Hamilton Journal News

Did Glasgow climate summit deliver ‘blah, blah, blah’?

- Pat Buchanan Patrick J. Buchanan writes for Creators Syndicate.

At the end of the first week of the Glasgow climate summit, 100,000 protesters marched to denounce the attendees as phonies who will never honor their commitment­s to curb carbon emissions.

Despite pledges by 100 nations to reduce methane emissions by 30% by 2030, and by 20 nations, including the U.S., to end financing of new internatio­nal fossil-fuel power plants, teenage climate superstar activist Greta Thunberg says the COP26 summit is a con:

“Two weeks of business as usual, blah, blah, blah!” Thunberg has a point. Commitment­s made in Scotland are not binding upon government­s that, be they autocratic or democratic, do not subordinat­e their national interests to pledges ostentatio­usly made in global forums.

This Glasgow summit calls to mind the Kellogg-Briand Pact, which won a Nobel Peace Prize for Secretary of State Frank

Kellogg.

On Aug. 27, 1928, 15 High Contractin­g Parties signed on to renounce war as an instrument of national policy. The signatorie­s that day were the United States, Britain, Germany, Italy, Japan, France, Poland, Belgium, Czechoslov­akia, Canada, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland and India. Within 15 years, all 15 nations, Ireland alone excepted, were ensnared in the greatest war in history.

Like the pledges at the climate summit, the Kellogg-Briand Pact provided for no means of enforcemen­t or sanctions against nations that failed to live up to their commitment.

Consider. China is the world’s largest emitter of carbon emissions, Russia the fourth largest, and Brazil the seventh largest worldwide.

Yet President Xi Jinping of China, President Vladimir Putin of Russia and President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil did not show up at the summit. And President Joe Biden of the United States and Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain both fell asleep during the proceeding­s.

Glasgow is destined to fail because national interests invariably triumph over globalism.

The demands of the people who keep regimes in power will be heard and heeded before the claims of the transnatio­nals.

Biden, faced with a threat by Sen. Joe Manchin to sink his Build Back Better bill, summarily dropped a measure that would have imposed rising carbon taxes on fossil fuel plants and provided monetary rewards for clean energy facilities. Biden dropped it because his own and his party’s fortunes depend on enacting the legislatio­n.

The protests in Scotland this weekend were far more colorful than the yearlong “yellow vest” protests in France. Yet, the French protests proved more effective and successful.

That movement originated with French motorists from rural areas who had long commutes and were protesting an increase in fuel taxes that was real and immediate. The French protests had a specific goal, and they succeeded in bringing about a reduction in the fuel taxes.

“King coal is dead!” we heard from the summit.

Really? Coal is a foundation­al resource in Asia, and demand for coal grows as the population­s and economies of Asia expand.

Coal accounts for 60-65% of the electricit­y generation in China and 68-73% in India, two nations that represent more than a third of the world’s population. Nations such as Australia depend upon the sale and shipment of coal as essential components of their exports . ...

These gatherings are to determine how much in reparation­s the latter can extort from a conscience-stricken West.

Will the GOP reject the shakedown?

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