada’s electricity grid.

CanWea also argues wind energy is cheaper than new nuclear, is cost competitive with new hydroelectric development and is not subjuect to the commodity and carbon price risks facing natural gas.

“We are confident that no potential source of new electricity generation in Canada better addresses these multiple objectives than wind energy,” CanWea said in a statement.

As for the natural gas industry, it points out that it is much better for the environment than burning coal or oil for power.

“It can substantially reduce Ontario’s carbon footprint and is the ideal complement to intermittent renewable energy sources such as wind and solar for power generation,” says the Ontario Natural Gas Alliance.

Canadian Nuclear Association arguments against wind power

  • a wind turbine usually produces only 20 percent of its potential power. If a turbine can physically produce up to one megawatt (MW) of electricity, then it typically turns in one-fifth of that, or 200 kilowatts (kW).
  • because we don’t have big-enough batteries yet to store electricity from wind turbines, the power company needs to get the other 800 kW from somewhere else, like a gas plant.
  • in Ontario, power demand is highest during the day, and in the summer. But the wind blows mostly at night, and in the winter and spring. By its nature, wind power finds itself out of step with power demand

How Ontario’s electricity was produced by fuel type​

2013

Nuclear: 59.2%

Hydro: 23.4%

Gas: 11.1%

Wind: 3.4%

Coal: 2.1%

Other: 0.8%

Oct. 13, 2014 at 8 a.m.

Nuclear: 65.8%

Hydro: 24.6%

Wind: 5.9%

Gas: 2.7%​

john.miner@sunmedia.ca

World-wide Energy Poverty Worsens, as Governments Enforce Unaffordable Energy Policies

Video: why renewables equal death

energy_poverty

Videographer Paul Budline writes:

First, pardon the overwrought subject heading.  But I would like as many people as possible to see a 5-minute piece that I just finished.  It focuses on the unintended consequences of marchers demanding an end to fossil fuels.
It’s obviously shot on a shoestring and relies heavily on stock footage, but it’s an important topic:
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kSugIzPGa5I

Obama’s Heavy-handed Regulatory Policies, Will Mean the Destruction of the American Economy!!

Paul Driessen on political developments and the highjacking of the American government

Well lets just be a little old fashioned and assume that the American Experiment in Government was designed by wise men who had studied the human reality and decided to form a union based on the best of principles of self government.

Then imagine that intrusive ideologies arose that would corrupt and then destroy those best of principles.

Paul Driessen speaks to some of those concerns.

President Obama and many Democrats have excoriated companies for utilizing “tax inversions” to repatriate stockpiles of cash from overseas bank accounts, thereby avoiding the 35% US corporate tax rate and providing new funds for plants and equipment, innovation, hiring and keeping workers, and tapping new markets. Calling this “unpatriotic” and “immoral” is just another false, distracting, divisive community agitator tactic.

What America really needs right now is regulatory patriotism – and Executive Branch morality, citizenship, and fealty to our Constitution and laws. What we’re stuck with is a destructive, unpatriotic regulatory onslaught. The bare tip of the iceberg is that confiscatory 35% corporate tax rate, which is embedded in a Tax Code that is 74,000 pages and 33 million words long – 42 times more words than in the King James Bible.

As President Obama said recently, “Make no mistake, [my] policies are on the ballot, every single one of them.” He’s absolutely right. Will American voters remember that when they head to the polls in November?

Thank you for posting my article, quoting from it, and forwarding it to your friends and colleagues.

Best regards,

Paul

We need some regulatory patriotism!

President Obama condemns tax inversions, but pillages America with his regulatory agenda

“My policies are on the ballot, every single one of them,” he reminded voters on October 2.

Paul Driessen

It’s no mystery why American companies have stockpiled over $2 trillion of overseas earnings in foreign bank accounts. If they bring it to the United States, the IRS would grab 35% of it. That’s the US corporate tax rate – the highest in the developed world, double the average in EU nations.

Medtronic found a creative way to repatriate its cash, allowing it to bring money to the USA subject to just a 12.5% tax. The company acquired Covidien, another, smaller medical device firm in Ireland and will establish its formal headquarters in Dublin, thereby slashing its tax rate by two-thirds, and leaving it with far more cash for plants and equipment, innovation, hiring and keeping workers, and tapping new markets.

Pharmaceutical, biotechnology, healthcare and other companies have concluded or are pursuing similar “tax inversion” strategies. The actions have outraged the White House, “progressive” activists and many Democrats in Congress – except when President Obama’s BFF Warren Buffett engineered Burger King’s acquisition of Canada’s Tim Horton café and bakery chain.

The President says the practice is “unpatriotic” and “immoral,” calls the companies “corporate deserters,” and says businesses must start acting like “good corporate citizens.” Congressional Democrats have issued similar denunciations and want inversions prohibited or punished. They’re barking up the wrong tree.

The proper solution is comprehensive tax reform. However, Republicans want to address both corporate and individual tax issues, Democrats insist that only corporate taxes on the table, and Mr. Obama is typically not inclined to do the hard work of forging bipartisan compromises. Instead, he wants his IRS and Treasury Department to review “a broad range of authorities for possible administrative actions” and ways to “meaningfully reduce the tax benefits after inversions take place,” as one Treasury official put it.

Companies, workers and investors are bracing for the coming executive fiats. The diktats epitomize a huge problem that neither Congress nor the courts have been willing to address, but which continues to drag our nation’s economy and employment into the abyss: an out-of-control federal bureaucracy that is determined to control virtually every aspect of our business and personal lives – at great cost, for few benefits, and with little or no accountability for mistakes or even deliberate harm.

Of course we need taxes, laws and regulations, to set norms and guidelines, safeguard society, punish miscreants and pay for essential government programs. No one contests that. The question is, How much?

What we need right now is regulatory patriotism – and Executive Branch morality, citizenship, and fealty to our Constitution and laws. The federal behemoth today is destructive, and unpatriotic.

* The confiscatory 35% corporate tax rate is embedded in a Tax Code that’s 74,000 pages long, counting important cases and interpretations. It totals some 33 million words (compared to 788,280 in the King James Bible) and is loaded with crony corporatist provisions and complex, indecipherable language.

* A 906-page, 418,779-word (un)Affordable Care Act that has already metastasized into more than 10,000 pages of complex, often contradictory regulations, with more interpretations and clarifications to come.

* The 2,300-page Dodd-Frank law has already spawned over 14,000 pages of banking and financial rules.

* Over 175,000 pages in the Code of Federal Regulations are coupled with more than 1.4 million pages of tiny-type Federal Register proposed and final rules published just since 1993, at the rate of over 71,000 pages per year. Doctors, patients, insurers, businesses large and small – much less average citizens – cannot possibly read, comprehend or follow this onslaught.

* At least 4,450 federal crimes are embedded in those laws and regulations (with some 500 new crimes added per decade) – often for minor infractions like failing to complete or file precisely correct paperwork for selling orchids or importing wood for guitars. Neither inability to understand complex edicts, lack of knowledge that they could possibly exist, nor absence of intent to violate them is a defense, and the “crime” can bring military swat teams through doors, and land “violators” in prison for months or years.

* Production Tax Credits and other sweetheart “green” energy subsidies and grants total some $40 billion a year – for ethanol producers and folks like Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Mr. Tom Kiernan, who is both CEO of the American Wind Energy Association and treasurer of the League of Conservation Voters, which gives millions to mostly Democratic candidates to perpetuate the arrangements.

* American businesses and families must pay $1.9 trillion per year to comply with these mountains of regulations. That’s one-eighth of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product; it’s almost all the corporate money now held overseas: $5,937 a year for every American citizen – and far more than the $1.6 trillion in direct economic losses that re-insurer Munich Re blames on weather-related disasters between 1980 and 2011.

* $353 billion of these regulatory costs are inflicted by the Environmental Protection Agency alone, say Competitive Enterprise Institute experts who prepared the $1.9 trillion regulatory costs analysis for 2013.

Even worse, these criminal complexities and costs are being imposed by increasingly ideological, left-of-center, anti-business “public servants” who target conservatives and are intent on advancing President Obama’s agenda of “fundamentally transforming” the United States. They are determined to redistribute wealth, pit economic and ethnic groups against each other, close down coal-fired power plants, ensure that electricity prices “necessarily skyrocketing,” and stop drilling, mining, ranching, fracking and pipelines.

Poll after poll finds Americans focused on jobs and the economy, and on ISIL, terrorism and Ebola. Not so our federal government. Secretary of State John Kerry says climate change is “the world’s most fearsome weapon of mass destruction,” posing “greater long-term consequences” than terrorism or Ebola. For EPA the biggest issues are global warming, “environmental justice” and “sustainable development.”

How is the US economy responding to these policies? Median household income is down $2,000 since Obama took office, while costs of living continue to rise. Despite the subsidies, electricity prices have soared 14-33% in states with the most wind power. Some 45 million Americans now live below the poverty line – a 50% increase over the 30 million in poverty on inauguration day 2009.

While the official unemployment rate is now under 6% for the first time in six years, University of Maryland economist Peter Morici puts the real jobless rate at closer to 20% – which includes the millions who have given up looking for work, those who want to work full-time but must settle for part-time, and students enrolled in graduate school because their employment prospects are so bleak.

The labor force participation rate now stands at 62.7 percent, the lowest level in 36 years, with over 92 million adults not working. Over the past six years, one million more Americans have dropped out of the labor force than have found a job.

Indeed, a hallmark of the Obama recovery is its unique ability to convert three full-time jobs with benefits into four part-time positions with no benefits – and then say unemployment is declining.

It’s hardly surprising that dozens of senators and congressmen who voted with Mr. Obama 90-99% of the time now want to be seen as “moderate independents” – and do not want to be seen with the President.

But as President Obama told Northwestern University students October 2, “Make no mistake, [my] policies are on the ballot, every single one of them.”

He’s absolutely right. So are his economic and employment records. Time will tell how many people remember that when they vote November 4.

_________

Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT) and Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death.

Time to End the Global Warming Scam….Before it Ruins the World’s Economies!

Global warming: Can Owen Paterson save us from an unimaginable energy disaster?

There is no way of meeting the Climate Change Act’s targets, except by closing down Britain’s entire economy

Owen Paterson visits the Northmoor Pumping Station in Moorland

Owen Paterson visits the Northmoor Pumping Station in Moorland  Photo: Getty Images

Mr Paterson will, for the first time, reveal clearly just what we have now been committed to under the two Lib Dem ministers, Chris Huhne and Ed Davey, who, since 2010, have presided over our energy and climate change policy. Most of this is hidden away in policy documents so obscure that few non-insiders have any idea of where we are heading. But Paterson will explain, first, what is really now being planned, and, second, why it cannot conceivably work. He will then set out what hard-headed technical experts believe to be the only practical policy that could save us from an almost unimaginable national disaster.

1. The reality of our existing policy

Key to all our present energy policy is the fact that Britain is now, uniquely in the world, legally committed under Ed Miliband’s Climate Change Act to cutting our CO₂ emissions by more than 80 per cent by 2050. When this Act – which Mr Paterson wants repealed – passed almost unanimously through Parliament in 2008, not one politician tried to explain how in practice such a target might be achieved. But since then, the officials at the Department of Energy and Climate Change (Decc) have been trying to devise ways in which it might be possible, within 36 years, to eliminate those four-fifths of all the CO₂ emissions on which any modern economy depends.

Their declared aim, at an estimated cost of £1.1 trillion, is the almost complete “decarbonisation” of our economy. Astonishingly, this means that, before 2030, the Government plans to eliminate almost all use of the fossil fuels we currently use to generate 70 per cent of our electricity, to cook and heat our homes and workplaces, and to power virtually all our transport. They want all our existing coal- and gas-fired power stations to close.

Out will go petrol-driven vehicles, along with all gas-powered cooking and central heating. These are to be replaced by such a massive switch to electricity for heating and powering our vehicles that it will require a doubling of our electricity needs. Much of this is to come from “renewables”, such as wind turbines; most of the rest from new nuclear power stations – although, after 2030, new gas- and coal-fired power stations will again be allowed, on condition that all the CO₂ they emit is buried in holes in the ground (what is called “carbon capture and storage”, or CCS).

2. Why the policy cannot work

Mr Paterson will then show how any hope of achieving those Decc targets hidden away in a mass of opaque documents is, in practical terms, just pure make-believe. The EU would have us provide 60GW of electricity from wind turbines, which, thanks to the wind’s intermittency, would require a total capacity of 180GW. We would thus have to spend £360 billion on some 90,000 giant wind turbines, 85,000 more than we have at present, covering an area the size of Scotland.

To meet our 2050 target would require building 2,500 new windmills every year for 36 years, a rate eight times greater than we have managed in the past decade.

Because wind is so unreliable, the Government hopes instead to keep the lights on by adding 1.5GW of power every year until 2050 from huge, new “zero carbon” nuclear power stations. But we can already see what a pipe dream this is, from the only plant so far given approval, at Hinkley Point in Somerset. This is not expected to begin generating its 3.2GW until 2023, at a cost now estimated to have soared sixfold, to a staggering £24 billion.

Equally wishful thinking is Decc’s belief that by 2030 we might have “carbon capture and storage”. Even if this can ever be made to work on a commercial scale, its costs could treble the price of their electricity. As for providing electric replacements for two thirds of the 36 million vehicles on Britain’s roads, last year’s uptake was just 10,000. At this rate, we might get there in 20,000 years’ time.

In other words, there is not a chance of meeting any of Decc’s targets, except by closing down virtually our entire economy. So, as Mr Paterson will ask on Wednesday, is there any way in which such an incredible disaster can be averted?

3. Paterson’s ‘Plan B’

Having consulted a range of practical experts, Paterson will end by suggesting a revolutionary new energy policy, based only on proven technologies. This might not meet the requirements of the Climate Change Act, but at least it could achieve a dramatic cut in our CO₂ emissions (for what that is worth) – and, unlike Decc’s policy, his “Plan B” could guarantee to keep our lights on, our buildings heated, and our now almost wholly computer-dependent economy still functioning.

The first leg of his new policy would be to tackle what has long been one of the real scandals of the way we use energy, by wasting colossal amounts of heat from power generation. This could be used to warm most of the buildings in the country by what is known as “combined heat and power” (CHP). Official figures from the US government show just how dramatically gas-fired CHP compares with the inefficiencies of wind and solar power. At well over twice their efficiency, a CHP system can generate more than twice as much electricity as wind, and, furthermore, produces large quantities of heat, at significantly less cost – while actually saving 50 per cent more in CO₂ emissions. And if ever we can emulate the “shale revolution” that has recently cut US gas prices by two-thirds, the costs of CHP would be even lower.

The second proposal is that, instead of relying for nuclear power only on hugely expensive plants such as Hinkley Point, using obsolete reactor designs, we should look to hundreds of mini-reactors. These would be similar to those that have been used safely for decades to power ships (Rolls-Royce has been running one for 50 years next to Derby football ground). These could thus be installed much nearer to population centres, both to generate electricity and to power CHP district heating schemes.

The third leg, the only one Decc is currently looking at, is to use the latest computer technology to provide what is called “demand management”. This uses sophisticated techniques to reduce electricity demand so drastically that we could actually reduce our capacity by 40 per cent, without anyone noticing.

The stark alternatives, Mr Paterson will conclude, are that either we continue down the present course, which cannot begin to achieve any of its desired goals – or we can adopt an entirely new strategy, which could actually allow us to survive as an industrial nation.

In his lecture on Wednesday, he will be the first politician to kick off a properly realistic debate on Britain’s energy future. It could not be more desperately overdue.

No Funding Should be Given to Any Organization, that Supports Agenda 21

WWF ACCUSED OF FUNDING ANTI HUMAN RIGHTS SQUADS THAT ‘BEAT AND KILL’ CAMEROON TRIBES

A leading human rights charity has alleged that the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) is causing the displacement of traditional tribal people by funding squads who “beat and kill” natives for living in newly established “conservation zones” designated to protect wildlife.

The accusations made by Survival International relate to the displacement of the Baki Pygmie people in Cameroon, whose ancestral lands have now been designated “protected areas” to defend wildlife from poachers. Although the Baki have coexisted with the forest and it’s wildlife for “countless generations”, government poaching squads have treated the tribesmen harshly over the past decade, and the WWF stands accused of complicity in the abuse of their human rights.

The United Nations requires the WWF to prevent or mitigate “adverse human rights impacts directly linked to its operations”, but as Breitbart London was told by a Survival spokesman: “the facts suggest the WWF just haven’t put measures into place to prevent these abuses”.

According to Survival, the squads, which put the rights of animals above the rights of ancient tribes, wouldn’t be able to operate without the extensive funding and administrative assistance provided by the WWF to the Cameroonian government. As we were told: “the WWF has known about this for ten years or more”, and have until recently failed to act.

A Baka man told Survival, “The forest used to be for the Baka but not anymore. We would walk in the forest according to the seasons but now we’re afraid. How can they forbid us from going into the forest? We don’t know how to live otherwise. They beat us, kill us and force us to flee to Congo.”

Survival also told Breitbart London: “Many Baka have now asked us to publicise their plight as widely as possible, and to tell WWF’s supporters so that they can take action”

Both parties are now participating in a Human Rights Commission inquiry, but this has only come after months of the WWF dragging their feet, say Survival. A press release by the WWF claimed they were “disturbed” by the claims and had been offering assistance since March, but the Survival spokesman told us: “the investigation WWF suggested to us was entirely biased… there was no intention to publish the results.”

“The WWF has claimed Survival has to initiate this enquiry, but that isn’t true. They could have done it themselves at any time over the past ten years – it’s shocking”.

For the duration of the inquiry, which is being chaired by WWF funding recipient the Cameroon government, the wildlife charity will continue to pay for the squads which have caused the controversy. Meanwhile therefore, the purportedly illegal eviction of the tribal people from their homelands in the name of “conservation” will continue unabated.

Steve Minick from Texas Association of Business on the EPA Clean Power Plan

This is a stunningly good letter that was presented to the Hearing of the Texas House on the latest EPA insanity–the Clean Power Plan. Wanna know what’s wrong with the EPA, read Minick’s letter for a place to start.

Minick takes the EPA big plan apart and shows it to be a empty portfolio of nonsense and bad policy making.

Minick is an important voice for Business in Texas–an eloquent and knowledgeable man.

I highlighted some of the important stuff.

September 29, 2014

The Honorable Patricia Harless, Chairman
Committee on Environmental Regulation
Texas House of Representatives
P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78768-2910

RE: Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed Clean Power Plan under Clean Air Act Section 111(d)

Chairman Harless:

The Texas Association of Business (TAB) appreciates the opportunity to discuss the Speaker’s charge to the committee to study the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) proposed Clean Power Plan. TAB is a broad-based, bipartisan organization representing more than 4,000 Texas employers and over 200 local chambers of commerce. As Texas’ leading employer organization for more than 90 years, TAB represents some of the largest multi-national corporations as well as small businesses in almost every community in the state. Our business members and local chambers of commerce have a vital interest in the outcome of any decision by EPA to fundamentally alter the management and operation of the state’s electric power system and the effects such a proposal represents for the reliability and cost of critical electric supply in Texas.

EPA’s proposal to impose existing source performance standards for greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions under Clean Air Act §111(d) is yet another in a series of rulemakings from EPA that regrettably departs even further from the cooperative partnership between EPA and the states that Congress envisioned in the passage of the Clean Air Act. The Act states clearly that air pollution prevention at its source is the primary responsibility of States and local governments. In addition to being inconsistent with the fundamental principle of cooperative federalism, the proposed Clean Power Plan is equally inconsistent with other specific provisions of the Clean Air Act. Beyond its questionable legal basis, however, the Committee should also be made aware that this rule, if enacted, will impose significant costs on Texas businesses and consumers, severely test our electric grid and reliability of electric service and effectively relinquish control of our power system to the federal government. Incredibly, even EPA’s own analysis shows plainly that this rule, intended to address climate change by reducing emissions of GHGs, will have no measureable effect on climate change.

Background and Description of the Clean Power Plan
EPA’s proposal to impose existing source performance standards for GHGs follows directly the failure of the current administration to move cap and trade legislation through Congress and is a well-recognized step in EPA’s long range plan to remove coal as a source of fuel for power generation in this country. An earlier step in that plan is the imposition of GHG performance standards for new sources. That rule, which will ensure that no new coal-fired power plants are built, was proposed in September 2013.
This next step, proposed in June of 2014, will ensure the closure of many of the existing coal-fired plants. President Obama, in speaking to the San Francisco Chronicle in 2008 outlined without any confusion his plan for coal power:

“Under my plan of a cap and trade system, electricity rates would necessarily skyrocket. Coal-powered plants…would have to retrofit their operations. That will cost money. They will pass that money on to consumers.”

The Clean Power Plan bears a resemblance to another increasingly familiar aspect of rulemaking under the Clean Air Act – obscuring any technical justification or analysis of a proposed rule in more pages of background than can reasonably be read and understood by the average interested party, certainly any affected party with limited time and resources. In this case, the rule itself only occupies some 38 pages of text, but that is then followed by over 600 pages of preamble with references to some 350 footnotes. Then comes a lengthy regulatory impact analysis and multiple technical support documents and then references to some 620 supporting documents.

While those affected by the rule might hope to find at least clarity in the rule’s purpose and effect in this massive production, even many of those who are supportive of the rule have expressed concern and uncertainty as to what it means, how it will affect their jurisdictions and, perhaps most importantly, how it can possibly be implemented.

Basis of the Clean Power Plan Rule
Under the Clean Power Plan EPA proposes to impose performance standards for existing power plants for GHG emissions under Section 111(d) of the Clean Air Act. In the previous 40 years EPA has used this authority in approximately five cases, and arguably never for any major source of emissions. Section 111(d) allows EPA to establish performance standards for existing sources of emissions and requires that any standards imposed reflect emission limitations achievable through what is defined as a Best System of Emission Reductions (BSER). But in this proposed rule, EPA abandons any rational definition of both source and system in the context of what Section 111(d) actually authorizes. Under the Clean Power Plan, emission reductions would apply not to a source of emissions (a power plant) but conceivably to every element of the state’s entire electric power system.

Further stretching the authority of 111(d), EPA does not propose any system of emission reduction technology, but instead, argues that each state can reach emission reduction targets through a variety of measures, including:

1. Improving efficiency of coal-fired electric generators by 6%;
2. Increasing the operation of natural gas-fired electric generators to 70% of current capacity;
3. Increasing the contribution of renewable energy sources up to 25%; and
4. Increasing the reductions in power consumption through demand response by 9-12%
An obvious observation of these “suggested” paths to compliance with GHG emission limitations is that, while they may indirectly affect emissions, none of them is actually a “system” of emission reductions applied to a “source” of emissions. In other words, EPA proposes to limit GHG emissions by not requiring any direct control of the emission of GHGs at their source. Put another way, the agency is proposing a rule under Section 111(d) that imposes requirements in no way authorized under Section 111(d). Within very specific conditions, EPA has authority to limit emissions by determining an appropriate system of controls for those emissions at their source.EPA does not have the authority to re-design our entire system for the generation, transmission, use or conservation of electric power to indirectly impact the production of GHGs.

Target Emission Rates
The key to the Clean Power Plan is target emission rates that EPA has determined for each affected state. Again, these are not targets applicable to actual sources of emissions (electric power plants) but overall targets applicable on a state-wide basis. In fact, it is accurate to acknowledge that under a statutory provision that authorizes control of sources of pollution, EPA is proposing a target for emission rates that is simply applied to an entire state, and not to any one source of pollution.

Beyond the obvious concern with the underlying statutory authority being cited, a major concern with the states’ emission targets is that the massive submission and supporting documentation still do not reveal any apparent rationale for the emission rates that are proposed. The rates assigned to individual states vary substantially and for reasons that are very difficult to comprehend. Somehow, under a rule presumably intended to reduce the emissions of a pollutant that we are told has serious negative implications for public welfare, some states are allowed to actually increase emissions of GHGs. Some observations of EPA’s proposed emission reduction targets may help to illustrate the difficulty in understanding a valid technical basis:

1. GHG emission reduction targets for the states range from an 83% reduction (for Washington) to a 37% increase (for Rhode Island).
2. Washington must reduce GHG emissions by 83%, Oregon by 42% and California by 7%.
3. Texas must reduce emissions by 42% and Oklahoma 41%, while Kansas and Nebraska can increase emissions by 10%.
4. South Dakota must decrease emissions by 4% but North Dakota can increase emissions by 1%.
5. Idaho has a reduction target of 49%, Wyoming 31%; Montana can increase emissions 8%.
6. Mississippi faces a target reduction of 62%, but Alabama 32%.
7. 3%.Virginia must reduce GHG emissions by 35%, West Virginia 0%.
8. Tennessee must reduce GHG emissions by 20%; Kentucky can increase emissions by 3%.
These examples are only some of the observations that clearly raise far more questions than EPA’s proposal provides answers.
The rationale of EPA appears to be an acknowledgment that each state is different and faces different challenges and opportunities for reducing GHG emissions. But in no provision of the Clean Air Act is EPA authorized to invent a plan for reducing emissions from existing sources without actually imposing requirements on existing sources and then allocate obligations to each of the states based on what in some opinion of EPA each state is capable of accomplishing. Beyond EPA’s questionable authority to impose such emission targets, it must also be recognized that the states on which fall the obligations to comply may lack much of the statutory authority to do what EPA outlines in its suggested “system” of emission reductions.

It must also be recognized that Texas is singled out for special treatment under this proposed rule. While Texas’ required percentage reduction in GHG emissions is not as large as some states (42%), when applied to the actual magnitude of Texas’ electric generation capacity the figures become very revealing of the real impact of the rule. Texas is clearly the largest producer and consumer of power in the U.S, but that status is merely a reflection of Texas’ position as a producer of fuel, manufactured goods and other products that meet the needs of the other states and our global trading partners. Under the Clean Power Plan, Texas is far and away the most significantly affected state:

• By 2030, Texas must reduce coal-fired electric generation by over 72 million megawatt hours (MWH), Florida is a distant second at just over 40 million MWH.
• Texas’ required GHG reductions by 2030 are almost three times greater than those required of second place Florida and dwarf the requirements for any other state.
To comply, Texas must reduce its coal-fired electric generation by over 53%; Indiana and Kentucky, the two closest states to Texas in terms of coal-fired generation, must reduce their generation from coal by 4.8% and 1%, respectively.
Texas leads the nation in the production of renewable energy. But by 2030, Texas must increase its use of renewable energy almost five times as much as the state closest to Texas in renewable energy capacity, California.
The significant variation and seemingly random allocation of emission targets to the different states, and certainly the significantly greater impact of the rule on Texas, are clearly impacts that demand a far more detailed and reasoned explanation before this rule receives any further consideration by EPA.

Costs and Benefits of the Clean Air Plan
There is no question that implementation of the Clean Air Plan will significantly affect the electric generation industry and consumers of power, from the largest industrial user to individual residential customers. The U. S. Chamber of Commerce has estimated compliance costs at approximately $50 billion. Other estimates of industry compliance costs are as “low” as $28 billion. These compliance costs to the electric industry are distinct from the actual costs to consumers which has been estimated to be a loss in disposable income of over $585 billion through 2030. Cost to manufacturers and others who use natural gas for purposes other than electric generation will also increase significantly as natural gas prices are projected to increase up to $50 billion. In addition to dollar impacts, the rule will result in some 178,000 lost jobs per year. Less easily quantified, but equally important, is the potential impact of a rule that will significantly put at risk the reliability of Texas’ electric grid, the failure of which can have extremely dramatic financial impacts, as well as public health and safety impacts.

One would assume that such a rule, with the potential for significant, negative economic consequences, would have to clearly provide benefits to public health and welfare at least as great, or even greater than the costs to justify serious consideration and certainly formal proposal. Quite surprisingly, the dramatic economic costs and potential risks to our electric power system will provide virtually no benefit whatsoever. EPA’s own analysis shows that the proposed rule will affect no more than .18 percent of global GHG emissions and offset the huge costs of its implementation by reducing global temperatures by between .01-.02 degrees C. and preventing a projected sea level rise of .016 inches.

EPA attempts to make up for the almost absurd lack of simple economic justification for the rule by suggesting that reducing operations and emissions from coal-fired power plants will have ancillary public health benefits. Even if such an unsupported position were rational, it is beyond reason to suggest that sufficient public health benefits could accrue to offset the significant costs of this rule. But the reality is that for several years and throughout EPA’s pursuit of its current air quality and energy policy agenda, the agency has continued time and again to cite ancillary benefits from reductions in emissions (e.g., PM2.5) where no public health benefit from the direct effect of the rule in question can be cited. The Clean Air Plan is simply the latest in a long line of air quality rulemaking where no public health benefit can be directly attributed to the pollutant the rule is intended to address.

Perhaps even more significant as a critique of EPA’s cost analysis is the fact that the cost/benefit equation ignores (as it does for essentially all such rules) the negative public health impacts of reducing the disposable income of those who are affected by the rule.
This rule if implemented will significantly impact the costs of electricity. That cost, particularly when borne by lower income ratepayers, will reduce the ability of those ratepayers to afford other essential goods and services that directly affect their health and welfare, including medical care, medicine, adequate food and housing and the expenses required to be sufficiently educated and prepared to acquire and maintain employment. The strongly positive correlation between income and public welfare and longevity has been well established and any cost/benefit analysis that ignores it cannot be considered to be valid or credible.

Other Impacts on Texas
It has been suggested by many in support of this rule that Texas should share that support due to the positive impact the rule will have on demand for natural gas, particularly as the prices for natural gas have declined and the incentives for more production have weakened. There is also at least the implication that Texas can benefit from this rule by simply building more gas-fired electric generation and easily mitigate the loss of any coal-fired facilities, while simultaneously benefiting from the economic effects of increased gas production. Missing from this presumptive analysis is the proper recognition of the role Texas’ competitive deregulated retail electric market plays in any theoretical scenario of how this state would attempt to implement EPA’s suggested methods of compliance. In Texas the Public Utility Commission, perhaps unlike in most other states, cannot simply set a price for electricity that will provide an incentive to build new gas-fired power plants to replace coal-fired plants. It is entirely uncertain that Texas’ electric market structure will be able to react as EPA assumes it can under any requirement to replace coal-fired with gas-fired generation.

The assumption that Texas can increase natural gas electric generation while benefiting from increased natural gas production also ignores the potential impact of other air quality rules being promulgated by EPA. The proposed reduction in the ozone national ambient air quality standard (NAAQS) can potentially bring large areas of Texas, including the major oil and gas production areas, into nonattainment status for ozone. Without a clearer picture of what a revised ozone NAAQS will be, what areas will be determined to be nonattainment and how such designation and subsequent ozone control measures will affect natural gas exploration and production, availability and price, it is impossible at this time to make assumptions that can dispel the many legitimate concerns about the loss of coal-fired electric capacity in Texas.

Conclusions
EPA’s proposed Clean Power Plan is poorly supported by current law and suffers from a thorough lack of technical and financial justification. It truly is a rule that on its face will have enormous costs and virtually zero benefit. It fulfills the administration’s goals for a cap and trade program by making cap and trade the only viable option for some states who simply cannot reengineer their electric power systems. In fact, the proposal will conceivably reward those states that have some type of cap and trade program by enabling those states with marketable credits to sell to other states, essentially establishing a wealth transfer from coal states to non-coal states. The proposal further supports the anti-coal agenda by imposing de facto federal renewable energy standards and federal energy efficiency standards – all in one rule.

It is appropriate to question EPA’s motives in proposing a rule that has such significant questions as to its legal foundation and for which the cost/benefit analysis so clearly shows that there are no benefits. Even the EPA leadership appears somewhat uncertain as to exactly what this rule is intended to do. In testimony before the Senate Public Works Committee, EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy stated:

“The great thing about this [111(d)] proposal is that it really is an investment opportunity. This is not about pollution control. It’s about increased efficiency at our plants, no matter where you want to invest. It’s about investments in renewables and clean energy.”

However, Acting Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation, Janet McCabe, before the House Energy and Power Subcommittee described the same rule quite differently:

“Chairman Upton, this is not an energy plan. This is a rule done within the four corners of 111(d) that looks to the best system of emission reduction to reduce emission… The rule is a pollution control rule, as EPA has traditionally done under section 111(d).”

If EPA admits that a rule to benefit climate change has no effect on climate and is yet still unclear as to what the rule is for, it would appear prudent to postpone any further consideration at this time.

Thank you for the opportunity to appear before the committee and share our thoughts on this subject. Please contact me at 512.637.7707 or sminick@txbiz.org if you have questions or need additional information.

Respectfully,

Stephen Minick
Vice President for Governmental Affairs
Texas Association of Business

More Fear Mongering from the Eco-Terrorists! Now it’s our Wildlife…

Baseless claim from WWF: Half of global wildlife lost, says new WWF report

from the World Wildlife Fund | World Wildlife Fund issues 10th edition of ‘The Living Planet Report,’ a science-based assessment of the planet’s health

Washington, DC – Monday, September 29: Between 1970 and 2010 populations of mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish around the globe dropped 52 percent, says the 2014 Living Planet Report released today by World Wildlife Fund (WWF). This biodiversity loss occurs disproportionately in low-income countries—and correlates with the increasing resource use of high-income countries.

In addition to the precipitous decline in wildlife populations the report’s data point to other warning signs about the overall health of the planet. The amount of carbon in our atmosphere has risen to levels not seen in more than a million years, triggering climate change that is already destabilizing ecosystems. High concentrations of reactive nitrogen are degrading lands, rivers and oceans. Stress on already scarce water supplies is increasing. And more than 60 percent of the essential “services” provided by nature, from our forests to our seas, are in decline.

african-elephant

“We’re gradually destroying our planet’s ability to support our way of life,” said Carter Roberts, president and CEO of WWF. “But we already have the knowledge and tools to avoid the worst predictions. We all live on a finite planet and its time we started acting within those limits.”

The Living Planet Report, WWF’s biennial flagship publication, measures trends in three major areas:

  • populations of more than ten thousand vertebrate species;
  • human ecological footprint, a measure of consumption of goods, greenhouse gas emissions; and
  • existing biocapacity, the amount of natural resources for producing food, freshwater, and sequestering carbon.

“There is a lot of data in this report and it can seem very overwhelming and complex,” said Jon Hoekstra, chief scientist at WWF. “What’s not complicated are the clear trends we’re seeing — 39 percent of terrestrial wildlife gone, 39 percent of marine wildlife gone, 76 percent of freshwater wildlife gone – all in the past 40 years.”

The report says that the majority of high-income countries are increasingly consuming more per person than the planet can accommodate; maintaining per capita ecological footprints greater than the amount of biocapacity available per person. People in middle- and low-income countries have seen little increase in their per capita footprints over the same time period.

While high-income countries show a 10 percent increase in biodiversity, the rest of the world is seeing dramatic declines. Middle-income countries show 18 percent declines, and low-income countries show 58 percent declines. Latin America shows the biggest decline in biodiversity, with species populations falling by 83 percent.

“High-income countries use five times the ecological resources of low-income countries, but low income countries are suffering the greatest ecosystem losses,” said Keya Chatterjee, WWF’s senior director of footprint. “In effect, wealthy nations are outsourcing resource depletion.”

The report underscores that the declining trends are not inevitable. To achieve globally sustainable development, each country’s per capita ecological footprint must be less than the per capita biocapacity available on the planet, while maintaining a decent standard of living.

At the conclusion of the report, WWF recommends the following actions:

  1. Accelerate shift to smarter food and energy production
  2. Reduce ecological footprint through responsible consumption at the personal, corporate and government levels
  3. Value natural capital as a cornerstone of policy and development decisions
###

Why is this a baseless claim? Read this: Where Are The Corpses?

Huge Congratulations to Marita Noon! Check this Out!

For immediate release: September 29, 2014.
Commentary by Marita Noon
Executive Director, Energy Makes America Great Inc.
Contact: 505.239.8998, marita@responsiblenergy.org
Words: 1250

People’s Climate March Wants to Change the System, not the Weather
Americans are generous people. We want to believe the best in others. We’ve tried to accept the narrative out of the White House that Islam is a peaceful religion. There’s been talk of the good Muslims reining in the bad—before they ruin the reputation of all Muslims. But then, the Islamic extremists have posted videos of innocent Americans—even a Brit and a Frenchman—being beheaded.

It has now reached our homeland: Oklahoma. News reports show Alton Nolen, a recent convert to Islam, who, on Friday, beheaded a former coworker and stabbed another before his rampage was stopped when the company’s COO shot him.

American’s patience has worn thin as extremists have taken over. Mosques, fearing potential retaliatory violence, are taking extra security precautions to protect Muslims who gather there. Saad Mohammad, a spokesman for the Islamic Society of Greater Oklahoma City, said any anti-Muslim sentiments local residents might have could be heightened due to the beheadings and violence overseas by Islamic State militants.

Earlier this year, General Iyad Ameen Madani, Organization of Islamic Cooperation Secretary, in his address at the 25th Session of the Arab Summit, told the audience: “Extremist voices and groups have hijacked Islam and misappropriated the right to speak on its behalf.” He referenced the “discord and mutual killings which have gained ground in our ranks” as “a war where there is no victor but it will invite perils for all,” and defended “Islam with its established values and aspirations and with its advocacy of justice, equality, concord, coexistence and mutuality,” as totally unrelated to the extremists and to their “ideologies and what they call for.”

Much like Madani sees that his belief system has been hijacked by extremists, and is publically saying so, sincere lovers of nature need to speak up, as anti-eco sentiments are heightened by extremists, who have hijacked the environmental movement, as evidenced by the September 21 People’s Climate March in New York City and the subsequent UN Climate Summit. In HotAir.com, Noah Rothman states: “The modern climate alarmism movement has been hijacked by the remnants of those who still adhere to the defunct tenets of revolutionary Marxism.”

Much like Americans have wanted to believe the war on terrorism was over and that Al-Qaida was on the run, they’ve previously accepted the “green” narrative coming out of the White House. After all, everyone wants clean air and water. No one wants to be against a critter.

ISIS has shown that Islamic extremists are alive and well—and are a growing threat. The People’s Climate March revealed the true colors of eco-extremists—and their growing threat.

The People’s Climate March had little to do with the climate. The eco-extremists want to “change the system.”

While reported numbers vary, hundreds of thousands of people clogged (and littered) the streets of New York City. The parade had grand marshals like actors Leonardo DiCaprio and Mark Ruffalo and politicos Al Gore and Robert Kennedy Jr. But, it also had an astonishing assortment of anti-American, anti-capitalism, and anti-free marketeers, who showcased for all of America what the environmental movement has become. In Human Events, the menagerie was described this way: “If you’re in favor of totalitarian power, sympathetic to America’s enemies, dubious about representative democracy, hostile to free markets, or you just get turned on by fantasizing about violent revolution, there was a place for you at this march.”

Marchers carried a banner stating: “Capitalism is the disease, socialism is the cure.” Others: “Capitalism is killing the planet. Fight for a socialist future.”

Hydraulic fracturing—which is uniquely responsible for U.S. carbon dioxide emissions dropping to the lowest in 20 years—was victimized: “Make fracking a crime.” Marchers held signs saying: “Fracking = Climate Change. Ban fracking now.”

Speaking of crimes, Robert Kennedy, Jr., in an interview at the Climate March, told Climate Depot’s Marc Morano that he wishes there was a law to punish global warming skeptics. He’s previously called coal companies “criminal enterprises” and declared CEO’s “should be in jail… for all of eternity.”

Interviews with participants in the March revealed sentiments such as: “corporations have to be reined in” and we’re “building a revolution for a whole new society—a new socialist society.”

A man in a cow costume carried a sign: “I fart. Therefore, I am the problem.” Bob Linden, the host of the nationally syndicated radio program Go Vegan, stated: “if 50 to 85 percent of us switch to veganism by 2020, scientists tell us we can save the planet from climate change.”

Unfortunately, you won’t see any of this in the mainstream media. The New York Times slide show of the event features a pictorial display of flower wreaths being strung, and of children and happy dancers.

In a piece titled: “Rockets Red Glare Distract Nation From UN Climate Summit and Import of Global Climate Protests,” the Huffington Post laments: “the critically important UN Climate Summit in New York has had to compete on mainstream media with the far more dramatic war coverage.” It continues: “the climate’s fate is far more important to the world even than the desperately needed military campaign by the U.S. and its allies to eradicate barbaric ISIL terrorists from Syria and Iraq.”

The Christian Science Monitor reported: “just as the climate movement has captured global attention, major leaders are shifting their attention elsewhere.” Regarding last week’s UN meeting that followed the Climate March, it stated: “The UN meeting is likely to be overshadowed by the new war on the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.”

The new war in Iraq and Syria, waged by Islamic extremists, centers on hate for all things Western and a desire to change systems of government to an Islamic caliphate. The shocking displays of violence have sounded an alarm that has awakened Americans and exposed the inconsistency and inaccuracy of most messaging coming from the Obama Administration.

The People’s Climate March also centers on hate and a desire to change the government. One description of the March said: “These people are defined by what they hate, and a big part of what they hate is capitalism.” Another offered this explanation of the participants: “the aimless in search of personal meaning complement the ranks of a movement which promises personal purpose.”

During a panel discussion held in conjunction with the March, Naomi Klein, author of “This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate,” was asked: “Even if the climate change issue did not exist, you would be calling for the same structural changes.” Her answer: “Yeah.”

I know every Muslim isn’t a terrorist and every person who cares about the planet isn’t an eco-extremist, but as ISIS has changed American’s view—and Islamic leaders, such as, Madani, are unhappy that “Extremist voices and groups have hijacked Islam and misappropriated the right to speak on its behalf”—the Climate March made clear that extremist voices have hijacked the environmental movement. Our patience has worn thin, and we no longer trust Obama’s clean, green message.

National Geographic summed up the March this way: “Despite all the enthusiasm displayed in New York and elsewhere on a muggy September Sunday, public opinion polls consistently show that climate change is not a high priority for most Americans.”

Americans are smarter than the collection of anti-capitalism satellite groups think. They’ve seen through the rhetoric and realize, as the Climate March made clear: it is not about Climate Change, it is about system change.

These eco-extremists showed their true colors: green on the outside, red on the inside. Watermelons.

(A version of this content was originally published on Breitbart.com)

The author of Energy Freedom, Marita Noon serves as the executive director for Energy Makes America Great Inc. and the companion educational organization, the Citizens’ Alliance for Responsible Energy (CARE). Together they work to educate the public and influence policy makers regarding energy, its role in freedom, and the American way of life. Combining energy, news, politics, and, the environment through public events, speaking engagements, and media, the organizations’ combined efforts serve as America’s voice for energy.

I am a bit tardy in getting you my column today as I was confirming the particulars with my editor (I’ve never had an “editor” before). He told me: “We basically run original, exclusive content, so there’s not a lot of precedent for sending out stuff that runs here first.” Here’s the deal. I wrote my usual, long, connect-the-dots style piece. He edited it, cutting it down by almost 50 percent. It’s good. I am happy with it. However, trimming it does remove some of the secondary messaging. Breitbart has agreed that I can send you both the full version and the version posted on Breitbart.com. In either case, please post the version you choose with the verbiage I’ve included. They ask that their version be posted with the first several paragraphs and then a link to Breitbart.com—which is how I am sending their version to you. If you choose the full version, please be sure to include “A version of this content was originally published on Breitbart.com”—and be sure to include the link. I trust that there will be refinements in the arrangements as the weeks go on.

With all that said, as always, the full version of People’s Climate March Wants to Change the System, not the Weather is attached and pasted-in-below. I’ve also attached the Breitbart version.

Thanks for your understanding. Please post, pass on, and/or personally enjoy whichever version of People’s Climate March Wants to Change the System, not the Weather works for you.

Marita Noon