Category: Climate Cult

Extra Sweater Weather

South Pole posts most severe cold season on record

The average temperature at the Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station between April and September, a frigid minus-78 degrees (minus-61 Celsius), was the coldest on record, dating back to 1957. This was 4.5 degrees lower than the most recent 30-year average at this remote station, which is operated by United States Antarctic Program and administered by the National Science Foundation.

Ach Du Liebe Zeit!

German Coal Plant Runs Completely Out Of Coal

In recent weeks, utilities across Europe have fired up more coal-powered generation as natural gas prices continue to surge.

Even the UK, which has pledged to phase out coal-fired power generation by October 2024, had to fire up earlier this month an old coal plant that was on standby in order to meet its electricity demand. The share of coal in Britain’s electricity mix during some periods in September—albeit below 3 percent—was more than double compared to the below-1-percent share in September 2020.

Have they tried burning solar panels?

Canada’s Future

As Climate Boris gets ready for the climate scam conference in Glasgow, citizens in the UK can look forward to freezing this winter with no Christmas presents, in order to please Greta. Well at least Justin will stay warm when this happens to Canada.

Update: Climate warriors don’t care if you die. Its a good thing we don’t have blockades in Blackie’s Canada.  

Freezing in the dark because of carbon taxes.  What Canadians can expect when Justin is back in power.

Energy=Food

Its not a complicated formula.

Europe’s energy crisis is spreading to the fertilizer industry and threatening the meat sector, risking tighter food supplies and even higher prices. Norwegian fertilizer maker Yara International ASA on Friday said record-high gas prices are hurting its production, and by next week will have curtailed about 40 per cent of its European ammonia output capacity. That comes after CF Industries Holdings Inc. said it’s halting two U.K. plants due to soaring energy costs.

And you’re not going to believe this… a CO2 shortage.

As well as curbing output of fertilizers crucial to feeding the world’s growing population, plant closures could further tighten supplies of carbon dioxide that’s produced as a byproduct. The gas is used to stun poultry and and pigs, and any shortages would be another headache for farms and processors already suffering from a lack of workers. The food sector also relies on CO2 for use in packaging to extend the shelf life of products such as meat and vegetables.

A millstone, not a milestone….

If one were honest about the actual cost of facilities like this one in Iceland, it would become clear that the chattering classes of the western world are incentivizing the digging of holes that not only bury carbon, but literally bury valuable capital as well.

That is less than 1% of the annual emissions of a single coal-fired power plant, according to EPA emissions data and an International Energy Agency report on the technology. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has estimated that, to avoid the worst impacts of global warming, the world needs to remove 100 billion to 1 trillion tons of carbon from the atmosphere by the end of the century.

Keynes may not have imagined this in his wildest dreams.

 

 

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