*'Climate change' fight has cost you astronomical figure *

6/11/2017

*By Joe Wilson*

WASHINGTON – The U.S. government spent nearly as much fighting “climate
change” between 1993 and 2014 as was spent on the entire Apollo program
between 1962 and 1973, according to a new report.

A May 2017 report from the Capital Research Center (CRS) states that “from
FY 1993 to FY 2014 total U.S. expenditures on climate change amount to more
than $166 billion.”

The total includes more than $26.1 billion from President Obama’s 2009
stimulus bill, as well as regular annual budget amounts and federal tax
credits distributed over a period of 21 years.

In comparison, the U.S. spent $200 billion, adjusted for inflation, on the
Apollo space program, which ran from 1962 until 1973 and flew 17 missions,
including Apollo 11, which put a man on the moon for the first time.
Through the program, the U.S. sent seven men to the moon and back.

The CRS report comes just as President Trump has announced that the U.S. is
withdrawing from the Paris climate accord. Under the agreement, the U.S.
would have been obligated to pay $3 billion to a green fund by 2020, among
other expected contributions.

The report shows that annual expenditures on climate change have increased
490 percent since 1993, and the annual amount going through the U.N. for
combating climate change internationally has climbed by 440 percent.

Most of the money is not going to climate-science research but to control
CO2 emissions based on inadequately tested hypotheses dating to the 1970s.
The amount of money spent on further research and experimentation in
climate science is $42.49 billion, according to the report. It’s little
more than 25 percent of total expenditure on climate change, meaning that
75 percent of the U.S. climate-change budget is dedicated to “efforts to
reduce carbon dioxide emissions and their presumed, but not demonstrated,
effects.”

The U.S. justification for such spending combating CO2 emissions is based
on the 1979 Charney Report, published by the U.S. National Academy of
Sciences (NAS). The Charney Report theorized that if CO2 in the atmosphere
were to double, the earth’s surface temperature would increase by roughly 6
degrees Fahrenheit, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3 degrees.
However, the Charney Report also predicted a more powerful warming trend
caused by an increase in water vapor, earth’s dominant greenhouse gas.

The CRS report states: “In 1979, scientists lacked any comprehensive
measurements of atmospheric temperatures, so the Charney Report’s guesses
could not be confirmed or denied. But to cause this ‘top-down warming,’ the
warming trends in the atmosphere would have to be more pronounced than
surface warming trends.”

That’s because much of the energy from atmospheric warming is lost in
space and doesn’t not affect surface temperature.

Despite the fact that the Charney Report’s data was unconfirmed, it heavily
influenced the 1992 U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
signed by President George H.W. Bush and ratified, with stipulations, by
the Senate. The treaty’s main goal was “stabilization of greenhouse gas
concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous
anthropogenic interference with the climate system.”

The UNFCCC aimed to combat the rise of greenhouse gas, even though
insufficient data had been gathered to confirm the Charney Report’s
hypothesis that greenhouse gases were contributing to global warming.

Meanwhile, “independent researchers have tested the Charney Report’s
hypothesis against atmospheric temperature data, which now extends over 37
years, and found the hypothesis wanting,” the CRS report states.

New methods and equipment have been developed to test the hypothesis, and
the data does not confirm it. As the report declares, “the hypothesis needs
to be modified or discarded.”

However, the U.S. government continues to fund projects based on the faulty
hypothesis.

Although it seems clear that the bulk of U.S. climate-change funding should
go into research so that the actual cause of climate change, as well as its
potential impact can be ascertained, more than $104.25 billion goes to
projects other than scientific research, compared to only $42.49 billion
sent to research projects.

Annual expenditures in research have increased by 200 percent since 1993,
while other climate change-related expenditures have gone up by an
astounding 850 percent. The combined cost of climate-change policy has been
$166 billion from 1993 to 2014.



*http://www.wnd.com/2017/06/climate-change-fight-has-cost-you-astronomical-figure/
<http://www.wnd.com/2017/06/climate-change-fight-has-cost-you-astronomical-figure/>
*


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