Are we observing the early stages of worldwide resistance against the constraints of net zero policies?
Investors are ditching renewable energy faster than any other funds on record.
LSEG Lipper data shows this to be the largest-ever quarterly outflow. There was also a 23 percent decline from the end of June of the total assets under management in the sector—now valued at $65.4 billion.
It is not just investors who are exiting net zero. Politicians are also raising concerns.
His position is that net zero is a “soundbite” and “totally insane.” It is unachievable because people will starve if it is enforced.
“Almost everything we grow, we make, we do in our society relies on the use of fossil fuels,” he said.
Patrick Moore, the co-founder of Greenpeace agrees.
Governments Across the World Bucking the Net Zero Trend
Politicians around the world are also raising concerns.UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has delayed banning new petrol and diesel cars and residential gas heating until 2035. This has been previously delayed twice with deadlines moved from 2025 to 2030.
France’s President Macron has said that gas boilers will not be banned. He has also been shy about declaring a date for phasing out fossil fuels.
The polls are showing that New Zealand’s government is heading for opposition in this weekend’s election.
The taxing of livestock for methane emissions and transforming sheep and cattle farms into pine plantations has caused a revolt among rural voters.
In the Netherlands, the Farmer-Citizen movement is the dominant party in the Dutch Senate and every provincial assembly.
Germany is planning to resurrect its coal plants and some of Germany’s large corporations such as Volkswagen, Siemens, and BASF are leaving their homeland for better business climates after the increasing local cost of pushing for net zero.
U.S. presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. believes that real environmentalism is about protecting natural habitats, sustaining ecosystems, and reducing pollution and deforestation. It’s not about net zero, he said.
That is the equivalent of 243 coal power plants with China now accounting for around 30 percent of global CO2 emissions.
Even in the European Union, there is a shift of voters turning away from Green parties and towards those with an anti-EU sentiment.
According to Politico, one reason is voter attitude towards climate transition policies.
Back in Australia, geologist, Professor Ian Plimer has been vocal in his criticism of net zero.
He told ADHTV that, “The fundamentals of science are you do not tamper with the original evidence. That has happened with our temperature record, where the past has been cooled and it makes it look as if we’re warming. That is fraud.”
Senator Ralph Babet told the Australian Parliament that net zero is a “complete and utter scam, designed to shut down our nation, enrich predatory globalists, and the CCP.”
There are still some who cling to the net zero mission, however.
Former UK PM Theresa May wrote on X (formerly Twitter), “Net zero isn’t a cost to be minimised—it’s the growth opportunity of the century, worth 1 trillion pounds to British business by the end of the decade.”
But investors aren’t buying it.
However, if there is a change of president in 2024, Pontillo may need to rethink this statement.