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CO₂ Can Cause Cooling Too? Climate Models Say Yes (Sometimes)

By |2026-03-29T11:59:43+02:00March 30, 2026|

As Dr. Matthew Wielicki dryly put it: “Is there anything CO₂ can’t do?” The study behind that remark claims that rising CO₂ levels may even lead to regional cooling under certain conditions—highlighting just how flexible—and uncertain—climate model outcomes can be.

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AI accurately reconstructs temperatures across Antarctica

By |2026-03-18T08:05:14+01:00March 18, 2026|

Artificial intelligence is increasingly being applied in climate science, with mixed results so far. A new study, however, suggests that deep learning can successfully reconstruct Antarctic surface temperatures despite limited observational data. By combining sparse measurements with reanalysis datasets, the researchers claim to achieve high accuracy—offering new insights into long-term temperature trends across the continent.

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New study finds low CO2-sensitivity again

By |2026-03-16T15:00:37+01:00March 16, 2026|

A new paper by Frank Stefani compares solar variability and CO₂ emissions as drivers of global sea surface temperatures. Using the solar aa geomagnetic index alongside CO₂ data, the study estimates a transient climate response (TCR) of about 1.1–1.4 K, near the lower end of the IPCC range. The results align closely with other observation-based estimates and highlight the continuing scientific debate about the relative roles of solar activity and greenhouse gases in recent climate change.

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Javier Vinós à propos de l’éruption du Hunga Tonga et de ses effets climatiques extraordinaires

By |2026-03-04T22:09:54+01:00March 4, 2026|

Lors d'une récente conférence ICSF/Clintel, le Dr Javier Vinós a soutenu que l'éruption du Hunga Tonga le 15 janvier 2022 était la principale cause des anomalies climatiques mondiales extraordinaires de 2023-2024. Il les décrit comme le premier véritable événement climatique mondial pluriannuel sur près de 80 ans, largement mal interprété par les analyses dominantes.

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La télévision suisse tente de réfuter les climatosceptiques et échoue

By |2026-03-04T17:21:11+01:00March 4, 2026|

L'équipe éditoriale du programme météorologique suisse SRF Météo a tenté d’exposer les « arguments des climatosceptiques » comme étant faux. Cependant, ce qu'elle présente comme le prétendu « état des connaissances scientifiques » ne résiste pas à la vérification des faits.

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Javier Vinós on the Hunga Tonga Eruption and its extraordinary Climate Effects

By |2026-03-03T17:04:53+01:00March 4, 2026|

In a recent ICSF/Clintel lecture, Dr. Javier Vinós argued that the January 15, 2022 Hunga Tonga eruption was the main cause of the extraordinary global climate anomalies of 2023–2024. He describes them as the first genuine multi-year global climate event in roughly 80 years, widely misinterpreted by mainstream analyses.

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Judge Rejects Climate Dogma, Begins to Restore Integrity

By |2026-02-23T11:22:42+01:00February 23, 2026|

In a significant move for scientific accountability, a U.S. federal judge has removed a controversial climate change chapter from a key judicial reference manual. The decision challenges the dominance of model-based climate narratives in the courts and signals a renewed emphasis on empirical evidence and institutional integrity.

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Warum kühlt sich der Südliche Ozean ab? Drei neue wissenschaftliche Erklärungen stellen Klimamodelle in Frage

By |2026-02-16T14:54:26+01:00February 16, 2026|

Surface temperatures in the Southern Ocean around Antarctica have cooled for decades, defying the projections of leading climate models and puzzling researchers worldwide. In this article, physicist Ralph B. Alexander examines three recent studies that propose strikingly different explanations for this unexpected climate anomaly.

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