Ever since the United Nations decided that combating so-called climate change would become its signature issue in the late twentieth century, it has ratcheted up the rhetoric against carbon dioxide emissions. The UN’s war on greenhouse gases is predicated on the absurd notion that carbon dioxide emissions are the sole driver of the recent warming period and has culminated into what it calls the road to net zero, which it aims to achieve by 2050.
The UN defines net zero as “cutting carbon emissions to a small amount of residual emissions that can be absorbed and durably stored by nature and other carbon dioxide removal measures, leaving zero in the atmosphere.”
In 2015, the UN oversaw the development of the Paris Agreement, which it described as “the beginning of a shift towards a net-zero emissions world.” Eight years later, the UN was not pleased with the pace of the shift and decided it needed to “accelerate action across all areas — mitigation, adaptation, and finance — by 2030, including a call on governments to speed up the transition away from fossil fuels to renewable energy such as wind and solar power.”
There are many problems with the UN’s…
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