The AJES Response to May & Crok
The featured image is the key figure 2 from May & Crok. This post is mostly a list of errors and misinformation in the AJES (The American Journal of Economics and Sociology) board’s response by Ted Gwartney [...]
Drought in the Southwestern U.S.
The featured image is a photograph of the Big Bend area in Texas in October 2015 when the drought index was moderately moist. The photo was taken by the author. Stories of some [...]
The Paris Accords As “Climate Insurance”—Unaffordable and Unnecessary
The following is based on remarks delivered by Steven Koonin and Mark Mills at an MIT Free Speech Alliance debate, which can be viewed here. Reposted from RealClearWorld.com The climate change debate continues [...]
Climate Models, Clouds, OLR, and ECS
To read this post in German see here, translation by Christian Freuer. The IPCC and the climate “consensus” believe that essentially all warming since 1750 is due to man’s emissions of CO2 and other greenhouse [...]
Is the detection and attribution of climate change really settled science?
The CERES team (Willie Soon, Ronan and Michael Connolly) was invited by the Heritage Foundation to contribute a Special Report on what is known about the causes of global warming since [...]
There is no climate emergency
A global network of
1983
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.