A new study in Nature magazine has put carbon footprints on the Great Reset, documenting that in order to reach the 1.5°C temp limit of the Paris Accord, the world must accept the equivalent of one lockdown every other year in the next ten years. Published March 3, “Fossil CO2 Emissions in the Post-COVID-19 Era” was written by a team of six scientists, led by University of East Anglia Environmental Sciences Professor Dame Corinne Le Quéré, who is, in addition, both a “fellow” of the Royal Society (FRS), as well as a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE).
“Five years after the adoption of the Paris Climate Agreement, growth in global CO2 emissions has begun to falter,” begins the abstract. “The pervasive disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic have radically altered the trajectory of global CO2 emissions,” meaning, they have shown an unprecedented collapse. In order to continue this trend, what it calls the “contradictory effects” of the desire for post-pandemic investments in fossil fuel-based infrastructure, “must be addressed with new policy choices to sustain a decline in global emissions in the post-COVID-19 era.”
“We need a cut in emissions of about the size of the fall [from the lockdowns] every two years, but by completely different methods,” Le Quéré told the Guardian, implicitly endorsing the imposition of Great Reset and its financial red-lining of all “unsustainable” high-energy investments.