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Goldhedge

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I searched but didn't find this topic by itself, though it seems to be creeping into every thread.

Leading geologist Prof. Ian Plimer: There is "absolutely no evidence whatsoever" that CO₂ drives global warming.​

"If we're looking at modern warming, we've got to be able to look at what's happened with past warmings, and how these past warmings have been natural."
"We see no evidence from the past that carbon dioxide drives warming. Absolutely no evidence whatsoever."
"The whole popular paradigm that this plant food... drives global warming, we see no evidence for that."

Ian Plimer: Climate Change: The Facts 2025 | Tom Nelson Pod #270​

Professor Ian Plimer is Australia’s best-known geologist. He is Emeritus Professor of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne, where he was Professor and Head of Earth Sciences. He was Professor at the University of Newcastle, Professor at The University of Adelaide and Professor in Munich (Germany). He was also on the staff at the University of New England, the University of New South Wales, Macquarie University and North Broken Hill Ltd.

He has published more than 130 scientific papers on geology and was an editor of the Encyclopedia of Geology. This is his thirteenth book written for the general public. Professor Plimer has received numerous national and international awards for his scientific work.

00:00 Introduction and Book Overview
01:34 Geology and Climate Change
06:22 Oceanic Influences on Climate
11:41 Volcanic Activity and Climate Impact
18:32 Historical Climate Events and Human Impact
30:51 Dynamic Planet: Oceans and Climate
31:39 The Role of Plant Food and Industry
32:28 Antarctica's Geological Mysteries
36:56 Methane and Earth's Ancient Atmospheres
38:45 Solar Influence on Climate
41:54 Future Climate Predictions
43:37 Preparing for Natural Disasters
45:23 The Younger Dryas and Human Adaptation
49:27 CO2 Cycle and Measurement Challenges
54:57 Political Shifts and Climate Policy
56:44 Looking Ahead: Future Plans and Reflections



Information about “Climate Change: The Facts 2025” here: https://climatechangethefacts.org.au/
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AI summaries of all of my podcasts: https://tomn.substack.com/p/podcast-summaries
 

The Sequel to The Fall of The Cabal - Part 28: CLIMATE CRISIS?​

This episode is all about the current 'mega-crisis' that will make the Covid-crisis pale in comparison: The Climate emergency that will destroy our planet and humanity, unless we pay a lot of CO2-tax. How did the Cabal get us to belief their impertinent CO2 lies? By using fraudulent 'scientists' and the MSM, as always. Does Climate Change exist? Of course! It's a natural phenomenon. Is there a Climate Emergency? No. You don't believe us? Then let's listen to the real scientists, the ones who refuse to be bribed into silence and who risk their careers by sticking to the Truth. It's about time they get to tell their side of the story, don't you think?

By Janet Ossebaard & Cyntha Koeter
Music: Alexander Nakarada, AShamaluev, James Dolley
38
 
61* this morning on the Treasure Coast in FL. It was like that here in 2003 when I first moved 2 hours north out of Ft. Lauderdale. The a/c got turned off in November and back on again the last week in April.

In the 20teens it got a liitle warmer with a few cold snaps into the 30s, but overall warmer. Lately we had earlier and more frequent weeks in the 40s and now perfect Northern Cali style weather with a liitlemore humidityand a few highs in the 80s.during the day.
 
Lotta laws / regulations being enacted in the shipping industry concerning climate change. Example:


Don't know what to make of the regs and laws coming out about this. Most of the stuff I've read comes outta Europe and seems very costly for businesses. Wonder what the money / taxes would actually be used for?
 
Global warming will NEVER be affected by the taxes I pay.

Neither the next Ice age...
 
Whatever happened to the swine flu, Legionnaire's disease and other outbreaks from the past? Did Climate Change cure them?
 
Podcast, nothing to see.

Petrostates, electrostates, and the energy transition​

Gerard Reid of the Redefining Energy podcast visits the Energy Gang

Is the global transition to low-carbon energy accelerating or slowing down? One answer is that it depends where you look. In the US, energy policy has shifted away from support for low-carbon technologies, but China is continuing with record installations of solar, wind, and batteries, and record sales of EVs. With AI emerging as the central arena for great power completion, which model will work best at providing the power the new technologies need?

The AI revolution will be the most transformative change in human history. That’s according to Gerard Reid, this week’s guest, a veteran energy commentator and co-founder of the advisory firm Alexa Capital. Gerard, who also co-hosts the podcast Redefining Energy, says he thinks AI will reinvent the world’s energy system. There is a widening gulf between ‘petrostates’ such as the US, which are rich in oil and gas and favor fossil fuels, and the ‘electrostates’, led by China, which is dominates global manufacturing for technologies such as solar panels, batteries and EVs.

Europe, which is relatively resource-poor, is following China’s path out of necessity, while India and others weigh up which model to adopt. Gerard, host Ed Crooks and regular guest Amy Myers-Jaffe debate the different approaches that different countries are taking to build secure energy systems that will be able to meet growing demand for electricity for AI.

More:

 

Minimal Arctic Sea Ice Loss in the Last 20 Years, Consistent With Internal Climate Variability​

Abstract

Over the past two decades, Arctic sea ice loss has slowed considerably, with no statistically significant decline in September sea ice area since 2005. This pause is robust across observational data sets, metrics, and seasons. Large-ensemble CMIP5 and CMIP6 simulations reveal that such periods with minimal sea ice decline under increasing greenhouse gas emissions are not unusual. Analysis of ensemble members that simulate analogs of the observed pause indicates that the current slowdown could plausibly persist another five to 10 years, although the chances of a faster-than-average decline are increased in the near-future. The modeling evidence suggests that internal variability has substantially offset anthropogenically forced sea ice loss in recent decades. Overall, this observed pause in Arctic sea ice decline is consistent with simulated internal variability superimposed on the long-term trend according to the bulk of the climate modeling evidence.

More:

 
NASA Analysis Shows Sun’s Activity Ramping Up
NASA

The Sun has become increasingly active since 2008, a new NASA study shows. Solar activity is known to fluctuate in cycles of 11 years, but there are longer-term variations that can last decades. Case in point: Since the 1980s, the amount of solar activity had been steadily decreasing all the way up to 2008, when solar activity was the weakest on record. At that point, scientists expected the Sun to be entering a period of historically low activity. But then the Sun reversed course and started to become increasingly active.

The earliest recorded tracking of solar activity began in the early 1600s, when astronomers, including Galileo, counted sunspots and documented their changes. Over the centuries that people have been studying solar activity, the quietest times were a three-decade stretch from 1645 to 1715 and a four-decade stretch from 1790 to 1830. “We don’t really know why the Sun went through a 40-year minimum starting in 1790,” said Jamie Jasinski of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “The longer-term trends are a lot less predictable and are something we don’t completely understand yet.”

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We better send a psychiatrist up to the sun and talk it into behaving.
Prolly work better than refreezing the Arctic or filling the atmosphere with reflective matter or getting rid of all the internal combustion engines.
 
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