A leading economist says the world should reject
lies about carbon emissions, pricing them to show the real cost of fossil fuel.
30 May, 2017 — A leading economist says the world should reject
lies about carbon emissions, pricing them to show the real cost of fossil fuel.
We even turn a blind eye to the fact that China
lied about its carbon emissions when it first came to the table with its pledge last year.
Not exact matches
Alberta's NDP government simply
lied to Albertans
about their
carbon tax.
... the source of global resilience
lies within the Indigenous traditional territories, which support
about 80 percent of the world's biological diversity and contain close to a quarter of the
carbon stored above ground in the world's tropical forests (not including the
carbon stored in the soil).
He also suggested people were
lying about severe weather getting worse (it is not), the undeniable benefits of increased
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and a whole array of related facts that, if more widely known, would embarrass climate alarmists.
JimD FYI the very serious problem with Benghazi is the known false cover story (BTW I know a lot
about the specific details of this event) not so bad except for the poor wannabe movie maker they arrested to cover their
lie free speech... once a liberal value I am a «denier» because of my best evaluation of the evidence not because I'm «scared» of a
carbon tax not because I don't like Obama
This would act as a disincentive for firms to
lie about their emissions, and would offer them certainty
about future
carbon dioxide prices.
This route of consideration entails the inference of what we'll call each respective warmist's primary and secondary gain motivating his allegiance to this objectively insupportable (and factually unsupported) damnfool contention
about the adverse effects of anthropogenic atmospheric
carbon dioxide and — much more importantly — the political measures being pushed by each such statist sumbeech in order to allegedly ameliorate the tissue - of -
lies «externalities» nonsensically asserted to be associated with the complete combustion of petrochemical fuels upon which all of industrial civilization depends for its function.
As well as advising partners on the risks and opportunities associated with climate change, he has authored Getting to Zero: Defining Corporate
Carbon Neutrality, which explores a number of the claims of
carbon or climate neutrality that have been made so far and makes a series of recommendations
about what should
lie behind any such declaration, and Making Sense of the Low
Carbon Economy, which provides an accessible overview of the drivers behind the low
carbon economy and explores the potential implications for business in the UK.
That's where his experience
lies, and that's where the rubber meets the road for what to do (if anything)
about fossil
carbon.