In particular, satellites transmit huge volumes of data on the upper atmosphere and the Earth's surface, enabling us to measure the system's energy balance and attribute infrared emissions to particular atmospheric components. This high-quality space and in-situ data is freely available to all thanks to Copernicus, but the problem is that we don't use it...
Forget proxies and old data that are constantly being "adjusted". We have proven, measured information that allows us to go back in time to 1960. It's a happy coincidence that January 1, 1960 is the reference 0 for the temperature series commonly used. The IPCC has arbitrarily ruled that climate change began with industrialization, i.e. around 1850 or 1880, since it assumes that GHG emissions are the cause. But data from the world's oceans, which drive climate, show that their temperature began to diverge from its natural cycle around 1980. So let's focus on the last sixty years, using the real-world observations available to objectively identify the true culprits of anthropogenic warming....<<<Read More>>>...
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Wednesday, 24 April 2024
Observation of the Earth shows that deforestation and urbanization cause three times more warming than CO2
Forget approximate climate models, whose simulations are increasingly removed from reality. There's a far more scientific way of understanding the climate, and that involves observing the actual climate system directly from space or in situ. A multitude of satellites and a worldwide network of land, air and sea sensors make millions of observations every day, creating detailed, faithful images of the Earth.