The Funding of Zero Net and Other Climate Change Monstrosities By Richard Miller (London)

The radical climate protest groups seem to be well funded, unlike our side of politics which struggles to get by. So where does the money come from? George Soros? Maybe. But an investigation by the Telegraph, who is good on these things, has uncovered a whole gang of British billionaires who have been bankrolling the zero net mania to the tune of multi-million-dollar donations.

British financier Sir Christopher Hohn has donated more than £670 million to climate issues from his philanthropic fund in less than a decade. He along with Michael Bloomberg, a former New York mayor, have funded the C40 cities network, which are cities who have mayors who agree with radical climate policies, such as seen with London mayor Sadiq Khan, who has called for people to eat less meat, give up their private cars, all in aid of dealing with a supposed climate crisis.

Of course, there is no such crisis, or at least not one in nature, as it is entirely a political construction of the globalist will to power. And they have the funding to push the agenda, with, as discussed below, hundreds of millions of dollars for this and other programs. People may not fully realise the extent of financial power being pulled together here, as these globalists are in the endgame now, and mean business. So, we certainly have a fight on our hands here. But the difficulty is not a reason to take one’s cricket bat and ball and go home (a home which is fast disappearing anyway), but to fight even harder against those in power seeking to dissolve Western civilisation.

https://dailysceptic.org/2023/11/12/extinction-rebellion-billionaire-funds-khan-climate-network/

“Wealthy British financier Sir Christopher Hohn’s multimillion-pound donations to climate campaigns, particularly supporting low-emission zones, come under scrutiny in a report questioning the transparency of funding behind climate policies. The Telegraph has more.

One of Britain’s wealthiest men has been bankrolling the campaign for low-emission zones and has made a £46 million donation to a climate network chaired by Sadiq Khan, the Telegraph can reveal.

Sir Christopher Hohn, a financier whose investments include a stake in the owner of Heathrow Airport, has donated more than £670 million to climate campaigns via his philanthropic fund in less than a decade.

He is one of a handful of billionaires ploughing money into civil society organisations that lobby local and national governments to enact Net Zero or clean-air policies.

Sir Christopher and Michael Bloomberg, a former New York mayor, are “strategic funders” of C40 cities, a global network of nearly 100 mayors of the world’s leading cities who are united in action to confront the climate crisis. 

Mr. Khan, the London Mayor and chairman of the group, which has called for people to eat less meat, give up their private cars and take only one flight every three years.

Since 2013, Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF), co-founded and chaired by Sir Christopher, has given nearly $57 million in grants to C40 cities, and Mr. Bloomberg has donated $45 million to the organisation that he used to chair.

The London Mayor has been the C40 cities chairman since 2021, and a source at City Hall said that its more radical proposals were made before he was in post and were not targets.

CIFF is also a major funder of the Clean Air Fund and has donated more than £17 million to it. The lobby group claims on its website that it “drove the creation or expansion of eight Clean Air Zones (CAZ) in Bath, Brighton, Portsmouth and the London Ultra Low Emission Zone – with the potential to save millions of lives.” …

The funding details are revealed in a report on the Clean Air campaign, seen by the Telegraph, which calls for the public to be included in debates about radical policies.

Its authors, from Together and Climate Debate U.K., say not enough is known about the funding behind organisations pushing through policies that have a major impact on people’s lives. Their report alleges that “undue proximity between billionaires and the centre of political power” excludes the public from conversations.”

 

 

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Friday, 03 May 2024

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