Quote:
Originally Posted by Pierre
One thing that doesn't help are the nudge tactics by Sky and BBC, over inflating temperatures and implying unrelated incidents are because of climate change. The Rhodes fires being a case in point.
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No one event can be attributed to climate change. We have floods, we have wildfires, we have heatwaves, and cold snaps. We also have
El Niņo events which have temporary impacts on certain years.
But the hypothesized impacts of climate change are an increase in the frequency of these events. We are possibly seeing that. We breaking hottest day records year on year now. Last month we broke the hottest day record several times in a week:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-66120297. This was in part an El Nino impact, we probably won't hit it next year, but overall the world is measurably getting hotter.
What I don't understand is where the confidence comes from that the majority of scientists and scientific bodies are wrong. People look at a dodgy graph and something some smartarse with a humanities degree wrote in The Spectator and think they know better than NASA.