Maybe they might like to explain why flooding was so bad in the 1950s:
From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT By Paul Homewood h/t Ian Magness Why is a so-called Science Editor allowed to get away with writing drivel like this? On…
From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT By Paul Homewood h/t Ian Magness Why is a so-called Science Editor allowed to get away with writing drivel like this? On…
Nor do they mention that the ice has not “gone missing”, as they claim, but strong winds have pushed it polewards. As a result, the ice is thicker than normal:
England is "not ready" to respond to extreme heatwaves this summer and ministers must implement a national strategy, researchers have said.
Sky News Australia has allowed "junk science, climate delayism and attacks on high-profile individuals working on the climate crisis to become mainstreamed", according to The Institute for Strategic Dialog.
We recommend applying a healthy dose of skepticism to assertions of climate-induced weather events. You also might want to follow more responsible outlets for your facts, such as the CO2 Coalition.
As any competent journalist should have known, severe flooding in Bangladesh is a common event, something which has always occurred in the majority of years...
According to NYT, James Murdoch once thought he could persuade his father to be more concerned about climate change, but his effort to "make Sky News neutral" were rejected.
Look up in the air, it’s a bird, its a plane, no it’s Phobos-Grunt! Video follows. From Sky News: An out of control Russian spacecraft could crash land on southern England sometime this weekend, scientists have...
The Durban climate conference has been an abject failure. But that hasn't stopped those who were there desperately trying – with all the plausibility of Monty Python's Black Knight – to spin their disaster as...
- Popular Related Tags: sky news, flooding, alarmism, bad science journalism, libyan floods, its worse than we thought, england, opinion, antarctic, politics
- Search for "sky news" on our Eco Web Search