News Round-Up
19 May 2024
by Will Jones
BBC Comes to Terms With Collapsing EV Market
17 May 2024
by Sallust
The Met Office is refusing to retract a claim made by a senior meteorologist on BBC radio that storms are becoming "more intense" due to climate change, despite admitting that it has no evidence to back up the claim.
2023 was a warm year. But the assumption that this was due to human carbon dioxide emissions fails to recognise the numerous more likely drivers of global temperature fluctuations, says meteorologist Andrew Sibley.
An art gallery's latest woke stunt is to display altered versions of classic artworks with the world 'on fire' from climate change. Why are modern political obsessions being shoehorned into everything, asks Steven Tucker.
One of India’s iconic large birds, the great Indian bustard, is feared to be about to go extinct due to the growth of electric transmission lines from wind and solar power. Just 150 birds may remain.
A leading member of a Canadian centre-Left party supporting Justin Trudeau’s minority Government has tabled a bill seeking to jail people who speak out in favour of fossil fuels.
JPMorgan Chase and BlackRock on Thursday announced that they are quitting or substantially scaling back involvement in a major United Nations climate alliance.
The bottom has fallen out of the EV market as consumers wake up to the drawbacks. Jeffrey Tucker argues that behind the boom was the illusion created by lockdown that EVs were paradigmatic of the 'Great Reset'.
Does Michael Mann's libel victory over Mark Steyn mean we're saddled with his hockey stick climate chart forever, asks Tony Morrison. Or will good science eventually triumph over bad?
The Met Office has admitted it is unable to back up a claim by its senior meteorologist on BBC Radio that storms in the U.K. are "more intense" due to the effects of climate change.
The Net Zero crisis deepens as the Government says it is only planning to build just over a quarter of the carbon capture capacity the Climate Change Committee says is needed to hit the green target.
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