The Great UN Climate Con

The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), signed at the Rio Earth Summit on June 12, 1992, is not just another communiqué. Unlike the Paris Agreement, which the U.S. joined by executive action and designed specifically to avoid Senate ratification, the 1992 framework went through the Senate and still anchors U.S. participation in the UN climate regime. That’s why it has more staying power than virtuous pledges. President Trump should begin the formal process to end U.S. participation in the 1992 framework itself, writes Matthew Wielicki.

Climate Intelligence (Clintel) is an independent foundation informing people about climate change and climate policies.

Matthew Wielicki
Date: 26 September

SHARE:

Global elites have spent three decades telling us “climate is a global problem, so only global solutions will do.” That framing didn’t appear by magic. It was written into U.S. law when President George H. W. Bush signed the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) at the Rio Earth Summit on June 12, 1992, and the U.S. Senate gave its advice and consent on October 7, 1992. Bush then signed the instrument of ratification on October 13, 1992, making the U.S. the first industrialized nation to ratify the treaty.

Most people have never read what that treaty actually says. The UNFCCC’s “ultimate objective” is to stabilize greenhouse-gas concentrations at levels that “would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system.” That sentence became the North Star for everything that followed: Kyoto, Copenhagen, Paris, and the sprawling COP process… with little success.

Before “DEI” became a campus and HR mantra, equity was written into U.S. climate policy through this Senate-ratified treaty. The treaty’s guiding principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities,” which tells developed countries to “take the lead” and makes climate finance from rich countries to poor countries a standing expectation. Over the years, that principle evolved into the $100-billion-per-year climate-finance pledge and the Green Climate Fund machinery.

Here’s why that matters now. The UNFCCC is not just another communiqué. Unlike the Paris Agreement, which the U.S. joined by executive action and designed specifically to avoid Senate ratification, the 1992 framework went through the Senate and still anchors U.S. participation in the UN climate regime. That’s why it has more staying power than virtuous pledges.

I’ve warned for years about how this architecture hard-codes confirmation bias into climate assessment and policy. In “Confirmation bias within the IPCC,” I show how the Panel’s mission is framed around identifying risks and “future risks,” not weighing benefits like CO₂ fertilization or the measurable drop in climate-related mortality with development. The result is a one-way ratchet toward alarm, regulation, and wealth transfers… while neglecting the gains from energy abundance.

Likewise, in my public comment urging EPA to reconsider its Endangerment Finding, I catalog the observational record that undercuts crisis headlines: robust global greening under higher CO₂, flat or mixed trends in normalized disaster losses, and the overwhelming role of adaptation. Readers who want receipts can start there.

And when DOE’s recent climate review landed, I walked through how it challenges the popular script on extremes and model performance… again emphasizing observations over virtue signaling.

Today, as President Trump addresses the U.N. General Assembly in New York, there’s a perfectly concrete step he could encourage: begin the formal process to end U.S. participation in the 1992 framework itself. The treaty explicitly provides a withdrawal mechanism: a country may notify the U.N. and, one year later, the exit takes effect. If the Paris executive pledge could be reversed, this Senate-ratified foundation can be lawfully revisited as well.

If you care about evidence-based climate policy and American self-government, everything starts here… with the text the Senate actually ratified in 1992 and the bureaucracy it empowered.

Subscribe to unlock the full analysis below, including exactly what the 1992 treaty says, how it locked in the UN/IPCC confirmation-bias loop, and a concrete roadmap for Congress and the White House to unwind it. You’ll also get access to 400+ data-driven posts that separate measurements from messaging at IrrationalFear.com.

Climate Intelligence (Clintel) is an independent foundation informing people about climate change and climate policies.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE:

Subscribe to our newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter

Climate Intelligence Clintel

more news

A review of The Frozen Climate Views of the IPCC, part 1

Clintel has analyzed IPCC’s Assessment Report 6 (AR6) and has published an important report on it, entitled: The Frozen Climate Views of the IPCC. It’s a report that provides many serious criticisms of the work carried out by the IPCC. Here you find part 1 (of 2) of a review of this important work by Clintel recently published by the French website: Climat et Vérité.

March 2, 2026|Categories: News|Tags: , , , , |

Yet more proof that Mother Nature is far worse than man-made climate change

New research suggests that prolonged natural drought — not ecological self-destruction — played a decisive role in the cultural transformation of Easter Island. Using hydrogen isotopes preserved in leaf wax, scientists reconstructed centuries of rainfall data, revealing a severe 16th-century drought that challenges the popular narrative of human-driven collapse.

February 27, 2026|Categories: News|Tags: , , , , |

Clearing up some misconceptions about the DoE report

After environmental groups sued to halt a critical Department of Energy climate report, accusations of secrecy and political bias quickly followed. Ross McKitrick responds by challenging what he calls widespread misconceptions about the project, defending its transparency, scientific grounding and editorial independence.

By |2025-09-30T11:46:50+02:00September 26, 2025|Comments Off on The Great UN Climate Con
Go to Top