By Paul Chesser on 2.12.09 @ 6:07AM
The Center for Climate Strategies is on its new solo tour,
playing all the old classics.
A global warming alarmist group that masqueraded for the
last few years as an objective consultant for many states
announced this week that it has been disowned by its global
warming alarmist parents .
Not that that will change anything.
The Center for
Climate Strategies, whose failed track record spreads beyond
the warming mythology, announced its separation last week from
the Pennsylvania Environmental
Council. For a long time CCS hawkers
Tom Peterson and Ken Colburn
(video), while promoting their
climate environoia (video), hid their bond with PEC. Now they
say they were related all along.
To recap, here's how this scheme was birthed. Years ago
PEC, which says it is "a
catalyst for legislative, regulatory and policy change by
public and private decision-makers to advance solutions that are
in the best environmental and economic interests of the
Commonwealth," decided to export its activism outside
Pennsylvania. It created Enterprising Environmental Solutions
(why has its website been taken
down?), which housed CCS, with the
goal (PDF of their tax return) of "form(ing) EESI to carry
out their non-regulatory agenda," as "EESI has their own board of
directors and is controlled by PEC, since PEC is the only member
of EESI." Despite this clear statement, CCS's executive
director Peterson
said, "(EESI) does not have an advocacy mission, and it
doesn't have an advocacy history."
A bit of alphabet soup, but the gist is that Peterson
disavowed CCS's IRS-granted purpose. He also apparently hid the
center's agenda from the states it sought business from.
Peterson, his lieutenant Colburn, and CCS have zipped around the
country to pitch (mostly) governors (or their administrations) on
this premise, in my own paraphrasing:
There is a human-caused global warming crisis and the
states must do something about it, because the federal
government is not. We ask the governor to issue an executive
order that confirms this crisis and creates a commission to
study greenhouse gas emissions -- but call it a "climate
commission." Appoint members who buy into the anthropogenic
global warming crisis, and include some representatives from
utilities and business, but not too many or they might screw
things up. Once you hire CCS, we will take care of everything
for you from then on: run the meetings, set the agendas, write
the meeting minutes, provide technical analysis, maintain the
website, and establish the voting rules. Oh, and the
Rockefeller Brothers Fund and
other global warming alarmist foundations have provided the
funding for our work, so don't you worry! Just let CCS do its
thing.
While Peterson and Colburn have been far from transparent
about their origins (they also
hide how much they get paid), the work CCS does has also been
thoroughly discredited. They
forbade any debate or discussion about global warming
science. As they wooed states out of as much money as they
could (not much, it turns out) to reduce the burden on their
subsidizers -- mainly the Rockefeller Brothers Fund -- they
peddled
incompetent economics (Green jobs! Cost
savings!) in every state
where they
worked. They
could not produce analysis in any state that showed the
effect their policy recommendations would have upon climate --
ostensibly the purpose for their state commissions. And besides
their disregard for recent
observed climatological trends, they continue to promote obsolete
technologies like biofuels, which recent studies show have
increased greenhouse gas emissions rather than reduced
them.
CCS is adrift in the same leaky skiff that their fellow
alarmists are trying to survive in. After the
anomalously heated year of 1998 (thanks, El Nino) groups like
CCS and their fellow environmental activist groups sought big
financial scores, and along with their sugar daddies (familiar
names like the Heinz Foundation, Ted Turner’s foundation, the
Hewlett and Packard Foundations, and the Rockefellers’ many
foundations) built another
bubblicious industry which long ago lost its flavor and can
inflate no more.
Now the deception that the Center for Climate Strategies
has carried out in at least 20 states has been exposed, and all
the more so because of its now-admitted past relationship with
the Pennsylvania Environmental Council. But happy talk of the
"we'll always be friends"-nature marked its separation
announcement:
"This move reflects the great success that CCS has had
working to address the issue of climate change in more than
twenty states," said Paul King, Chair and Interim President of
PEC. "The success that CCS has had is remarkable."
"We are looking forward to continuing our efforts and to
focus more intently on the climate issues at the national
level" said (Tom) Peterson, (president of CCS). "We greatly
appreciate PEC's support of our work over the past several
years."
It doesn't matter, practically. Considering CCS's past
denial of reality, it'll need scrutiny now more than ever.
topics:
Global Warming, Environmentalism