More than 1,900 Scientists Deny the Climate Emergency

Thousands of professionals from around the world oppose the policy of zero net CO2 emissions by 2050 and sign an urgent message demanding that climate science be less political.

Day and night, all the media outlets repeat that the world will become an uninhabitable hell if decisive decisions are not taken to combat climate change. However, the reality is that more and more people suspect that behind the climate emergency, proclaimed with increasing levels of hysteria, there are plans for population control, if only because the creators of the narrative of climate change and planetary boiling do not seem to have changed their way of life one iota.

The skeptics now have as allies a large group of scientists from around the world who have signed a declaration in which they dismiss the existence of a climate crisis and insist that carbon dioxide is beneficial for the Earth, contrary to the popular alarmist narrative.

Today, many scientists and experts claim that we are experiencing accelerated climate change as a result of human action, especially due to greenhouse gas emissions in recent years. A theory that has been bought by the governments of practically all countries in the world and which has been embodied in the Kyoto Protocol or the Paris Treaty, which set the objective of a significant reduction in these emissions. However, there are others who claim that this climate change is simply due to a normal Earth cycle and that it has already occurred on other occasions, so they consider that the measures adopted by States to reduce CO2 emissions into the atmosphere are unnecessary.

That's why more than 1,900 scientists and professionals from around the world have joined together under the declaration There is no climate emergency to prepare what they have called an "urgent message" in which they demand that climate science be less political "while climate policies must be more scientific."

According to the manifesto, promoted by the Climate Intelligence Foundation (CLINTEL), the geological archive reveals that the Earth's climate has varied since the planet's existence, with natural phases of cold and heat. "The Little Ice Age ended in 1850, so it is not surprising that we are now experiencing a period of warming."

They also note that the world has warmed significantly less than projected by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) based on modeled anthropogenic forcing.

«CO2 is not a pollutant»

Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions have been in the spotlight in recent years. The signatories therefore recall that CO2 is plant food, "the basis of all life on Earth" and is therefore not a pollutant. «More CO2 is good for nature and makes the Earth greener: more CO2 in the air has promoted the growth of global plant biomass and is also good for agriculture, as it increases crop yields worldwide.»

On the other hand, they stress that global warming has not increased natural disasters, as there is no statistical evidence that hurricanes, floods, droughts and similar natural disasters are intensifying or becoming more frequent. However, they say there is ample evidence that CO2 mitigation measures are both damaging and costly.

The scientists end the manifesto by saying that there is no climate emergency and therefore no cause for panic or alarm: "We firmly oppose the harmful and unrealistic policy of zero net CO2 emissions proposed by 2050. If better approaches emerge – and they certainly will – we have plenty of time to reflect and readjust. The goal of global policy should be 'prosperity for all' by providing reliable and affordable energy at all times. In a prosperous society, men and women are well educated, birth rates are low, and people care about their environment.

The signatories include 12 Spaniards, all of them doctors or professors from different universities in the country, as well as Nobel Prize winners Ivar Giaever and John F. Clauser. This declaration has brought together a wide variety of scientists from around the world.

CLINTEL believes that the knowledge and experience of this group are "essential to achieving a balanced, dispassionate and competent vision of climate change."