Canada English2023-09-15T08:47:00+02:00
2910, 2021

BBC’s Fake Climate Audit Screengrab

By |29 October 2021|Canada English, IPCC, News, United Kingdom|

By Stephen McIntyre reposted from Climate Audit On October 18, 2021, BBC (producer Owen Sheers) aired a “conspiracy thriller” entitled The Trick – though a more complete title would have been The Trick… to Hide the [...]

1810, 2021

No signs of a climate emergency for W. Hudson Bay polar bears this year ahead of UN climate meeting

By |18 October 2021|Canada English, News|

Reposted from Dr. Susan Crockford’s Polar Bear Science By Susan Crockford I’ve been told that another complete aerial survey of the Western Hudson Bay polar bear subpopulation (from the Nunavut to Ontario boundaries) was [...]

3009, 2021

New Yorker Magazine Has a Moral Obligation to Open the Climate Debate Before COP26, says Friends of Science Society

By |30 September 2021|Canada English, News, The Netherlands, USA|

In response to a recent podcast by David Remnick with Swedish climate activist Andreas Malm, who advocates sabotage for critical infrastructure that underpins modern society, The New Yorker has a moral obligation to [...]

1609, 2021

Still waiting for two thirds of polar bears worldwide to disappear due to lack of summer sea ice

By |16 September 2021|Canada English, News|

Post by Susan Crockford. Original post here. It’s hard to believe that a polar bear specialist would claim that their predictions have come true, given the facts of the matter: that polar bears arguably [...]

1808, 2021

The IPCC’s attribution methodology is fundamentally flawed

By |18 August 2021|Canada English, News|

by Ross McKitrick – repost from Climate Etc. One day after the IPCC released the AR6 I published a paper in Climate Dynamics showing that their “Optimal Fingerprinting” methodology on which they have long relied for attributing climate [...]

There is no climate emergency

A global network of

1917

scientists and professionals has prepared this urgent message. Climate science should be less political, while climate policies should be more scientific. Scientists should openly address uncertainties and exaggerations in their predictions of global warming, while politicians should dispassionately count the real costs as well as the imagined benefits of their policy measures.

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