Did globalist billionaire Bill Gates say the quiet part out loud for the climate change hoax?
Although Gates is among the biggest funders of the climate agenda, he admitted “there’s a lot of climate exaggeration.”
Gates told The New York Times: “There’s a lot of climate exaggeration. The climate is not the end of the planet. So the planet is going to be fine… and no temperate country is going to become uninhabitable,” WLTReport noted.
WATCH:
In a surprise twist, Bill Gates calls out "climate exaggeration," says there's a lot of alarmism happening.
"No temperate country is going to become uninhabitable."
Thoughts? pic.twitter.com/wjwyfzZNza
— Young Americans for Liberty (@YALiberty) October 12, 2023
“This clearly shocked The New York Times interviewer, as can be heard in his voice after Gates makes his startling claim. Additionally, the independent media didn’t fail to notice Gates’ backpedaling on the issue,” WLTReport added.
Despite his comments, Gates continues funding climate hoax initiatives such as carbon capture.
Fortune reports:
Instead of unproven methods like planting trees, Gates said he prefers carbon taxes as ways to fund future green technologies, in particular carbon capture, which aims to take CO2 out of the atmosphere.
Although he acknowledged that in most cases large fossil fuel and electricity companies would pass those costs on to consumers, making it a politically unpalatable policy for elected officials.
“If you try to do climate things by brute force you’ll sometimes get people that say, ‘Hey I like climate. I’m for climate. I don’t want to bear that cost and reduce my standard of living.’”
Notice how Gates said ‘planting trees’ is an unproven method.
Trees absorb carbon dioxide.
It’s an elementary school concept.
Bill Gates said planting trees to solve nonexistent climate change is “nonsense.”
“I don’t use some of the less proven approaches,” Gates said at the New York Times’ Climate Forward summit.
“I don’t plant trees,” he added.
“Some people would even say that if you plant enough trees it would take care of the climate issue altogether,” the reporter commented.
“And that’s complete nonsense,” Gates said.
“Are we the science people or are we the idiots?” he asked.
“Which one do we want to be?” he added.
WATCH:
"Are We Science People or Are We the Idiots?"
Bill Gates Says Planting Trees to Solve Climate Crisis is Nonsense. pic.twitter.com/j5Pn6fAOBo
— Doni 🤓🏴🏴☠️ (@DoniTheDon_) September 30, 2023
Bill Gates declared it's 'complete nonsense' to think planting trees will solve climate change. 'Pro-tree' Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff accused him of going on a 'tirade.' https://t.co/auYwUILZVM
— Insider Business (@BusinessInsider) September 28, 2023
Insider reports:
Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, who has put $300 million toward planting trees to address climate change, took offense.
Benioff called New York Times climate reporter David Gelles to criticize Gates’ opinion.
“I couldn’t really understand why he was going on this tirade,” Benioff told Gelles. “Number one, we all have to go net zero. And number two, we have to plant a trillion trees.”
Benioff has been outspoken in the past about corporate climate responsibility — and the best ways to reduce carbon footprints.
“We think every company should be focused on how to sequester the carbon that they’re creating, Benioff told Insider in 2019. “It’s not that hard. We can all do it very easy.”
He was a strong advocate for planting trees then, too.
“The one that we directly have in the most actionable form is more trees,” Benioff said. “You can have 205 gigatonnes of carbon sequestration for every trillion trees. We need more trees.”
Maybe there’s another reason Bill Gates thinks planting trees is nonsense.
Gates has funded an initiative to reduce carbon emissions and fight so-called global warming by chopping down and burying trees.
Bill Gates is now funding a company that wants to CUT DOWN 70 million acres of trees and bury them underground.
Why?
To stop climate change of course.
This is madness.
— illuminatibot (@iluminatibot) October 9, 2023
From the U.S. Department of Agriculture:
Trees also store carbon dioxide in their fibers helping to clean the air and reduce the negative effects that this CO2 could have had on our environment. According to the Arbor Day Foundation, in one year a mature tree will absorb more than 48 pounds of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and release oxygen in exchange.
So next time you take a deep breath of air give credit to a tree or hug a tree in thanks for what it gives us – the very air we breathe.
However, Gates helped bankroll Kodama Systems in a “stealth effort to bury wood for carbon removal.”
“Bill Gates and other investors are betting Kodama Systems can reduce carbon dioxide in the air by chopping down and burying trees, which has raised $6.6 million in seed funding from Bill Gates’ Breakthrough Energy and others,” Crossroads with Joshua Philipp noted.
“Scientists say, ‘burying trees can reduce global warming as well.’ I don’t know where they’re finding these scientists, by the way. To help address the problem, the U.S. Forest Services aims to thin out 70 million acres of Western forest, mostly in California over the next decade, extracting more than 1 billion tons of bone-dried biomass,” Philipp said.
“Normally, when you cut down trees, when you’re a lumberjack, when you have a lumber company, you’re selling the lumber to build houses, people buying from Home Depot or whatever. They’re arguing that they want to, rather than sell the timber, take all that wood and just bury it, because they’re saying that that is a better solution. And so in other words, this is a business, because they’re getting money to create carbon offsets, and this is what Bill Gates is financing,” he added.
WATCH:
Scientists say, "burying trees can reduce global warming as well." I don't know where they're finding these scientists – Watch more on Josh's analysis of Bill Gates' agenda to chop down forests.
WATCH 👉 https://t.co/74jZAUXtTt pic.twitter.com/ULpaVyGiet
— Crossroads with Joshua Philipp (@crossroads_josh) August 30, 2023
MIT Technology Review reports:
A California startup is pursuing a novel, if simple, plan for ensuring that dead trees keep carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere for thousands of years: burying their remains underground.
Kodama Systems, a forest management company based in the Sierra Nevada foothills town of Sonora, has been operating in stealth mode since it was founded last summer. But MIT Technology Review can now report the company has raised around $6.6 million from Bill Gates’s climate fund Breakthrough Energy Ventures, as well as Congruent Ventures and other investors.
In addition, the payments company Stripe will reveal on Thursday that it’s provided a $250,000 research grant to the company and its research partner, the Yale Carbon Containment Lab, as part of a broader carbon removal announcement. That grant will support a pilot effort to bury waste biomass harvested from California forests in the Nevada desert and study how well it prevents the release of greenhouse gases that drive climate change.
It also agreed to purchase about 415 tons of carbon dioxide eventually sequestered by the company for another $250,000, if that proof-of-concept project achieves certain benchmarks.
“Biomass burial has the potential to become a low-cost, high-scale approach for carbon removal, though there is a need for further investigation into its long-term durability,” said Joanna Klitzke, procurement and ecosystem strategy lead for Stripe.
For the last several years, Stripe has pre-purchased tons of carbon dioxide that startups aim to eventually draw out of the air and permanently sequester, in an effort to help build up a carbon removal industry. It has also helped establish a different model for counteracting corporate climate emissions that goes beyond simply purchasing carbon credits from popular offsets projects, such as those that involve planting trees, which have come under growing scrutiny.
A handful of research groups and startups have begun exploring the potential to lock up the carbon in wood, by burying or otherwise storing tree remains in ways that slow down decomposition.
Watch the complete interview with Bill Gates below: