Clintel at Heartland Conference: new terminology in climate debate needed

At the Heartland Conference in Washington, D.C., Clintel highlighted new perspectives on climate science, including the benefits of CO₂-driven global greening and the need for a renewed vocabulary in the climate debate, as presented by Marcel Crok.

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

Marcel Crok

Peter Baeten
Date: 11 April 2026

SHARE:

Last week (April 8 and 9), Clintel attended the 16th International Conference on Climate Change in Washington, D.C., organized by the Heartland Institute. Clintel Director Marcel Crok was one of the speakers at this important annual climate-realist conference. The focus of his presentation was on the significant (positive impact of the) greening of the Earth due to the increased concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere. This greening effect is now undeniable and also has a positive impact on global agricultural yields.

New language and vocabulary are needed

Clintel’s American branch, Climate Intel, led by researcher Forrest Frantz, is also closely monitoring this greening effect and contributed to the data presented. Frantz has also put forward striking suggestions regarding the language used in the climate debate, a topic Marcel also addressed in his presentation. Language plays an enormous role in how people experience the climate debate. Climate alarmists have been using this to their advantage since the beginning of the discussion. Crok and Frantz therefore advocate that the climate-realist side also start using new, more positive terms. As a start, Crok offered six concrete suggestions:

Emissions is replaced by: Restoration of CO2 to the air

Fossil fuels becomes: Natural Organic Energy

Carbon dioxide changes into: CO2, Earth’s Oxygen-of-Life

Climate change becomes: climate (because the climate is always changing anyway)

Greenhouse gas is replaced by: Active IR-effect of CO2

H2O and CO2 emissions from power plants becomes: Atmospheric rivers of life

Watch Marcel Crok’s lecture below:

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

SHARE THIS ARTICLE:

Subscribe to our newsletter

Climate Intelligence Clintel

more news

The Strait of Hormuz Crisis Shows the World Still Runs on Fossil Fuels

The Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most critical energy chokepoints, highlights the continued global dependence on oil and gas. Recent geopolitical tensions have disrupted energy flows, exposing vulnerabilities in global supply chains and triggering emergency responses across Asia. Despite decades of rhetoric about an energy transition, fossil fuels remain indispensable for modern economies, not only for energy but also for agriculture, plastics and pharmaceuticals. The crisis underscores that energy systems are shaped by geography and economics, and that a full transition away from hydrocarbons will be far slower and more complex than often assumed.

March 24, 2026|Categories: News|Tags: , , , , |

The EU’s Nuclear Phase-Out Was a Blunder

Following Friedrich Merz in January, Ursula von der Leyen has now also admitted that the phase-out of nuclear energy was a major ‘strategic mistake’, not only for Germany but for the EU as well. American researcher Roger Pielke Jr. uses some simple calculations to demonstrate the magnitude of the EU’s strategic blunder.

March 23, 2026|Categories: News|Tags: , , , , |
By |2026-04-11T11:20:25+02:00April 11, 2026|Comments Off on Clintel at Heartland Conference: new terminology in climate debate needed
Go to Top