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To: Brumar89 who wrote (71598)8/20/2016 1:43:51 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 86350
 
Greenwashing Has Suddenly Become Very Expensive

Eric Worrall / 5 hours ago August 19, 2016

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

Companies which took the easy route of paying lip service to climate issues, instead of opposing green lies, may be about to pay a high price for their decades of complacency.

According to the WSJ;

Enlist the Market in the Climate-Change Fight

Standardized disclosure of climate risk will help secure long-term value for investors and taxpayers.

Even before the devastating flooding began in Louisiana last week, and we learned that July 2016 shattered all global temperature records, mounting data had demonstrated the growing risks climate change poses to the global economy. Whether you are an investor assessing the $2 trillion in bonds that Moody’s found carry elevated near-term climate risk, one of the nearly two million U.S. homeowners facing significant risk from climate-related flooding, or a U.S. taxpayer staring at $360 billion in direct government costs from extreme weather over the past decade—these threats are looming, large and increasing.

This year’s World Economic Forum Global Risks Report declared the “failure of climate-change mitigation and adaptation” the “risk with the greatest potential impact in 2016.” Yet financial markets suffer from an alarming lack of standardized and comparable climate-risk information, which keeps investors and policy makers from accurately incorporating these risks into their decisions. Combating climate change requires not only leveraging bold action by governments to cut carbon pollution, but also harnessing the power of market forces with clear, uniformly disclosed assessments of climate-related economic risks.

This starts by changing the way the federal government does business. On Friday, the Federal Emergency Management Agency is proposing the first update to federal flood standards in 40 years. These needed changes will reduce the risks and costs of flood disasters, including lost lives and up to hundreds of millions in taxpayer dollars. In coming months, our Housing and Transportation Departments will issue similar, new standards.

Likewise, the administration recently proposed requiring that all companies doing business with the federal government publicly disclose what they know about their climate-risk exposure. This information will be a factor in taxpayer-funded contracting decisions. The administration is also working to increase disclosure of climate risks that America’s more than 140 million pension beneficiaries face in their investments. And we now require that our agencies consider and publicly disclose climate risk when undertaking other major federal actions, like leases of public resources, issuance of permits, and investment in infrastructure.



Read more: http://www.wsj.com/articles/enlist-the-market-in-the-climate-change-fight-1471561052

The World Economic Forum report;

What are the top global risks for 2016?

From the environment to international security and the coming Fourth Industrial Revolution, the World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2016 finds risks on the rise in 2016.

In this year’s annual survey, almost 750 experts assessed 29 separate global risks for both impact and likelihood over a 10-year time horizon. The risk with the greatest potential impact in 2016 was found to be a failure of climate change mitigation and adaptation. This is the first time since the report was published in 2006 that an environmental risk has topped the ranking. This year, it was considered to have greater potential damage than weapons of mass destruction (2nd), water crises (3rd), large-scale involuntary migration (4th) and severe energy price shock (5th).



Read more: https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/01/what-are-the-top-global-risks-for-2016/

The Obama Administration of course is leading the charge, by moving towards requiring private tenders for government contracts to be assessed on how much climate risk information the tenderers submit.

The Federal announcement referenced by the World Economic Forum article;

Making Federal Acquisitions Climate-Smart

MAY 25, 2016 AT 10:00 AM ET BY ANNE RUNG, ALI ZAIDI, CHRISTINE HARADA

Summary: Today, the Administration proposed a rule that would drive greater disclosure of greenhouse gas emissions & climate-related risk data among the Government’s supply chain.

The idiom that ‘you don’t manage what you don’t measure’ holds when it comes to greenhouse gas emissions and climate-related risk.

It’s the responsible thing to do to take steps to understand the sustainability – and challenges – associated with your supply chain; and that’s especially true when you’re the Federal Government and that supply chain exceeds $400 billion per year.

Today’s action does just that.

Today the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council proposed for public comment a rule that would drive greater disclosure in the Federal Government’s supply chain to indicate if and where contractors and vendors publicly disclose greenhouse gas emissions, greenhouse gas reduction goals or targets, and climate-related risks—such as physical risks to operations associated with extreme weather events. The proposed rule puts even more focus on how we manage the Federal Government’s supply chain and the data we need to do that responsibly, and it leverages the Federal Government’s purchasing power to push for this type of unprecedented disclosure Government-wide.

By understanding where larger contractors and vendors that sell goods and services to the Federal Government disclose this information, we’ll be able to better assess supplier greenhouse gas management practices, manage direct and indirect greenhouse gas emission, address climate-risk in the Federal Government’s supply chain, and engage with contractors to reduce supply chain emissions.

Already, individual Federal agencies have started to manage their supply chains in this way. For example, just last month, the Department of Navy requested that its 100 largest suppliers disclose their greenhouse gas emissions and strategies for cutting them. And in 2014, the U.S. General Services Administration factored in greenhouse gas intensity (paired with estimated damages from those emissions) to make multi-million dollar contract awards for domestic delivery services for both air and ground shipments.

There are significant existing demand drivers for disclosure of greenhouse gas emissions and climate-related risk data, including growing calls from investors, insurers, and institutions like the Financial Stability Board. Today’s announcement sends another clear market signal that there is strong interest for disclosure of greenhouse gas emissions and climate-related risk data government-wide.

Anne Rung is the U.S. Chief Acquisition Officer.

Ali Zaidi is the Associate Director for Natural Resources, Energy, and Science at the Office of Management and Budget.

Christine Harada is the Federal Chief Sustainability Officer at the Council on Environmental Quality.

Read more: https://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2016/05/25/making-federal-acquisitions-climate-smart

The Federal Government announcement may be the most immediately damaging. Quite apart from the extra costs, it potentially allows Federal bureaucrats to reject bids which offer best value for money on the basis of a qualitative judgement as to whether the bidder has provided the right “climate risk” information – which may pave the way for more Federal procurement corruption.

But make no mistake. If you run a construction business, or your business is in some other way sensitive to environmental pressure, your compliance and planning costs will likely skyrocket, unless you take steps now to challenge some of the more ridiculous green assertions which will shortly be added to various statutes, such as wild predictions of imminent accelerated sea level rise.

Paying lip service to green issues will no longer protect your business from increasingly damaging compliance requirements based on green fantasies.

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2016/08/19/greenwashing-has-suddenly-become-very-expensive/

Adam Soereg says:
August 19, 2016 at 3:39 pm

This chart tells everything about ‘green or ‘climate change mitigation’ policies. The only result of them: skyrocketing energy costs.



The liberal or so-called ‘progressive’ left has already ruined most of the EU’s economy. Higher energy prices are driving input costs upward, thus making energy-intensive industries uncompetitive. Greenwashing is an option only for big corporations, smaller or medium-sized family owned businesses have a way lower profit margin (and capitalization) so they just simply cannot afford to comply with the new regulations and higher input prices.

Germany and Denmark have the largest installed per capita solar + wind capacity within the EU. German residential energy prices are around 0,33$ per kWh while in Hungary (where you have to search through the whole countryside to find any bird choppers or PV solar panels out there) you have to pay only $0.12.

And EU bureaocrats are forcing Eastern European countries to accept higher mandates for renewable energy. They are also pushing for more regulations on residential building insulation requirements, this will inevitably lead to higher construction costs. The net median monthly earnings in Hungary are around $500 per month, while only 10% of the workforce earns above $850 p.m or $10000 p.a. Most of the people are sitting at home on hot summer days without air conditioning because they can’t afford the equipment & electricity costs. And a bunch of liberal-leftist-elitist types wants to elevate the costs of living even higher? Unbelievable!



To: Brumar89 who wrote (71598)8/22/2016 8:55:19 AM
From: Eric  Respond to of 86350
 
Are TV Meteorologists Finally Embracing The Science Of Climate Change?

August 20th, 2016 by James Ayre

It’s been publicly noted for a long time now that some highly visible television weathercasters count themselves as being “skeptics” on the matter of climate change science.

Considering how publicly visible many of these weathercaster personas are, and how much people trust them even if they have no training in climate science (typically, they don’t), the situation has been recognized by some as a bit of a problem. After all, if “the weather guy” doesn’t believe in anthropogenic and potentially catastrophic climate change, then why should you?

Given the increasingly common “extreme” weather that we’ve been getting these past few years — the ceaseless breaking of heat records, extreme droughts and fires, etc. — is this situation now starting to change? Are weathercasters increasingly embracing the science of climate change?

Perhaps. Peter Sinclair of Climate Denial Crock of the Week seems to think so, noting that at a recent meteorologist conference in Austin, Texas, he spoke to some who had had a change of view over recent years.

Here’s an excerpt from that: “The TV Mets I interviewed were smart, thoughtful, had science training, though not at the PhD level, enough to have begun digging into the data on their own to draw conclusions. Some, like Amber Sullins of ABC 15 in Phoenix, had initially been skeptical, ’10 or 20 years ago,’ she told me. But after doing what a scientist does — ‘… take in the information, question, and research it yourself’ — she came to understand the problem was real. Likewise, Greg Fishel of WRAL in Raleigh, formerly a self-described ‘hardcore skeptic’ — who finally realized that he was only seeking ‘information to support what I already thought’ — began searching independently for answers. Dan Satterfield, of WBOC in Maryland, spent his own money to travel to the high arctic, where he witnessed the change firsthand, as did Fishel.”

TV Meteorologists Warming to Climate Science

Yale Climate Connections

youtube.com

A meteorologist for the Washington Post by the name of Jason Samenow was apparently working on a similar line of thought for an article when queried by Sinclair. Here are a couple of interesting bits from that:

It is perhaps the most frustrating response I encounter as a meteorologist when I write about climate change. It stems from doubts about climate change or the view that it’s a political issue, one that shouldn’t contaminate straight weather reporting.

‘Stick to the weather,’ people say. But climate change is a scientific reality, and it’s one that is modifying the weather in important ways. However, despite overwhelming evidence that climate change is impacting weather, George Mason University’s Center for Climate Change Communication found that only ‘a minority’ of television weathercasters ‘feel very comfortable’ presenting climate change information on air. Most say discussing climate change won’t help their careers. Some fear discussing the role of climate change on weather will upset their viewers — or even newsroom management.

…Greg Fishel, chief meteorologist at WRAL in Raleigh, NC, shifted from climate change doubter to climate change instructor after a long, self-led education. ‘Broadcast meteorologists have the least amount of formal education (on climate change) of all atmospheric scientists,’ Fishel told the Capital Weather Gang. ‘But even though we have the least education, we have most responsibility to educate ourselves so we can educate the public in the right way.’

Interesting. Also worth pointing out is that these media personalities are focused completely on covering the weather, which is notoriously difficult to predict. If they conflate weather with climate, they may initially think that predicting the climate is just as difficult. It is not, as climate is a much more stable matter, and science has developed a strong understanding of the global climate.

After the ceaselessly hot weather, “1000-year floods,” enormous forest fires, disappearing glaciers, and extreme droughts of recent years, I would guess that even the most skeptical out there are starting to have doubts about where things are headed. Belief in anthropogenic causation is another matter, though, and depends much more on a recognition of the authority of the scientific worldview — those who don’t see the current scientific paradigm as being objective truth are much more likely to look for their explanations of events and phenomena elsewhere.

Though it may offend some reading this, I’m actually a bit skeptical that belief in anthropogenic climate change will increase over the coming decades. It may well even decrease, as the disparity grows between what the future has been projected to be by various utopians masquerading as scientists and what it actually becomes. Turning away from the current paradigm and towards alternatives seems likely, as that is, after all, what typically happens in periods of great turmoil — as a look back through the various rises and long, slow, bloody falls of the cultures and civilizations of the past will show.

And once the effects of anthropogenic climate change start hitting in earnest, there will be great turmoil — with falling agricultural yields, mass migration, water scarcity in certain regions, civil and inter-state wars, reduced sanitation, failing medical solutions, and rapidly spreading disease vectors all playing their usual parts.

cleantechnica.com