Paul Driessen and
David Wojick, Ph.D.
August 15, 2018
It’s
obscene enough when the Multilateral anti-Development Banks do it. But Trump agencies?!? In
a prime example of Deep State revanchism, despite the profound change
in
administrations, the US Agency for International Development is still
funding
and advancing anti-energy Obama-era climate change dogmas and policies
for
developing countries. USAID handles tens of billions of dollars a year,
roughly
half of all US foreign aid, so this climate alarmism puts literally
millions of
lives at risk. USAID
calls its “flagship” program “low emissions development.” Emissions of
course
means plant-fertilizing, life-giving carbon dioxide – but the term is
intended
to suggest dangerous climate changing pollution. The effect, if not the
intent,
is to deprive poor countries of the enormous life-enhancing benefits of
abundant, affordable electricity and fossil fuels, which created the
health and
wealth Americans enjoy. The
President and Congress need to terminate this poverty-perpetuating
carbon
colonialism – which USAID prefers to describe in this deceptive, eco-virtuous language: “Enhancing Capacity for Low
Emission Development Strategies (EC-LEDS) is a flagship U.S. program
that has
forged partnerships with more than two dozen developing countries from
Colombia
to Indonesia to South Africa to Ukraine committed to and taking
concrete
actions to achieve low emission development. Under EC-LEDS, USAID, the
State
Department and other U.S. agencies work with partner countries to help
develop
tools and analyses to estimate GHG emissions and identify and pursue
the best
options for low emission growth.” In
fact, says the agency, “this new development strategy marks the first
time
climate change will play a central role
throughout the entire agency’s development efforts.” [emphasis added] USAID
itself could never function under the low-emission standards it imposes
on
nations that struggle daily with rampant poverty, disease, malnutrition
and
premature death. Its employees could never run their own homes and
lives under
such standards. They would never tolerate having those restrictions
imposed on them (though this might
be a fascinating
exercise that would bring out their true colors). Eco-imperialist
aid policies did not end with Obama’s exit As
we have noted (here, here and here),
Multilateral anti-Development Banks use similar claims and language to
justify
their eco-imperialist, anti-fossil-fuel policies and lending practices.
But
especially during the Obama era, the State Department, its USAID
operations and
other US government agencies also prevented poor countries from using
oil,
natural gas, coal and modern farming technologies. That
this continues is despicable. That even Trump State Department
representatives
to the 2017 Climate Summit in Bonn, Germany were advancing
Obama policies is intolerable. It
needs to end, now. The
refusal of these “public servants” to be part of the new Administration
is pure
Deep State, guided in part by an Obama
era document,
“USAID Global Climate
Change and Development Strategy 2012-2016.”
Their plan is clearly based on climate alarmism that is increasingly
rooted in computer models
and hysterical claims that bear little resemblance either to global
temperature
trends over the past 20 years or to the actual history of droughts and
extreme
weather over the past century. The document asserts: “Climate change is one of the
greatest challenges of our generation. USAID – as part of the broader
[Obama]
Presidential Global Climate Change Initiative (GCCI) – is addressing
this
challenge in ways that recognize both its severity and the
opportunities clean
economic growth presents to spur innovation and encourage investments
that will
have long lasting environmental and development benefits. If we support
countries to build climate resilience and move towards a ‘low carbon’
economic
growth pathway, we can help provide more stable and prosperous futures
for the
U.S. and for our partners, including new markets for clean technology
and
expansion of the green economy. Alternatively, if we are unable to meet
this
challenge, climate change could jeopardize many of the development
gains the
international community and the U.S. government have worked for decades
to
secure.” The
policy was implemented in 2012. But 18 months after
Mr. Trump was sworn in, current USAID national and regional websites
– as well as the strategy document itself – still say it remains in
effect and
still “guides our work helping countries transition to lasting and
climate-resilient, low-emission economic development.” They say the
policy is “Extended to September 2018,”
and suggest
that the “StratPlan” will be kept in force even if it technically
expires in
September. “Clean
energy activities help countries attract the private investment they
need to
scale up sustainable and cost-effective renewable energy, minimizing
pollution
and keeping pace with today's changing energy landscape,” the documents
claim.
Moreover, the dogma will be “integrated” and implemented across all
USAID
activities: “Integration activities ensure climate change knowledge and
practice is applied, where appropriate, across USAID’s development
portfolio to
protect U.S. investments from unforeseen risks." “Sustainable”
energy thus ties into UN climate alarmism, alleged risks of “imminent
resource depletion,” avoidance of “over-consumption,” and
funding, guiding and imposing policies and programs that limit the
number of
people around the world who might achieve the middle and upper class
living
standards that USAID, UN, IPCC, World Bank and EU technocrats (and
their
environmentalist allies) already enjoy. These
governing elites fear that newly middle class families would want more
stuff: cars,
real houses, refrigerators, stoves, lights, and vacations to exotic
locales now
enjoyed mostly by UAID officials and other climate conference
attendees.
Extending these “privileges” to “middle class wannabes” would require
taking
more resources out of the ground, which would hurt
Mother Earth. Therefore,
these billions of people who have electricity only a few hours a week,
who
“enjoy” life on the edge of the disease and starvation abyss, must be
permitted
to improve their lives only a little; only to the extent that it would
conform
to UN and USAID climate, sustainability and over-consumption
guidelines; only
as much as could be supported by wind and solar energy, subsistence
farming and
bed nets. Trump
USAID Administrator Mark
Green should have
terminated this travesty his first day at the helm. At the very least, he, the White
House and Congress
should now serve notice that it will be rescinded in
toto August 31– and then make sure it is
totally repealed, defunded and shut down September 1. Rescission
must be active, not passive. It must
cover all US and overseas USAID budgets, personnel, strategic plans,
policies,
“guidance” and policy statements, websites and other items that advance
these
climate, sustainability and related agendas. Funds and
personnel should be
reassigned, and Deep Staters complicit in perpetuating the programs
after
January 2017 should be disciplined or let go. The
Foreign Operations Appropriations bills now pending in the House and Senate
provide all USAID funding, and are obvious vehicles for issuing
permanent
pro-energy, pro-people, pro-development rules. Part
2 will examine how these carbon colonialist
policies fail on humanitarian and ecological grounds, and how they use
fabricated threats to justify minimal energy and economic growth for
decades to
come. |
Paul Driessen is a senior fellow with the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death. Read his full bio here. You can contact Paul here. David Wojick, Ph.D., is an independent analyst specializing in science, logic and human rights in public policy, and author of numerous articles on these topics. |
Copyright © Paul Driessen |
aug2018