Month: July 2025

Al Jazeera Wrongly Hypes a Climate Connection to Recent European Heatwaves

From ClimateREALISM

By Linnea Lueken

A recent article at Al Jazeera, titled “Wildfire risks as climate change fuels extreme heatwave in Southern Europe,” claims that recent heatwaves in parts of southern Europe are due to climate change, which the publication says is making them more intense, and will inevitably cause more deaths. This is false. Recent heatwaves are not outside of historic norms, and though Al Jazeera correctly identifies the urban heat island effect as a major contributor, they downplay its role in recent trends and the evidence concerning temperature related deaths.

Al Jazeera reports that authorities across several southern European countries have issued heat warnings and fire warnings, “as Southern Europe experiences the summer’s first severe heatwave and as experts link the rising frequency and intensity of soaring temperatures to climate change.”

Countries impacted are: Spain; Portugal, where Al Jazeera says Lisbon is “expected” to see temperatures around 107°F; the Italian island of Sicily, which saw some wildfires over the weekend; and Greece.

Much of the article presents a reasonable discussion of the dangers heatwaves can pose, like increases in the likelihood of wildfire outbreaks and heat stroke. Unfortunately, the author of the post proceeds to make unfounded claims regarding the cause of the summer heat, like that “extreme weather events are becoming increasingly common across Europe’s southern region due to global warming.”

This is false; extreme weather is not becoming more severe or frequent. For example, Lisbon’s predicted high is not unprecedented, in part because the city is prone to being impacted by what is called the “Saharan air layer.” This is the same phenomenon that carries dust all the way across the Atlantic, as well as hot dry air with boosts temperatures. In 2018, Lisbon recorded a high of 111°F, and the all time high for Portugal was 117°F in 2003.

Even these temperature records do need to be taken with a grain of salt, however, because it is not clear where they were recorded, and as Al Jazeera admits, the urban heat island effect can bump temperatures upwards, both daytime and nighttime highs but especially nighttime lows. Satellite data can avoid some of the issues with ground sensors, and record much more modest warming trends than the ground sensors do.

Al Jazeera references a Lancet study they say “predicted that heat-related deaths could more than quadruple by mid-century under current climate policies,” even while admitting that more people die from cold than heat, and that the “the study stressed that rising temperatures will offset the benefits of milder winters, leading to a significant net increase in heat-related mortality.”

These claims together do not make sense. The Lancet study, referenced by Climate Realism in posts herehere, and here, showed that deaths due to cold outnumber heat related deaths by ten to one. The study also found that heat related deaths have increased 0.21 percent since the year 2000, but that the deaths due to cold have declined by more than double that, 0.51 percent. Why Al Jazeera would assume cold deaths would not continue to decline at a higher rate is unsupported by the trends and data. The only thing we know for certain is that the number of temperature related deaths have declined by tens of thousands of victims over the course of the study period. (See figure below)

Al Jazeera added a bunch of unnecessary climate change fearmongering to a post that otherwise reasonably reported on the impact of a recent heatwave in southern Europe. There was no reason for it, other than to try to scare readers into accepting the alarmist narrative that climate change is causing worsening summer weather and a rise in deaths. Even the article’s redeeming points, the truth that the urban heat island effect has a significant impact on temperature records and health and that cold related deaths are declining, were minimized or glossed over to promote unsupported alarming claims about a dramatic regional rise in heatwaves and sharp increases in heat related deaths.

Propaganda like that peddled by Al Jazeera in this article may serve as good click-bait, but  misinforms anyone who reads the piece.


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July 15, 2025 at 08:07PM

“Oil/gas professionals are NOT energy transition experts”… Really?

Guest “You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows” by David Middleton

“Jul 9, 2025
Journalist Markham Hislop discusses one of his pet peeves: oil and gas professionals, especially engineers, who think because they have expertise in one area of the energy system that they are experts in ALL things energy.

The video is mind-numbing. It’s just a closeup of Journalist Markham Hislop droning on and on about oil & gas professionals not being qualified to discuss the energy transition because they aren’t experts in energy transitions. Guess what Markham? Journalists aren’t experts in anything, with the occasional exception of journalism..

Regarding the energy transition (or lack thereof): You don’t need to be an “energy transition expert” or even an “oil and gas professional”… You just need to know how to download data and use Excel.

Let’s zero in on fossil fuels and renewables:

Figures 1 and 2 are modified versions of graphs I used in this July 4 post: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that” there is no energy transition! I was inspired to convert quadrillion Btu to something more American by this comment:

Figure 3: D’Oh!
Figure 4: Did you know?

As an oil & gas professional, I don’t know why I never thought to do this before. 100 quadrillion Btu might as well be eleventy gazillion joules under the sea… It’s an unrelatable quantity. Now, 16 billion barrels of oil (or BOE) is something I can wrap my head around!

To the extent that there has been an energy transition, it was from renewables to fossil fuels. It occurred very rapidly from 1860 to 1920.

Here’s the full transcript of the video. I guessed at the paragraph breaks and I did not correct spelling errors or edit out the Uh’s and Um’s:

Today I want to talk about a pet peeve of mine. This has bothered me for years and years and years and that is oil and gas professionals who think and claim to be experts on the energy transition.

Now just because you’ve got ex expertise in the oil and gas industry which is basically uh extracting and transporting molecules to you know uh refineries or to natural gas plants or whatever it is. uh that that somehow that makes you an expert on all things energy. Well, I’m here to that is not the case.

And I’m going to illustrate my point with the dispute that I got into last uh last August with uh some folks who put together a course at the University of Alberta. So, somebody sent me a link to this course and it was on the energy transition and they said, you know, take a look check it out uh because we do a lot of energy transition work and reporting here at uh at Energy Media. So I did and I wrote a column and I said this course absolutely stinks. It’s terrible and the instructor uh who shall go unnamed to protect the guilty is not qualified to do it. And so the reason the ar here’s the argument though.

Uh this course posited that there’s only two ways of looking at the energy system. The one is sort of the oil and gas forever the OPEC view which is you know oil and gas is going to be around forever. or the global south is going to increase uh consumption and whatever new energy sources uh are added like wind and solar uh it’ll be added to not it won’t displace existing uh energy from oil gas and primarily and from coal as well I guess and then the other worldview is climate change which is basically the world is you know the environmental groups climate groups argue this the the world is burning up we need to phase out oil and gas, switch to renewable energy and and uh and do away with it.

So, and so the course basically argued that no, what we really need to do, what the energy transition means is decarbonizing oil and gas, reducing the emissions, eliminating the emissions from the production of oil and gas. Not the consumption, not the the actual combustion say of of gasoline in a internal combustion engine, which is where 80% of the emissions are produced. It’s decarbonizing the production of these of those molecules. And what they’ve what their cardinal sin here and I made this really clear in the column is that there is a third way of looking at the world and that is that uh electricity produced now primarily from a variety of sources uh wind solar hydro nuclear advanced geothermal all sorts of things. Uh and also coal and and natural gas when that’ll be that’ll take years before decades before we get rid of those entirely. But primarily you create electricity and then you have a whole new set of new technologies that turn that energy into work. So instead of an internal combustion engine, you have an electric uh vehicle motor. Uh instead of a gasoline tank, you’ve got a battery. Instead of a gas furnace in your house, you’ve got a a heat pump. Instead of a you know, that sort of thing. And and that’s a completely different way of looking at it. It’s the and in fact if you step outside of North America if you you know we interview experts in Europe and Asia and and that is the dominant way of looking at the energy transition. It’s very much an electrification of the of the global economy on both the supply side.

So you’re you’re you’re increasing the amount of electricity that’s gets produced in the power grid or or you know on your rooftop solar whatever and also adoption of new technologies like electric vehicles like battery storage like heat pumps.

Okay. So that’s those are the I would argue that there are only two real worldviews here. One is continue what the way we we’re going uh just add more energy sources or electricity and electric demand devices technologies will replace the commodities oil, gas and coal and the devices like internal combustion engines that turn that commodity into energy and into work.

Okay. So I wrote the column and the organizers of the course, one of them in particular was outraged, absolutely outraged, tore me a new one on on LinkedIn and said very very rude things and also and this is the key part of this is that complained to by basically by tagging me them in in the the LinkedIn post uh tagged our one of our our funders. We have two and this is one of the large uh foundations in in Canada because they were tagged was public. They felt obligated to check it out. Check out the accusation that I didn’t know, you know, that I had somehow impuged the integrity of this course and of the instructor. So they sent one of their staff, the foundation did sent one of their staff to take the course and they did that, reported back to the board and what did they say? Markham is correct. Markhamm got it absolutely right. That that’s exactly it. In fact, they kind of had a good chuckle over it. And and so here’s my point. I is that these guys, they don’t even know when they’re wrong. And when it’s pointed out to them that they’re wrong, they simply go and don’t listen to you and get all affronted. and and if you see them on social media, if you run into them uh in uh in real life, they’re absolutely sure that they’re correct. It’s Dunning Krueger.

If you’re an oil and gas engineer, for example, what do you know about electricity generation in China and the manufacturing of batteries, electric vehicles, and heat pumps or how efficient they are or what the cost is or how fast if you don’t look at the data, you don’t know. And these guys never look at the data. It’s astonishing to me that so many of them, and I’ll point out Brett Wilson as one example, because he comments all the time on social media, in fact, on my Facebook threads all the time, and he says, “No, you’re wrong.” Well, where’s the data, Brett? Well, he hasn’t got any because all he just It’s the It’s the sure he’s absolutely sure that he’s right even though he’s absolutely wrong. And this goes on on and on and on again. And it’s and so uh I want to make the point here that when you’re reading something or you’re engaged in conversation uh in social media or maybe you’re around the the dinner table, you’re in in Calgary or Edmonton or someplace and you have family that works in the oil industry and they will say with absolute certainty, look, I work in the I work in the energy industry. I know these things. No, they don’t. They absolutely don’t. I I talk to policy makers. I talk to people in the industry. I interview them. I have conversations with them. Uh, you know, sort of off camera. None of them know any of the data. None of them do any of the work and the research to educate themselves on what’s going on outside of North America. It’s quite criminal. And these are the people who are setting Alberta oil and gas policy, energy policy. Some of them are having a tremendous influence at the federal level. and they don’t know. They don’t the the emails I get late at night from people who run oil companies or make policy in Alberta would curl your toes. They are they’re that devoid of of evidence and and and information.

So, if there’s anything you take, there’s one I want to hammer this home over and over and over again, and that is oil and gas professionals aren’t energy transition experts.

Energi Media

If I understood the transcript, he seems to think that oil & gas professionals aren’t energy transition experts because the think we will keep adding new sources of energy on top ot legacy sources. He seems to think that we are replacing fossil fuels with electricity.

Well… Neither Bjorn Lomborg, nor Vaclav Smil are oil and gas professionals and it looks like they disagree with Journalist Markham Hislop …

Figure 6: “All energy (not just electricity) per person in the world, 1800–2100, TPES (total primary energy supply) measured in kWh, denoting natural gas with “gas.” Historical data 1800–2017, SSP2 middle-of-the-road scenario for 2020–2100. 1800–1900 plus traditional biomass data up to 2017 from (Vaclav Smil 2017, 240–41); see also (Fouquet 2009). 1900–1979 from (Benichou 2014Etemad and Luciani 1991), 1971–2017 from (IEA 20182019a), 2020–2100 SSP2 including population from (IIASA 2018Riahi et al., 2017), global population 1800–2017 from (HYDE 2019Roser and Ortiz-Ospina 2019). “Other” includes liquid biofuels, geothermal, solar thermal, modern biofuels, and waste. There are some minor discrepancies from the historical data to scenario data: SSP2 nuclear is inexplicably halved, SSP2 biomass seems to include all modern biofuels and possibly waste, and SSP2 solar is somewhat larger than IEA solar.” Bjorn Lomborg, 2020

Just remember: Life is Good!


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July 15, 2025 at 04:07PM

Virginia green energy mandates—an ‘impending train wreck’

From CFACT

By Kevin Mooney

Youngkin offers up nuclear power as an innovative solution in the run-up to the November election

Gov. Glenn Youngkin, the Republican incumbent in Virginia, warns that the Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA) will drastically raise utility rates due to its overreliance on “green energy.” Unless the Virginia General Assembly steps in to lighten the regulatory load in the energy sector, an “impending train wreck” in the form of rising utility bills will remain in motion, according to a statement from the commonwealth’s energy director.

Youngkin points to the VCEA—enacted under his predecessor in 2020—as the primary culprit behind projected increases in utility bills. Known as the “Virginia Green New Deal,” the VCEA is laced with green energy mandates that are expected to become more costly in the absence of Youngkin’s veto pen.

The Virginia Power Grid Hangs in the Balance

But there’s still time for Virginia to cut a different path in line with Youngkin’s “all-of-the-above” approach to energy policy, which includes nuclear power. Glenn Davis, the Virginia Department of Energy director, points to the Commonwealth Fusion System’s (CFS) planned commercial fusion plant at the James River Industrial Park as a prime example of the kind of initiatives policymakers should pursue. The CFS plant is poised to become the first grid-scale commercial fusion power outfit of its kind anywhere in the world. In an exclusive statement to Restoration News, Davis said:

Virginia is leading the way in energy innovation, especially nuclear, as the home to the world’s first commercial fusion reactor. This plant is just one piece of a much larger energy plan to meet the 6.5% growth in demand Virginia is expecting as we continue to see a soaring increase in jobs and investment. Fusion has been talked about for generations and now is becoming a reality, right here in Virginia, with not only a plant but also an innovation hub. Under Governor Youngkin’s leadership, Virginia has embraced all-American, all-of-the-above power and is front and center in an energy and power renaissance that will power the Commonwealth with safe, secure, reliable, and affordable energy for years to come. Unfortunately, while the Youngkin administration has been working arduously to give Virginians relief on their energy bills, the Virginia Clean Economy Act is about to cause utility bills to skyrocket, with a projected compliance cost exceeding $5 billion over the next ten years, beginning with bill increases this September. For four years, Governor Youngkin has warned of this impending train wreck, but General Assembly Democrats have refused to address it.

The outcome of this year’s gubernatorial race will likely determine the trajectory of energy costs for Virginia residents. That’s because Abigail Spanberger has a history of supporting Green New Deal-type policies—that was evident during her time in Congress. Her voting record shows she supported extending a moratorium on drilling off Virginia’s coast. Spanberger also voted against prohibiting bans on gas stoves and gas-powered cars, and she opposed ordering the government to issue all federal permits for the Mountain Valley Pipeline, which runs through Virginia.

As the Democratic candidate for governor, Spanberger has also expressed support for having Virginia rejoin a carbon tax scheme known as the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, or RGGI. By contrast, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, her Republican opponent, supported Youngkin’s decision to withdraw from RGGI. Earle-Sears is also running on a platform of lowering living costs.

Stephen D. Haner, a senior fellow for environment and energy policy at the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy, expects an almost 50% increase for Virginia ratepayers within the next two years. Haner bases this forecast on an analysis of the rate increase applications Dominion Energy—the Virginia public utility—submitted earlier this year to the State Corporation Commission, the regulatory authority overseeing utilities.

The 1,000-kilowatt hour monthly bill was about $116 just before VCEA was implemented. Haner expects pending price increases to take this amount to about $170 in 2027, with VCEA compliance costs the biggest component of this increase.

From here, the news gets even worse as Haner envisions a scenario where Virginia experiences power blackouts. PJM, the regional trading entity, issued a statement in its “Summer Outlook 2025” document of particular concern to energy policy analysts. The current season marks the first time that available generation capacity may fall short of required reserves in an extreme planning scenario that would result in an all-time PJM peak load of more than 166,000 MW, according to the PJM statement. Put another way, the VCEA mandates on wind and solar could further strain a power grid that is already under stress.

Nuclear power could be part of the solution. Virginia already has the Surry Nuclear Power Station located in southeastern Virginia, on the south bank of the James River across from Jamestown, and the North Anna Power Station in Louisa County.

Youngkin is set to leave office in January, since the Virginia governor is limited to just one consecutive term under state law. He has been a consistent opponent of the VCEA and is pursuing court action to keep Virginia out of RGGI.

With the Democrat-controlled House of Delegates continuing to refuse to take action, the approaching gubernatorial race could decide the fate of the power grid in Virginia.

This article originally appeared at Restoration News


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July 15, 2025 at 12:03PM

Turns Out Americans Really Don’t Care About Climate Change After All

From THE DAILY CALLER

Daily Caller News Foundation

Nicole Silverio
Media Reporter

CNN senior data reporter Harry Enten said on Thursday that Americans are not too concerned about climate change or about being a victim of a natural disaster.

Polling from Gallup found that 40% of Americans are “greatly worried about climate change” currently, which has decreased by six percentage points from 2020. These new numbers emerged as many liberals, including Democrat members of Congress, have attempted to blame climate change and President Donald Trump for the devastating flood in Central Texas.

“Are Americans concerned of climate change, and the answer is, Americans aren’t afraid of climate change,” Enten said. “Climate activists have not successfully made the case to the American people. I want you to take a look here. ‘Greatly worried about climate change.’ We have data going all the way back since 1989, and look at it then, it was 39%. In 2000, it was 40%. 2020, 46%. In 2025, 40%, which is the exact same percentage as in 2000, despite all of these horrible weather events. The percentage of Americans that are greatly worried about climate change has stayed pretty gosh darned consistent.” (RELATED: Jasmine Crockett Manages To Make Texas Flood Tragedy About Herself)

WATCH:

The percentage of Americans who “often [or] sometimes worry” about being the victim of a natural disaster has decreased from 38% to 32% since 2006, Enten said. A minority of Americans of each political party, including only 27% of Democrats, believe that climate change will impact their home areas.

“Look at this, all adults, it’s just 17%. It’s just 17%. The GOP is 6%, Independents is 16%, even Democrats here, it’s just 27% of Democrats who say that climate change will make it harder to stay in our area,” Enten continued. “And I think this is what’s so important. This is across the aisle in terms of the percentage of who will say it’ll be harder to stay in our area. And it is the exact same thing that we see here, ‘when you’ll be a natural disaster victim.’ Under 50% of Democrats, Republicans and Independents believe that in fact, they could be, or at least worry about the chances that they’ll be a natural disaster victim.”

Several prominent figures, such as Bill Nye, have pointed fingers at climate change and the use of fossil fuels. CNN’s Dana Bash and Democrat Texas Rep. Joaquin Castro suggested that climate change is a factor in the flood during a Sunday segment of “State of the Union.”

The flood in Texas has killed over 120 victims as of Thursday, including 27 campers at the all-girls Christian camp, Camp Mystic. At least 150 individuals remain missing in Kerr County.

Floods have occurred since the beginning of Earth’s history, and some of the worst floods in the U.S. happened over a century ago. One disaster in Pennsylvania  May 31, 1889, unleashed 16 million tons of water and killed over 2,200 people, while another flood on the Mississippi River in 1927 killed at least 250 people, according to History.com.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.


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July 15, 2025 at 08:03AM