The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is collaborating with the Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol to create a global emissions accounting system. This development can significantly influence how American companies produce energy, often without public input or oversight.
• The ISO announced a partnership with the GHG Protocol to unify global emissions standards, driven by organizations supported by progressive funding.
• ISO standards, while voluntary, can become mandatory through incorporation into regulations, affecting American companies.
• The GHG Protocol has a major flaw: it measures emissions cumulatively rather than per production unit, potentially penalizing companies that increase production while lowering emissions.
• Companies must report emissions across their entire supply chain, which disproportionately burdens smaller manufacturers, diverting funds from innovation and job creation to compliance costs.
• The process behind these standards lacks transparency, with no public disclosure on decision-making, raising concerns about accountability.
• The merger of these frameworks serves to impose activist policies under a technical guise, potentially undermining U. S. sovereignty and resource management.
The United States must develop its own transparent emissions reporting standards, without succumbing to international frameworks driven by external ideologies. Stakeholders, including workers and manufacturers, should have a role in shaping these standards to ensure fair and informed energy policies.
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2026/04/10/the-carbon-bureaucracy-nobody-voted-for/
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