Reports

An Assessment of the Conventional Global Warming Narrative, by Richard Lindzen, with Nic Lewis. Dr Richard Lindzen has a PhD in atmospheric physics and is MIT physics emeritus. He was in the first IPCC working group on climate change and stopped working with the IPCC when he saw how the political motives drove the science.

Climate of the Past, Present and Future. A scientific debate, 2nd ed., by Javier Vinos. This is by far the most accurate, comprehensive thing ever written about the earth’s climate. The IPCC does not produce scientific research or literature. This book will guide you to making sense of the debate on climate. It is very technical and only for people with a science background.

The Rational Climate E-Book, 2nd ed, by Patrice Poyet. Technical and very worth reading. Gives great detail on the origin of Arhennius’s equations and why they are not fit for purpose. Updated September 2022.

To what extent are temperature levels changing due to greenhouse gas emissions? by Statistics Norway. They conclude: “Using theoretical arguments and statistical tests we find, as in Dagsvik et al. (2020), that the effect of man-made CO2 emissions does not appear to be strong enough to cause systematic changes in the temperature fluctuations during the last 200 years.”

On Climate Sensitivity, by Richard Lindzen, founding member of the IPCC’s Working Group 1.

The State of the Climate, by the Global Warming Policy Foundation.

Rethinking the Greenhouse Effect, by William Kininmonth

A Primer on Carbon Dioxide and Climate, by the CO2 Coalition.

The Positive Impact of Human CO₂ Emissions on the Survival of Life on Earth, by Patrick Moore.

The Greatly Exaggerated Threat of Man-made Warming, by John McLean, former IPCC reviewer who has become an open critic of the organization.

The Tropical Skies, Falsifying Climate Alarm, by John Christy. Christy is a climate and weather researcher at NASA. He is a data scientist and has been responsible for many of the sensors put onto satellites to create the UAH global troposphere temperature record.

How the IPCC Sees what isn’t There, by GWPF

My list of peer-reviewed papers that go against the common narrative that humans are changing the climate.