News Round-Up
28 October 2024
by Toby Young
Tommy Robinson Jailed for 18 Months for Contempt of Court
28 October 2024
by Will Jones
Policymakers routinely exaggerate the risk of climate change, bordering on being hysterical, as well as being alarmingly complacent about the costs of their schemes to mitigate it. Why? asks Andrew Sibley.
A deadly heatwave in West Africa was "impossible" without climate change, claims the BBC. But read the fine print and you learn that El Niño was the more likely culprit.
The Hunga Tonga underwater volcanic eruption in January 2022 that boosted stratospheric water vapour by a massive 10% is the most likely cause of the recent warm temperatures, according to scientist Dr Javier Vinós.
Lawks-a-mercy, the oceans have stopped boiling. Plunging ocean temperatures signal the collapse of the strong El Niño that has driven a year-long bout of climate hysteria. How will the Met Office hide it this time?
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.
Alarmists claim that 2023 was the hottest year on record, but a deep dive into the data reveals that this was not true for over 70% of the world's population. What's more, there was no correction for urban heat expansion.
The El Niño natural climate phenomenon is behind the high temperatures in 2023, pushing them up to a similar degree as in 2016, new analysis shows.
The climate alarmists are sounding their annual warning about global temperatures breaching the 1.5°C threshold ‘within five years’. Chris Morrison, the Daily Sceptic's Environment Editor, is not convinced.
According to new research reported in the Guardian, climate conditions that reduce coffee yields have become more frequent over the past four decades. Why then have yields and production mushroomed?
The UK Met Office's latest climate scare story is to predict that a jump in global temperatures of half a degree may occur in the next five years. But what's the truth behind it?
© Skeptics Ltd.