Michael Mann Deconstructs The Current State Of Climate Denial
In a recent interview with Vox, Michael Mann spoke about how attacks on climate science have changed over the past 25 years.
In a recent interview with Vox, Michael Mann spoke about how attacks on climate science have changed over the past 25 years.
Michael Mann explains that the view that it would take tens or hundreds of years for the climate to stabilize after emissions were cut was the prevailing view until about a decade ago, and that emerging data and research indicates that it’s simply not the case. The temperature rise would stop pretty fast, and then stabilize, and start going back to normal.
Researchers at the Norwegian Business School say their climate model shows catastrophic global warming has now reached the point of no return.
Winning is easy. Governing is hard. Joe Biden has big plans to confront global warming. Can he deliver?
Are flesh eating pedophiles responsible for a warming planet? No, scientists say.
In this episode of our CleanTech Talk podcast interview series, Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist of TFIE Strategy Inc. and CleanTechnica contributor, sits down to talk with Michael Mann, Distinguished Professor of Atmospheric Science and the Director of the Penn State Earth System Science Center at Pennsylvania State University, about the immediacy and importance of addressing climate change.
New research supports seeding efforts to bolster water supplies in drying regions, but some scientists question its effectiveness in addressing climate change.
Climate deniers, it seems, would rather see an entire continent burned into ash instead of admitting that they were wrong.
A new study says the best way to get people to start thinking about climate change is to talk to them about it. Let the conversation begin.
Zuckerburg and Facebook have hired an offshoot of the Daily Caller to fact check climate news on the world’s largest social media site. What could possibly go wrong?