Global carbon accounting lets unelected foreign-led NGOs pick winners and losers

.

Americans are increasingly being governed by rules they never voted for, written by people they will never elect, and enforced through systems they cannot challenge. Foreign-led institutions are effectively controlling U.S. domestic environmental policy.

Behind the technical language of “global standards” and “harmonization” are decisions that shape American industry, energy, and cost of living, which are being outsourced to international bodies with zero constitutional accountability. No oversight. No appeal. Yet the consequences are binding.

The International Organization for Standardization has long enjoyed a reputation for the kind of necessary, dry-as-dust neutrality that keeps the world’s gears turning.

TWO CORPORATIONS AND ONE WORKER INDICTED OVER KEY BRIDGE COLLAPSE

From the diameter of a screw to laboratory safety protocols, the ISO has been the invisible hand ensuring that global trade speaks a common language. However, a recent and quiet pivot has seen this body step out of the machine shop and into the halls of global governance. By partnering with the Greenhouse Gas Protocol to “harmonize global emissions accounting”, the ISO is now deciding who gets to stay in the race.

This partnership is sold as a triumph of transparency, a way to declutter the “alphabet soup” of climate reporting. In reality, it represents a profound outsourcing of American economic sovereignty to an unelected international bureaucracy. While ISO standards are technically voluntary, history teaches us that they are “voluntary” in the same way that having a pulse is voluntary for staying alive. Once these frameworks are embedded into international banking regulations, insurance requirements, and federal procurement policies, they become de facto law. For the American business owner, the result is a regulatory regime that was never debated in Congress and cannot be challenged at the ballot box.

The standardized methodology is equally concerning, particularly the fixation on emissions. By requiring companies to account for the carbon footprint of their entire value chain, from the raw materials provided by a distant supplier to the product’s eventual use by a customer, the ISO is mandating a logistical nightmare. It forces businesses to act as private investigators into their partners’ affairs, imposing staggering administrative costs that a multinational corporation might swallow but that will surely choke a small manufacturer in New Mexico or a family-owned energy producer in Texas.

Perhaps most damaging is the insistence on measuring aggregate emissions rather than emissions intensity. Under this global framework, a factory that implements cutting-edge technology to become 20% cleaner per unit of output is still “failing” if it grows its business to meet rising demand. We are effectively telling our most productive sectors that success is a sin and expansion is a liability. It is a system that perversely penalizes the very technological progress it claims to encourage.

One need look no further than my home state of New Mexico’s 2025 Climate Action Plan to see this “standardization” trap in action. Under the guise of Measure B-1, the state has moved to adopt the 2021 International Energy Conservation Code into its administrative framework. While proponents frame this as a common-sense update for efficiency, it is actually the first domino in a sequence that prioritizes global technical alignment over local economic reality. By codifying these international standards, state regulators are bypassing the traditional legislative debate, effectively importing a one-size-fits-all regulatory regime that was never designed with a New Mexican family’s mortgage in mind.

The irony is that the state’s own planning documents acknowledge the friction these mandates create. Even as the Climate Action Plan cites analysis on the “hidden costs” of these building codes, recognizing the risk that a 10% to 20% spike in construction costs could permanently price families out of homeownership, it proceeds to embrace the international metrics that drive those costs. It is a classic bureaucratic double-bind: acknowledging the economic harm with one hand while tightening the global regulatory knot with the other. This is the quiet surrender of state-level common sense to a foreign power.

SCIENTIST WARNS OF ‘CRYPTIC MORTALITY’ THREATS TO WHALES DUE TO SHIPPING ROUTE CHANGES

The United States possesses a unique, diverse energy portfolio that combines traditional resources with nuclear and renewable innovation. A one-size-fits-all global standard, designed in the sterile rooms of international nongovernmental organizations, will inevitably fail to account for these domestic realities. If we allow our climate policy to be dictated by a technical committee in Geneva, we are handing our competitors a road map to outmaneuver us.

Transparency in emissions is a noble goal, but it must be pursued through a scientifically grounded, democratic process that respects the distinction between a technical specification and a political objective. We must decide whether our economic future will be shaped by the needs of American workers and consumers or by a harmonized spreadsheet managed by an unaccountable global elite. Coordination is a virtue, but not when it comes at the cost of our national common sense.

Patrick M. Brenner is president and CEO of the Southwest Public Policy Institute.

Related Content