Environmentalism will be the ruin of Germany

The green elites are sabotaging Europe’s most powerful economy.

Good news at last? Europe has managed to replenish its gas reserves. In the first week of the new year, all over Europe, daily gas-storage rates were higher than they were at the same time in 2022. In Austria, for example, the gas-storage rate was over 80 per cent, compared with 33 per cent in 2022. In Germany, it was even higher: 91 per cent compared with 54 per cent last year. This comes as a relief. Especially given that just a few months ago, there was a very real possibility of crippling gas shortages.


Also … The road to eco-serfdom

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What is Trudeau’s game with the politicking over a ‘just transition’?

It will be interesting to see which of Alberta’s two main party leaders is able to make the stronger case in the upcoming election that Justin Trudeau is rooting for her opponent.

The UCP has already been banging the drum of a Notley-Trudeau-Singh alliance, but at this point a credible case can be made that Trudeau prefers the re-election of Danielle Smith and the UCP. How else to explain the federal government’s clumsy and ill-timed announcement of forthcoming “Just Transition” legislation?

Justin is an idiot but a true believer of the BIG GREEN LIE.

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Electric vehicles: carmakers put the brakes on costly revolution

British and European manufacturers are slowing down production of electric vehicles because they are too expensive for the vast majority of motorists, an industry body has said.

The Advanced Propulsion Centre, which disburses taxpayer money to help push the automotive industry to a zero-emission future, said in its latest quarterly review of the market that British factories would produce 280,000 fully electric cars and vans in 2025, out of a total production of 1.1 million.

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Why don’t we ever hear the good news about climate?

Climate-related disasters are killing fewer people than ever.

It has been almost impossible to miss the recent media reports that 2022 was the UK’s warmest year on record. But did you also spot the news that 2022 was another year of exceptionally low climate-related deaths across the world? This good news comes from data from the OFDA / CRED International Disaster Database and was noted by economist Bjorn Lomborg on 1 January. Yet few, if any, mainstream media outlets decided to report it.

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Trudeau gov’t boasts COVID economy killing lockdowns helped Canada hit ‘climate change’ targets

The Canadian ministry responsible for the environment recently boasted that “real progress” was made in hitting its “climate” targets thanks to the COVID lockdowns harshly imposed on Canadians for well over a year by various levels of government.  

Per Blacklock’s Reporter, Canada’s Department of Environment earlier this week claimed that a recent report showed 2020 emissions went down nine percent because of COVID lockdowns. 

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Braid: Trudeau trash talks Alberta climate change action, drawing hot response from Smith

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is either clueless about what’s going in Alberta, or cares nothing for the truth.

That’s the unpleasant choice in his inflammatory remarks about provincial action on climate change.

“One of the challenges is there is a political class in Alberta that has decided that anything to do with climate change is going to be bad for them or for Alberta,” Trudeau said in an interview with Reuters, the business news service with a worldwide audience.

Says the nation wrecking eco-nutbar

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Paul Ehrlich’s war on the poor

Will humanity eventually eat itself?

Just five days after the storming of the Bastille, the Rev. Thomas Malthus rose to the pulpit with the text from the Gospel of Matthew: “whatsoever you wish that others would do to you, do also for them”. He was, by all accounts, a rather dull preacher, and was seemingly unaffected by the tumultuous events of the revolution taking place over in France. Keep calm and carry on could have been his motto. But within a decade he was to publish a book that would make him possibly among the most cancelled men in history, An Essay on the Principle of Population.

Populations grow exponentially, he argued, but food supply grows in a more linear way. And so, at some point there are more people alive than there is food to support them, whereupon there will be some crisis — plague, famine, war — that will reduce the population so that it comes back into line with the amount of food there is to support it. One way of avoiding this is to take preventative measures to reduce the population, including cutting support for the poor so that they are encouraged to have fewer children. As such, Malthus famously opposed the Poor Laws of the 18th century, a primitive form of welfare provision.

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Low-emission zones: are motorists running out of road?

Traffic restrictions are taking over our cities, with little chance of a U-turn. Drivers will have to get used to paying their way, writes Rosie Kinchen

Two days before Christmas is usually a busy time for Dan Lentell, a stay-at-home father in Cambridge. But a fortnight ago, instead of wrapping presents for his children, he was addressing a crowd of hundreds on a park in the city centre and railing against social injustice. “What’s happening is that this is a well-dressed group of people who are shoving poorer people out of the way, like on the Titanic where the rich push past the poor to get to the lifeboats,” Lentell said to cheers.

The cause of his ire was not strikes or the spiralling wealth of the 1 per cent but a proposal from a government body called Greater Cambridge Partnership (GCP) to introduce a £5 charge on all vehicles entering the city centre.

Coming to a city near you!

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Canada ‘committed to remaining competitive’ despite U.S. EV subsidies

Canada’s ambassador to the United States says the federal government should be watching American investments in electric vehicle manufacturing, but wouldn’t give specifics on how it plans to compete with the subsidies offered in the Inflation Reduction Act enacted south of the border.

Kirsten Hillman told CTV’s Question Period host Vassy Kapelos, in an interview airing Sunday, it’s important Canada remain competitive in the electric vehicle market, an arena in which it already has several advantages, including the workforce, expertise, and critical minerals resources. She said experts are working to ensure Canada is ahead of the curve and encouraging investment in the electric vehicles sector, but she didn’t specify how.

I’m old enough to remember when all the EV hurdles were solved between the US and Canada!

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No matter how many turbines we build, no wind means no power

IF A situation contains two opposite facts that seem impossible, that is a paradox. Climate change produced an unexpected example last month when the polar vortex hit the US and Canada. There is a ‘paradox between warming climate and intense snowstorms’, Canadian scientists said, ‘what climate modellers are finding is that climate change involves more frequent extremes.’

What we, the general public, are finding is that whatever weather we suffer will inevitably be blamed on climate change.

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GUNTER: Trudeau’s Just Transition an investment-killing enviro-appeal to green voters

Alberta is about to be plunged into another recession, or at least the Trudeau government is going to do its damnedest to plunge us into one. Their stated goal for kicking the stilts out from under our economy once again (by my count, the third Alberta recession caused by a prime minister named Trudeau), will be to save the planet from climate crisis.

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Randall Denley: Doug Ford is on the path to repeat the doomed green energy plans of the Liberals

There was a time, not long ago, when Ontario Premier Doug Ford seemed skeptical about government’s ability to lead us to an emissions-free future. He was the guy who scrapped the province’s cap-and-trade emissions reduction system, cancelled government subsidies for electric car buyers, fought the federal carbon tax and undermined it by reducing the province’s own gasoline taxes.

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How Green Investors Pay the Media to Promote ‘Climate Change’

AP takes millions from groups leveraged in green investments to promote the need for green investments.

The Associated Press revealed last year that it had scored $8 million to promote claims of global warming. The AP impartially described this massive conflict of interest as an illustration of “how philanthropy has swiftly become an important new funding source for journalism”.

“This far-reaching initiative will transform how we cover the climate story,” its executive editor claimed. That is no doubt true. And an incredibly damaging admission.

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