GOP ‘RINOs’ Consider Attending Big Globalist Climate Shindig – Morano responds: ‘The U.S. does not need ‘a seat at the table’ at the UN climate summit, we need to knock the table over”
“Leave it to ‘Mitt Romney’ style Republicans like Sen. Curtis to try to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. … The UN climate agenda and the UN’s COP30 meetings should be disbanded, not given credibility by GOP senators,” Marc Morano, author and Climate Depot executive editor, told the DCNF.
“This is a pathetic throwback to the pre-Trump Republicanism of George H. Bush, George W. Bush, John McCain, and Mitt Romney. … The UN climate agenda has quite literally overseen the outsourcing of the West’s once dominant industries to China, India, and the developing world. The U.S., Canada, and Europe have boasted about emission accounting tricks, while China builds two new coal plants a week and benefits from the West’s attempts at a ‘green transition.’ The U.S. does not need ‘a seat at the table’ at the UN climate summit, we need to knock the table over.”
‘Congrats, strong UK climate policy: #1: Highest electricity price for industries in developed world’
Congrats, strong UK climate policy: #1: Highest electricity price for industries in developed world #2: Second-highest electricity price for households in developed world (after Germany)https://t.co/Hv2hU65FKghttps://t.co/Ob0jyxcfUU (w/o paywall) https://t.co/EZKk4OQa79 pic.twitter.com/OktwVCMC9V — Bjorn Lomborg (@BjornLomborg) October 9, 2025
UK Sunday Times reveals climate deception! Global banking ‘staying the course on climate action’ – World Bank & IMF ‘have been keeping quiet about it, but green funding has continued to flow under the radar’ – ‘Climate finance from the multilateral development banks…hit a record $137 billion in 2024’
The World Bank and International Monetary Fund are holding their annual meetings in Washington DC this week. Much of the discussions there will concern how to keep climate finance going in a hostile political environment. They’ve been keeping quiet about it, but green funding has continued to flow under the radar.
In fact, climate finance from the multilateral development banks – the World Bank, European Investment Bank, Asian Development Bank, etc – hit a record $137 billion last year, up 10 per cent on the year before. As Ambroise Fayolle, vice-president of the European Investment Bank, put it, these organisations are “staying the course on climate action”.