Climate Change Alarmism Is the World’s Leading Cause of Hot Gas

Source: https://www.dailysignal.com/2018/12/08/climate-change-alarmism-is-the-worlds-leading-cause-of-hot-gas/

Even as anti-gas tax riots raged in France this week, naturalist David Attenborough warned a crowd at a United Nations climate change summit in Poland that “the collapse of our civilizations and the extinction of much of the natural world is on the horizon.”

U.N. General Assembly President Maria Espinosa told the media that “mankind” is “in danger of disappearing” if climate change is allowed to progress at its current rate.

Speakers, who flew in to swap doomsday stories, advocated radical changes to avoid this imminent environmental apocalypse. These days, “the point of no return” is almost always in view, yet always just out of reach.

Sorry, but by now, this rhetoric is familiar. Continue reading “Climate Change Alarmism Is the World’s Leading Cause of Hot Gas”

Defrock the Wind Industry

Source: https://defrock.org/2018/12/13/email-to-the-nwfc-re-medical-research/

DeFrock will be publishing correspondence, discussions and notes of direct experiences country Australians have had in dealing with the wind farm Commissioner. A wide systemic show of public neglect and ruthless dismissal of many wind farm complaints has led Andrew Chapman to write an email which supports people he knows in his community that are being negatively impacted by wind turbines.
Continue reading “Defrock the Wind Industry”

Why do Big Oil and Big Gas Support the War on Carbon Dioxide?

By Philip Mulholland

Put simply, because it both improves profits and also damages their main fossil fuel competitor, the coal mining industry. Coal is a solid fuel that can be dug out of the ground, loaded on to trucks, and transported to a power station for electricity generation. It is cheap to extract and easy to handle.

Gas however is a difficult material to handle, it must at all times be kept contained and transported using specially designed pipelines. For overseas export of natural gas, tankers with cryogenic liquid containers are required. If you have a lot of gas to sell, then climate change is good for your company’s bottom line in the following ways: Continue reading “Why do Big Oil and Big Gas Support the War on Carbon Dioxide?”

Murray-Darling Management Delivers the Worst of Both Worlds

by Chris McCormack
News Weekly, December 15, 2018

The current approach to managing the water resources of the Murray-Darling Basin (MDB) seems to be a classic case of “straining out gnats while swallowing camels”.

The Federal Government plans to return an additional 450 gigalitres of water “to the environment” as part of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan (MDBP) via $1.4 billion of taxpayers’ money to buy farmers’ water allocations and increase water efficiency. Already, 2100 GL of water has been diverted away from agri­cultural production to “environmental flows” as part of the MDBP.

A further 605 GL is being directed to the environment via water “savings measures”. Up to 70 per cent of water in reservoirs feeding the MDB is earmarked for “the environment”. One of the problems with diverting such large amounts of water away from food production and sending it down river is that there is no scientific basis to claims that the extra water is benefitting the environment. Quite the reverse, in fact.

Read the full article: http://newsweekly.com.au/article.php?id=58362

Climate Summit Language Reveals Real but Hidden Agenda

The goal isn’t saving Earth from climate disaster – it’s changing the world order.

By David Wojick, PhD

People complain all the time about UN jargon. But the technical language of the Katowice, Poland climate summit is actually very revealing. It is all about changing the world order.

Words exist because there is something important to talk about. Words also embody basic beliefs. In this context, it is very useful that the ever-green Climate Change News has published a Glossary of the 32 technical terms they think are most important in Katowice. Continue reading “Climate Summit Language Reveals Real but Hidden Agenda”

CO2 Emissions from Submarine Volcanic Activity and ‘Capture and Storage’ of CO2 in Carbonate Bearing Sediments

By Jacob Rebek
7 December 2018

CO2 emissions from volcanic activity are orders of magnitude greater than those caused by humans burning fossil fuels.

Submarine volcanic activity is orders of magnitude greater than subaerial volcanic activity but it was ‘out of sight and out of mind’ until results of studies of sea/ocean floor commenced in 1950’s. Geologists are aware of importance of submarine volcanic activity in global CO2 ‘supply and demand’ balance. However, climate scientists contributing to IPCC reports are still ignoring the importance of CO2 emissions from submarine volcanic activity.

Marie Tharp and Bruce Heezen created the first accurate map of the sea/ocean floor, a project they started in the 1950’s. This map was published in 1980, but is still relevant today. In addition to volcanic activity along mid-sea/oceanic ridges, there is volcanic activity elsewhere on sea/ocean floor (including islands if the volcanic cone is high enough) and along some of the margins of sea/oceans.

Continue reading “CO2 Emissions from Submarine Volcanic Activity and ‘Capture and Storage’ of CO2 in Carbonate Bearing Sediments”

Saltbush Solar Activity Watch Established

The Saltbush Club today announced the formation of the “Saltbush Solar Activity Watch” led by Mr David Archibald.

The Executive Director of Saltbush, Mr Viv Forbes, said it was obvious to everyone except school teachers, the ABC, the Greens and the leaders of CSIRO that the sun is the main driver of weather and climate on Earth.

“This giant ball of nuclear power in the sky beams solar radiation and exerts gravitational force on everything on earth.

“These two solar forces, radiant heat and gravity, control our world. Continue reading “Saltbush Solar Activity Watch Established”

Tsunami of Evidence

Another full moon, another associated high tide, another solar cycle of gravitational stresses on the Earth’s crust, another major sub-sea earthquake in Indonesia, another volcanic eruption as Krakatoa poured another toxic mix of stuff into the sky – and another tsunami.

And for every surface volcano, there are dozens of sub-sea eruptions pouring heat and chemicals into the sea.

There is a strong correlation in this sequence of natural events. Continue reading “Tsunami of Evidence”

The War on Carbon Fuels

What fuels power the planet?

Watts Up With That has produced a useful readable summary of energy consumption trends 1965 – 2017. This is the period covering the noisy war on carbon fuels and the massive subsidies and hype about wind and solar energy.

Here are the trends in the country that uses the most energy in the world – CHINA: Continue reading “The War on Carbon Fuels”