News Round-Up
26 April 2025
by Toby Young
How Britain’s Libraries Became Trans Indoctrination Hubs
25 April 2025
by Lucy Marsh
Recent European flooding is "unexceptional" from a historical point of view, a new scientific paper has found. Records show that flooding was far greater in the past, before human CO2 emissions rose, the authors conclude.
During the LA wildfires in January, Green Blob outfit World Weather Attribution was quick to put out a report blaming climate change. But now one of the authors has admitted the result was "not statistically significant".
Ignore the alarmist media, says Chris Morrison: wildfires across southern Europe fell for the second year in succession and are running below average. In fact, 2024 was the 10th lowest year since 1980.
As fires raged across California, the Met Office claimed climate change was driving an increase in wildfires. But the facts don't support this, says Ben Pile. Digging down, it turns out the Met Office's claim was a model.
A bombshell new paper in top science journal Nature has revealed that, far from hurricanes getting worse, as the alarmists claim, they have dropped in frequency and power globally over the past 30 years.
The Guardian has been indulging in climate zigzaggeration of late, says Prof James Alexander. Such a zigzagging whirlwind of alarmist exaggeration deserves to be shared more widely, if only to ward off the unwary.
Up to now the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has largely held the line on not blaming 'extreme' weather on humans. But its latest press release suggests that is about to change, says Chris Morrison.
Wind speeds dropping, rainfall similar to a century ago, no acceleration in sea level rise – the UK climate news you won't hear in the mainstream, but all contained in Paul Homewood's latest report for the GWPF.
'Scientists say climate change made Spanish floods worse,' declares the BBC. In fact, says Ben Pile, the more sinister truth is that green ideology is at war with flood defences as it sees flooding as "natural".
2023's record temperatures were not driven by human CO2 emissions, a new scientific paper published in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics has found. They were rather a natural spike from a strong El Niño.
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