The solar hype continued last month in the pages of the New York Times with an article by David Wallace-Wells headlined, “What Will We Do With Our Free Power?” The nut graf of Wallace-Wells’ article appeared near the...
Apparently, NYT reporter Coral Davenport couldn’t be troubled to seek out the facts. Or perhaps, she just doesn’t know how. This sort of slapdash reporting containing speculative claims rather than simple facts seems...
To be clear, in recent decades, the GBR’s extent was lower, much lower, than at present when ocean temperatures were cooler, and it has grown considerably in the aftermath of bleaching events.
In reality, objective data show vanilla production has doubled since the year 2000 and the current market is saturated with oversupply.
More than 70 percent of the world’s cobalt, sometimes called the blood diamond of electric vehicle batteries, comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo
In my opinion, this kind of ‘science communication’ is more misleading than enlightening because it fails to alert readers to the fact that the topic is actually more complicated and gives the impression that the author...
At best, this is a graph of fantasy
guesstimates.
The post Climate Fact Check: December 2023 first appeared on Watts Up With That?.
In short, DeSantis is right to “shrug off” the climate hype and focus instead on the real problems facing Florida.
Biofuels are neither a practical nor desirable replacement for fossil fuels, even if they needed replacing, which they don’t.
...a number of Carson’s major arguments rested on what can only be described as deliberate ignorance.
Ten pieces of climate propaganda from March 2023 exposed and debunked.
At the most likely rate of rise, some experts say, most of the beaches on the East Coast of the United States would be gone in 25 years.
On the other hand, if you work for the New York Times, it’s possible to look at the exact same set of facts and draw entirely the opposite conclusions.
So, instead of citing the clear and convincing scientific consensus, the NY Times substitutes their own narrative. Yikes!
The Amazon rainforest in South America has large quantities of copper, tin, nickel, bauxite, manganese, iron ore and gold, making it attractive to mining companies all around the world.
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