When I think of my neighboring state to the north, Wisconsin, I generally reflect on how much I despise the Green Bay Packers. However, more recently, I’ve been watching in abject horror as the Badger State becomes yet another victim of the climate alarmist green transition.
Meet Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, who is certain that climate change is causing doom in his state, despite a total lack of evidence.
According to Evers, “The climate crisis is taking an undeniable toll on the health, safety, and economic well-being of folks across our state. The livelihood of Wisconsin farmers is in danger with extreme and unpredictable weather taking a toll on crops and production, our state’s tourism industry and economy depends on our vast and valuable natural resources, and as health professionals have indicated, the health of our people depends on the health of the environments they live in.”
Based on this false premise, which will be debunked below, Evers has launched an ambitious “Clean Energy Plan.”
“Every Wisconsinite – whether they live in the Driftless, the Central Sands, the Northwoods, or in the heart of our urban areas – has experienced the effects of climate change in one way or another, and reducing carbon emissions and bolstering clean energy opportunities will remain a priority for me as long as I am governor,” Evers declared.
“We don’t have to choose between mitigating climate change and protecting our environment and good-paying jobs and affordable energy. Wisconsin is ready for bold and urgent solutions that will stop treating these goals as mutually exclusive – we can and will do both,” he added.
Under his Clean Energy Plan, Wisconsin will become “100 percent carbon-free by 2050,” fulfill “the carbon reduction goals of the 2015 Paris Agreement,” reduce “disproportionate impacts of energy generation and use on low-income communities and communities of color,” maximize “the creation of, and equitable opportunities for, clean energy jobs,” and prioritize “health equity, environmental justice, and equitable economic development.”
The problem is that this plan would put Wisconsin back into the Stone Age. And it would litter the state’s pristine landscapes with big, ugly, bird-killing windmills and solar panels. It would also cause residents of the Badger State to pay through the nose for electricity and gasoline, if internal-combustion engine vehicles are still allowed in Wisconsin years from now.
The most whacky part of all this climate alarmism and fantasies of a quick and easy green transition in Wisconsin is that the state is thriving due to modest recent warming.
This is not speculation, it is based on empirical data.
As my colleague, Linnea Lueken, notes in a new climate profile of Wisconsin, “According to USDA data, Wisconsin’s corn grain production, which includes corn for human and animal consumption, as well as ethanol production, has increased 45 percent since 1990, and soybean production rose an astounding 477 percent in that same period.”
“Harmful climate change is not evident in Wisconsin’s weather, climate, or agricultural data. Winter temperatures are not quite as cold, which benefits human health, not harms it. Neither flood nor tornado trends are worsening. Modest warming has boosted agricultural output, benefiting Wisconsin farmers and consumers,” the report concludes.
Regardless of these indisputable facts, Evers continues to plow forward with his Clean Energy Plan.
Even if Evers is right, his assertion that his Clean Energy Plan “will improve the reliability and affordability of the energy system” is flat-out wrong.
In “Affordable, Reliable, and Clean: An Objective Scorecard to Assess Competing Energy Sources,” Heartland Institute President James Taylor notes, “Affordable, reliable, and clean are the foundational elements of sound energy policy. An in-depth analysis of seven common electrical power sources reveals that natural gas makes the most sense according to the affordable, reliable, and clean standard, with nuclear, hydro, and coal not far behind. Biomass trails by a moderate margin while wind and solar stand apart as the least desirable power sources.”
Moreover, it must be emphasized that so-called green energy is not good for the environment when the totality of its manufacturing process is taken into account.
In sum, it looks like all is well in Wisconsin. There is no pending climate catastrophe.
The real imminent threat comes from climate alarmists like Gov. Evers, who know that their harebrained green energy transition will make life a whole lot worse for residents of the Badger State while destroying huge swaths of beautiful, untouched land.
