|
Skip
to this weeks poll |
Send to friend
29
November 2009
The
Copenhagen
Saga
|
Printer
friendly version (PDF)
View
>>> |
From
the 7th of December through to the 18th,
the much publicised United Nations Climate Change Conference
will be held in Copenhagen, Denmark. The main aim of the
conference is to reach an agreement on a framework to replace
the Kyoto Protocol when it expires in 2012. Attending the
conference on behalf of New Zealand will be the Minister for
Climate Change Nick Smith, his Associate Tim Groser, and a
contingent of officials. In addition, as one of the
concessions to the Maori Party for their support of the
emissions trading scheme, taxpayers will also fund two iwi
leaders and kaumatua to travel to the Copenhagen conference.
Few
details about the cost of the proposed treaty have been
disclosed. In 2001, when New Zealand signed the Bonn
Declaration, we were amongst 20 industrialised countries that
pledged millions of dollars a year to help developing
countries tackle climate change: "We are prepared to
contribute $410m, which is 450 million euro, per year by 2005
with this level to be reviewed in 2008." However, this
has turned into a debacle according to the BBC, with no proper
record of what money has actually been paid, as well as large
sums that can’t be accounted for.[1]
The
stakes are higher now. The global warming scaremongering
machine has been so successful that developing countries at
Copenhagen will be asking nations like New Zealand to front up
with an estimated $250 billion to tackle climate change –
and according to some sources, that could be each and every
year.
The
details of what is being proposed at Copenhagen can be found
within a document penned by the UN Framework Convention on
Climate Change working group.[2] This virtually impenetrable
181 page draft contains a bewildering array of negotiating
options. However, what stands out is that the bottom-line
purpose is money, power and control!
Through
this Copenhagen treaty, the United Nations wants countries
like New Zealand to agree to ambitious emission reduction
targets (up to 95 percent of 1990 levels by 2050 is one of the
targets being proposed), to provide huge financial support to
developing countries for the purpose of adaptation, mitigation
and compensation, and to support the establishment of a
proposed new governance body.
The
problem for New Zealand is that the decision to support such a
treaty - which could have enormous implications for the future
prosperity of New Zealand - is taken solely by the Executive
of Government, rather than Parliament. And while a procedures
has been established whereby a “National Interest”
analysis of proposed treaties must be presented to a select
committee of Parliament, that is as far as it goes.[3] If
however the treaty involves a domestic law change then the
proposed legislation must, of course, go through the normal
parliamentary process.
Our
arrangement contrasts to that in other countries such as the
United States, where the Constitution requires the approval of
a two-thirds supermajority of democratically elected senators
- along with the approval of the President – for any binding
Treaty. This is in order to effectively safeguard national
sovereignty against threats posed by foreign treaties.
Interestingly, while the US signed up to the Kyoto Protocol,
it was never ratified, because it failed to win supermajority
support in the Senate.
In
spite of the wealth destroying implications for New Zealand of
most climate change policy, an argument that has been used by
governments to justify strong action, is that associated with
trade: if we don’t play our part in combating climate change
then New Zealand’s trade will suffer. Given that Canada has
thumbed its nose at climate change measures on the basis that
they will damage the economy, I asked New Zealander David
Seymour, a Senior Policy Analyst for the Canadian Frontier
Centre for Public Policy and this week’s NZCPR Guest
Commentator, whether Canada has experienced the sort of trade
backlash that our politicians have warned us about:
“Canada
is approximately fifty per cent wealthier than New Zealand on
a GDP per capita basis, and on some days temperatures in some
cities are colder than those at the North Pole.
Unsurprisingly, Canadians burn a lot of fossil fuels.
Putting aside a few small oil-rich nations, only the
United States and Australia emitted more greenhouse gases per
capita than Canada did in 2005.
Canada’s 22.6 tonnes per capita was twenty per cent
higher than New Zealand’s 18.8, and by 2007 they were
thirty-four per cent above their Kyoto target.
“Anybody
who supposes they might be sorry for it is in for a rude
shock. Only last
week did Prime Minister Stephen Harper agree to go to
Copenhagen next month, and in case anybody was to take this as
an act of contrition, his Minister for the Environment had
this to say: One thing
the Conservative government will never do is fly over to
Copenhagen, pull a target out of the air that is ill-suited to
our industrial base, to our geography and agree to damaging
the Canadian economy.”
David
explains, “In reality, Canada has not suffered trade
problems due to its position on climate change policy.
Meanwhile, Canada has shown that a commitment to free
trade is the most important factor in getting trade deals
done. With a
trained economist as a Prime Minster, Canada has brought
agreements with four new countries into effect over the past
two years, and has a further eleven currently pending.
Since 2003, Canadian exports have risen twenty per
cent, hardly the sign of a country that is becoming an
economic leper in the international community.” To read
David’s full article, click
here >>>
As
the media hype over the Copenhagen conference reaches fever
pitch, a scandal dubbed “Climategate” that hits at the
heart of the whole theory of man-made global warming is
unfolding. As a result of communications between the United
Nations’ top climate scientists being made public, doubts
have now been raised about the accuracy of their influential
reports. Serious allegations have been made that these
scientists have been colluding to falsify data, manipulate
results, and block other researchers from having access to the
figures in order to protect their fabricated evidence that the
globe is warming due to the influence of man-made greenhouse
gases. It is a scientific fraud of massive proportions and as
the fallout spreads, there are calls for resignations,
inquiries, and the disbanding of the whole United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
This
scandal is so big that it has now enveloped our own crown
atmospheric research unit, NIWA. NIWA has been accused of
scaremongering by inflating temperature records to show the
New Zealand’s temperature has increased by 0.92°C over the
last 100 years. In
comparison the un-adjusted data shows an insignificant
increase of 0.06°C over the 100 year period.[4] The questions
over whether they have indeed been involved in this global
scandal continues. If the data has been doctored as some are
suggesting, then those responsible for doing so should be
exposed and sacked from their government paid positions.
President
Vaclav Klaus of the Czech Republic, one of the few world
leaders who is an outspoken critic of the whole theory of
man-made global warming, was speaking in Washington DC earlier
this month, reflecting on the forthcoming Copenhagen
summit.[5] I will leave the final words this week to President
Klaus:
“I
have already been at a UN Summit in Copenhagen before. It was
in 1995 at the so-called Social Summit. At that time, the
Summit was attended by then U.S. Vice President Al Gore who
— so it seems — will be there again this year. I did also
attend, as Prime Minister of the Czech Republic, but I don’t
plan to go there now. I don’t see any chance to influence
the results or to be listened to.
In
1995, there were huge demonstrations organized by all kinds of
anti-establishment groupings - from socialists and greens to
anarchists and anti-globalizationists. I have never seen such
clashes between demonstrators and police and army forces
before. The difference is that I don’t expect any
demonstrations in Copenhagen now. The anti-establishment
people have in the meantime become insiders and will be
sitting in the main hall. This is a shift with far-reaching
consequences.
We
should not forget how the doctrine of global warming came into
being. In a normal case, everything starts with an empirical
observation, with the discovery of evident trends or
tendencies. Then follow scientific hypotheses and their
testing. When they are not refuted, they begin to influence
politicians. The whole process finally leads to some policy
measures. None of this was the case with the global warming
doctrine.
It
started differently. The people who had never believed in
human freedom, in impersonal forces of the market and other
forms of human interaction and in the spontaneity of social
development and who had always wanted to control, regulate and
mastermind us have been searching for a persuasive argument
that would justify these ambitions of theirs. After trying
several alternative ideas — population bomb, rapid
exhaustion of resources, global cooling, acid rains, ozone
holes — that all very rapidly proved to be non-existent,
they came up with the idea of global warming. Their doctrine
was formulated before reliable data evidence, before the
formulation of scientifically proven theories, before their
comprehensive testing based on today’s level of statistical
methods. Politicians accepted that doctrine at the Rio Earth
Summit in 1992 and — without waiting for its confirmation
— started to prepare and introduce economically damaging and
freedom endangering measures.
Why
did they do that? They understood that playing the global
warming game is an easy, politically correct and politically
profitable card to play (especially when it is obvious that
they themselves won’t carry the costs of the measures they
implement and will not be responsible for their consequences).
I
don’t see any problem with the climate now, or in the
foreseeable future... We should not deceive ourselves. A
cap-and-trade scheme is a government intervention par
excellence, not a “market solution.” This country, my
country, as well as the rest of the world face many real
issues. We do not need to solve non-existing problems. I
don’t think the real issue is temperature and/or CO2, but a
new utopian vision of the world. We have only two ways out:
salvation through carbon capping or prosperity through
freedom, unhampered human activity, productivity and hard
work. I vote for the second option."
This
week’s poll asks: Should New Zealand agree to
contribute to the cost of climate change adaptation,
mitigation and compensation for developing countries?
Go
to poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.
BBC, Climate
Change help for the poor has not materialized
2.UNFCC, Copenhagen
Draft
3.MFAT, Treaty
Making Process in New Zealand
4. Richard Treadgold, Are
we feeling warmer yet?
5.Vaclav Klaus, Largest
tax increase in world history
Skip to top Skip
to this weeks poll
Send to friend
Your
Comments:
Reader's
comments will be posted on the NZCPR Forum page click
to view >>>
Skip to top Skip
to this weeks poll
Send
to a friend:
|