Allure Massage

Carney is as climate crazy as Guilbeault

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
14,403
2,370
113
Ghawar
For a decade, he has pushed Greta Thunberg's agenda on the world's largest financial institutions. He won't let electoral politics stop him

Matthew Lau
Mar 19, 2025

Having left his gig as UN Special Envoy for Climate and Finance to lead the federal Liberal government, Mark Carney is now in a position to focus his and Greta Thunberg’s global climate crusade squarely on Canada. The crusade, Carney boasted back in 2021 while in his previous role, is worth many trillions of dollars. As he told CBC News at that year’s UN climate conference, “We have banks, asset managers, pension funds, insurance companies from around the world — more than 45 countries — and their total resources, totalling US$130 trillion” dedicated to transitioning the world’s economy away from fossil fuels. That dollar figure is higher than global GDP.

Last month, Carney laid out Canada’s required contribution to his climate ambitions: “Canada must invest $2 trillion by 2050 — about $80 billion per year — to become carbon competitive and achieve Net Zero. However, investments in decarbonisation currently run between $10–20 billion annually.” The implication is that another $60-70 billion a year will need to be wrung out of Canadian businesses and consumers, either through direct taxation and government spending or with regulatory browbeating to push Canadians’ savings and investments into global warming initiatives.

Carney has made no effort to hide his agenda to browbeat businesses into joining his and Greta Thunberg’s climate crusade. In a 2021 interview he declared, “We need a sustainable economy, and is your business aligned with that? Are your hiring practices consistent with that? Are you developing people in a way that’s consistent with that? Ultimately, what’s being asked of businesses when it comes to climate is, do you have a plan for net-zero? Canada has a legislated objective for net zero alongside another 130 countries.”






“A Swedish teenager,” Carney continued, referring to Thunberg, “can figure out the carbon budget and that we have less than 10 years and you have to get to net-zero to stabilize it and if you’re a company and you have purpose, well, what’s your plan? And all these plans need to come together.”

This is utter insanity: under Justin Trudeau Canada suffered rapidly declining business investment and now his successor wants the country’s business leaders to take financial planning directives from Greta Thunberg.

While the federal government barrels down the road to net-zero impoverishment for Canada, everyone else is looking for the exit ramp. In January, six of the largest U.S. banks — JPMorganChase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley — quit the Carney-led net-zero banking alliance. Canada’s Big Six Banks — RBC, TD Bank, BMO, Scotiabank, CIBC and National Bank — have quit the initiative as well.

Even Europe is beginning to back off on government piling climate obligations onto businesses in the name of fighting global warming. As the Wall Street Journal reports, the EU is watering down its climate accounting policies “amid pushback from member states and companies within the bloc over the new rules, which they say would have increased costs and reduced the competitiveness of their business.” Specifically, regulations previously scheduled for this year would have forced companies “to report in detail on their environmental, social and corporate-governance performance while making significant cuts to the emissions from within their supply chain.”

The EU is now dropping, weakening or postponing many of these climate regulations, so that businesses will be able to better “grow, innovate, and create quality jobs.” This is effectively an admission that piling climate obligations and environmental reporting mandates onto businesses prevents them from growing, innovating and creating good jobs.

Unfortunately, Mark Carney is all about climate obligations and reporting mandates. The road Canada is currently marching down for climate-related financial disclosures is based on a framework proposed by a task force Carney initiated in 2015. His aforementioned Thunberg-praising interview was not with an environmental journalist, but with Pivot Magazine, which is published by CPA Canada, the accounting industry’s national association. “We cannot get to net-zero without proper climate reporting,” he insisted, speaking of the need for “one core global standard” for climate accounting and reporting.

A global climate reporting standard to help push trillions of dollars — yes, trillions with a “T” — from Canadian workers and taxpayers into Mark Carney and Greta Thunberg’s climate crusade? After a decade of Justin Trudeau’s ruinous policies weakening Canada from coast to coast, there could be little worse for the country and its economy than a Liberal government led by Mark Carney.

 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
14,403
2,370
113
Ghawar
For some time I thought Carney though a climate change hypocrite would
nonetheless make a better PM than Trudeau when it comes to Canada's
climate and energy policy. Now I wonder if I could be wrong. Trudeau as PM
was an airheaded bimbo who jumped on the climate bandwgon to appease
climate sheeple voters. Carney certainly comes across as the more intelligent
climate zealot who would turn out to be more likely to implement zero-emission
policy for real.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
'I am part of her movement': PM's COP26 adviser Mark Carney hails Greta Thunberg

12 November 2021
James Morris

Mark Carney has hailed Greta Thunberg, telling LBC he considers himself as part of the "social movement" that the teenage climate activist started.

Mr Carney, the former Bank of England governor, has been Boris Johnson's finance adviser at the COP26 climate change summit in Glasgow.

Ms Thunberg, 18, has been a vocal critic of Mr Johnson, saying his climate plans amount to nothing more than "blah, blah, blah". She has also been part of COP26 protests in the Scottish city this month.

But Mr Carney, speaking to LBC's What Next? with Lionel Barber podcast, praised the "incredible" activist.

The 56-year-old said "I would say I see myself as part of the social movement", though he conceded young activists "at the vanguard of the social movement might see me as being farther behind".

Mr Carney said he gives "absolutely full credit" to Ms Thunberg "who I've had the pleasure of meeting several times and who absolutely has catalysed that movement, the youth movement".

He said that often in finance, "very obvious truths are not fully understood" and that Ms Thunberg has "done something incredibly valuable" in "hammering home" the message about the carbon budget.

"How small it was, how rapidly it was being depleted – and we've moved in a few short years, in part because of her, from a world of… broader conversations around sustainability, to a relentless focus on net zero.

"It's called the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero for a reason, because we've moved to the relentless logic of having to get emissions down, consistent with the carbon budget."

The key aim of COP26 has been to get countries to commit to achieving net zero emissions by 2050, in order to limit global temperature rises to 1.5C. For context, previous climate change action plans would result in warming above 3C.

Mr Carney, meanwhile, praised the UK's approach to the vital climate change summit, in particular Chancellor Rishi Sunak's policy, announced last week, to force finance firms and large companies to publish next zero plans from 2023.

"When I look at the UK approach, there's much to commend [in] it.

"The Chancellor stood up last week in Glasgow and said 'listen, we're going to require companies, large listed companies, to have net zero plans'. Absolutely essential to be done. Candidly, I would have expected that would take another two, three, maybe four years for that to happen in the major economies. UK leading the way.

"That will put UK companies and UK pension funds, investors [and] banks in a better position relative to others. So, it may not be perfect, but it's – from where I sit and I observe the rest of the world – pretty good."

 
  • Like
Reactions: The Oracle

Lenny59

Well-known member
May 25, 2023
679
737
93
Yes, these guys are obsessed with Canada's minuscule carbon emissions but won't say a peep about China and India.
 
Toronto Escorts