This the third of a series of articles by Mr Lomborg on climate change. They are all worth reading, are clear and separate fact from fiction. Unfortunately, I could not copy the chart that appeared in the WSJ, but the article is clear even without it.
Category: Climate Change
Harvey’s Introduction
Mr. Lomborg writes about climate change in a way that highlights truth from hyperbole and costs versus benefits. This one of what will be three editorials he wrote for the WSJ.
Harvey’s Introduction
Mr. Lomborg has written a great deal on climate change. This one of three articles he has written on the cost benefit considerations of any climate policy. well worth reading.
Biden’s Not-So-Clean Energy Transition The International Energy Agency exposes the hidden environmental costs and infeasibility of going green. By Mark P. Mills Wall Street Journal May 11, 2021 The International Energy Agency, the world’s pre-eminent source of energy information for governments, has entered the political debate over whether the U.S. should spend trillions of dollars to […]
Harvey’s Introduction
This is an essay by an esteemed scientist who has analyzed the record of climate change models. He finds that they have been uniformly wrong and always in the direction of predicting too much warming. The implications are important for those setting climate change policy. I’ve included at the end six comments written by other scientists who read his paper.
Harvey’s Introduction
I’m way behind so I’m posting a number of articles without an introduction. I’ll try to catch up later
Harvey’s Introduction
You’ve all heard that the climate is warming and as a result the polar ice caps are shrinking, causing the ocean level to rise. This study, peer reviewed, shows that Antarctica is not shrinking. Here you will see a summary to the study and an abstract of conclusions. For those interested, you can link to the full study from the URL at the bottom of the abstract.