The Journal Science Of Climate Change Is 5 Years Old and Is Now Experiencing Explosive Growth
At just five years old, the journal Science of Climate Change is now experiencing remarkable growth, rapidly establishing itself as a peer-reviewed platform in the climate-science landscape.
The journal is finally becoming an internationally recognized scientific peer reviewed journal, with a 141 % page view growth during the previous month. The journal is open for scientific contributions which contradict the IPCC’s climate hypotheses, is open access and has very modest author fees. Authors include Christopher Monckton of Brenchley, Hermann Harde, Murray Salby, Francois Gervais, Nils-Axel Mørner, Ronan Connolly, Susan Crockford, Ed Berry, Roy Clark, Antero Olilla, Demetris Koutsoyiannis, William Happer and William van Wijngaarden and more.
onderschrift
A Review Article about the role of CO2 in Global Warming marked a historic milestone. It’s the first peer-reviewed climate science paper with an Artificial Intelligence system as the lead author. Grok 3 spearheaded the research, drafting the manuscript with the human co-authors J. Cohler, D. Legates, F. Soon and W. Soon providing critical guidance. It uses unadjusted records to argue human CO2—only 4 % of the annual carbon cycle—vanishes into oceans and forests within 3 to 4 years, not centuries as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change claims. The authors conclude that the anthropogenic CO₂-Global Warming hypothesis lacks empirical substantiation, overshadowed by natural drivers such as temperature feedbacks and solar variability, necessitating a fundamental re-evaluation of current climate paradigms: To read the article see https://doi.org/10.53234/SCC202501/06
The journal Science of Climate Change (SCC) was established in summer 2020, hosted by the Norwegian Climate Realists. Unfortunately, the first Chief Editor, Prof Nils-Axel Mörner, passed away before the regular publication process could be started. Nevertheless, thanks to the dedicated commitment of Dr. Geir Hasnes as interims Chief Editor a first issue of SCC could be published in August 2021.
From October 2022 until December 2023, Professor Jan-Erik Solheim acted as Chief Editor strongly supported by senior researcher Stein Storlie Bergsmark. Since that time, due to the unprecedented engagement of both, SCC developed rapidly. In 2021 SCC published two volumes (271 pages), in 2022 three volumes (309 pages) and in 2023 five volumes (600 pages). In total, we have now published 18 volumes, 65 original articles, 12 review papers and 55 conference abstracts.
Since January 2024, the Editorial board consisted of Chief Editor Professor Hermann Harde, and 9 other members, as well as an Extended Editorial board with 6 members. We seek to strengthen the journal with co-editors within the important scientific fields of climate change like, e.g., astrophysics, palaeontology, carbon cycles, atmospheric processes/meteorology, the impact of greenhouse gases, oceanographic processes/sea level, biosphere, modelling, geology, temperature measurements and data series, energy supply etc. Members may also have supplemental perspectives linked to their country and organization.
From 2025, the journal is hosted by the SCC Publishing Association, with a 3-member board and some 25 supportive members. The SCC Publishing board has come to an agreement with Professor Nikolaos (Nikos) Malamos (Greece) to take over the role as Chief Editor on January 1, 2026. We are confident that Professor Malamos will continue the good work by his predecessor and further develop the journal by expanding the board of editors, bringing in new reviewers and last but not least, strengthen the journal’s scientific profile and attracting new authors.
more news
Amsterdam Ad Ban Typifies Climate Alarmism’s Farce
Amsterdam just became the world’s first capital to outlaw public ads for both meat and fossil fuels. But advertising bans serve only to boost a feeling of moral superiority among urban elites while achieving nothing and jeopardizing much, says Vijay Jayaraj.
The climate catastrophe has been called off – the plundering continues. Politicians and the media are complicit.
In this article for EIKE – European Institute for Climate and Energy, author Michael Limburg examines the political and media fallout after the IPCC quietly dropped the extreme RCP8.5 climate scenario as a plausible future pathway. The debate in the German Bundestag raises broader questions about how climate risks have been communicated — and whether exaggerated scenarios were used to justify far-reaching policies.
Rage, Rage Against the Dying of the Net Zero Dream
Unless the current crop of left-liberal governments in Europe and allied capitals is replaced by administrations willing to confront economic and physical reality, they will continue their tremendously destructive course, says Tilak Doshi.







