The annual reach-around boondoggle has wrapped up, and it accomplished - like all those before it - absolutely nothing.
Not content to having destroyed Germany's economy, climate alarmists have much bigger goals.
Rational people and governments are waking up to the shake down.
COP29, Climate Groundhog Day
Shale fracking does more to reduce CO2 emissions than all the talk in Baku.
The Editorial Board
Nov. 25, 2024 5:46 pm ET
The United Nation’s COP29 climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan, ended this weekend with a promise by wealthy countries to spend $300 billion a year by 2035 to help poorer ones adapt. Was this the ransom for letting high-flying emissaries escape on their private jets?
Like the movie “Groundhog Day,” each U.N.’s annual climate confab is a repeat of the last. Poor countries lambaste wealthier nations for their CO2 emissions. Wealthy countries self-flagellate and promise to atone by financing climate projects in developing countries. That sums up the blowout in Baku.
The U.S. and Europe are hailing the $300 billion deal for climate transfer payments. But like previous commitments, this one isn’t legally binding, and almost any international assistance counts toward the goal. As India’s emissary noted, it’s an “optical illusion.”
In 2009 wealthy countries pledged to spend $100 billion a year as penance for their climate sins. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development took a victory lap in 2022 when wealthy countries supposedly hit that goal, though general development projects backed by multilateral financing agencies accounted for much of the spending.
Poorer countries led by India tried to shame their wealthier counterparts into offering up $1.3 trillion in grants. But rich countries rightly balked at asking their taxpayers to finance climate largesse in low-income countries, especially when they are spending hefty sums trying to meet their own pointless emissions goals.
The West’s self-defeating climate policies have failed to reduce global emissions and may increase them by driving more manufacturing to China, India and other countries that rely heavily on coal. Global emissions are set to hit a new peak this year, though U.S. CO2 emissions are expected to decline 0.6% and Europe’s by 3.8%.
U.S. emissions are declining as cheap and abundant natural gas replaces coal in power production. America’s coal emissions are the lowest in more than 120 years. Increasing renewable production has reduced Europe’s emissions but also raised its energy prices and driven more manufacturing to China.
The reality is that U.S. shale fracking has done more to reduce emissions than the West’s climate mandates and subsidies. This may be why Biden climate envoy John Podesta said he expects U.S. emissions to continue to decline under Donald Trump. By accelerating U.S. liquefied natural gas export projects, Mr. Trump could also reduce global emissions.
But don’t expect this to stop the same climate movie from replaying next year.
EDIT: typo
...given the reality of fracking's declining production, never mind the reality of Global Warming/CC effects, we need to maintain and increase efforts to transition away from Fossil Fuels for heat and power.
...from the attached article...
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This is referred to in shale professional circles as The Red Queen effect, referring to a scene in Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass where Alice learns from the Red Queen that she must run increasingly fast just to stay in the same place. This has turned out to be a fairly apt metaphor for shale production. A report from energy analyst firm, Enervus, to this effect was summarized in a Journal of Petroleum Technology article August, 16th of last year. Dane Gregoris, report author and managing director at Enervus Intelligence Research, was quoted as saying.
“The US shale industry has been massively successful, roughly doubling the production out of the average oil well over the last decade, but that trend has slowed in recent years. The production decline rate has grown steeper at a rate of more than 0.5% annually since 2010. We’ve observed that decline curves, meaning the rate at which production falls over time, are getting steeper as well density increases. Summed up, the industry’s treadmill is speeding up and this will make production growth more difficult than it was in the past.”
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"Drill, Baby, Drill!" is a recipe for catastrophe...
Link: https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Is-US-Shale-Production-Finally-Nearing-Its-Peak.html