Link to article in heraldsun.com.au
11
COOL FACTS ON WARMING TO CALM DOWN YOUR SOBBING CHILD
Andrew Bolt, Herald Sun
September
26, 2019 10:31am
I
promised you a list - easy to print out - of scientific facts that should stop
children from being terrified that global warming will kill them. It's time to
fight this hysteria, especially after Greta Thunberg's breakdown at the United
Nations. Here's the list. Distribute widely.
NO,
GLOBAL WARMING WON'T KILL YOU
Are
you terrified by claims that global warming is an "existential threat"? That
there will be a "great winnowing" and "mass deaths"? That we face "the collapse
of our civilisations"?
Don't
believe those scares.
You
are told to believe "the science". Well, here is some science you should
believe - solid scientific facts that tell you that global warming is not as
scary as you've been told.
Be
calm. You are not in danger.
- You have never been less likely to die of a
climate-related disaster. Your risk of being killed has fallen 99 per cent
in the past century. Source:
International Disaster Database.
- You have never been more likely to live longer.
Life expectancy around the world has risen by 5.5 years so far this
century. Source: World Health Organisation.
- We are getting fewer cyclones, not more. Source: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; Bureau of Meteorology.
- There is more food than ever. Grain crops have
set new records. Source: Food and Agricultural Organisation.
- The world is getting greener. Leaf cover is
growing 3 per cent per decade. Source:
NASA.
- Low-lying Pacific islands are not drowning. In
fact, 43 per cent - including Tuvalu - are growing, and another 43 per
cent are stable. Source: Professor Paul Kench, University of Auckland.
- Cold weather is 20 times more likely to kill you
than hot weather. Source: Lancet, 20/5/2015
- Global warming does not cause drought. Source: Prof. Andy Pitman, ARC Centre of Excellence for
Climate Extremes.
- Australia's rainfall over the past century has
actually increased. Source: Bureau of Meteorology.
- There are fewer wildfires. Around the world, the
area burned by fire is down 24 per cent over 18 years. Source: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center et al.
- Polar bear numbers are increasing, not
decreasing. Source: Dr Susan Crockford.