CNN’s AMOC Alarm Debunked: Ocean Current Collapse Claims Crumble Under Scrutiny

A recent CNN article by Laura Paddison, titled “A crucial system of ocean currents is slowing. It’s already supercharging sea level rise in the US, references new research on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) to claim the current is slowing down leading to rising seas and costly, deadly coastal flooding. This false claim is based solely on a single, as yet unpublished and unverified, study which used a single climate model’s projections. Evidence, such as other studies and historical reporting on AMOC trends demonstrate that there is no consensus on the status of the AMOC. Rather, scientists’ predictions and the media’s reporting on the AMOC have been flip-flopping for nearly two decades—unable to decide whether AMOC is speeding up, slowing down, or staying steady.

Figure1. A simplified illustration of the global “conveyor belt” of ocean currents that transport heat around Earth. Red shows surface currents, and blue shows deep currents. Deep water forms where the sea surface is the densest. The background color shows sea-surface density. The AMOC is the currents in the Atlantic Ocean off the east coast of the US. Source: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio.

The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation has been among the climate alarmists’ top go-to bogeyman for years. There was even a sci-fi movie made about its collapse, The The Day After Tomorrow, in which the AMOC;s collapse leads to a new ice age within days. Whether the movie made for good drama is debatable, but what is not debatable was the vigorous criticism that climate scientists leveled against its portrayal of climate change. Looking at the history of AMOC predictions, according to some studies, it’s collapsing. In others, it’s strengthening. Sometimes studies suggest that the AMOC has not changed measurably at all in recent years. The problem is scientists have not had a reliable way to observe AMOC long enough to make definitive statements. That hasn’t stopped the press from pushing speculative, often contradictory, claims based on every new study.

Heartland President James Taylor documented this ever-changing narrative in his 2021 article at Climate Realism, highlighting how climate activists have repeatedly contradicted themselves on AMOC trends. One year it’s accelerating—fueling European warming—another year it’s stalling, threatening a new Ice Age. The takeaway? We simply don’t know enough to draw sweeping conclusions, let alone restructure financial lending or credit scoring based on these speculations.

In this case, CNN isn’t even citing published research, but relies heavily on yet unpublished research started in 2024 by Liping Zhang—an oceanographer with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory—suggesting that AMOC may be weakening due to climate-related factors and could be ingincreased coastal flooding. While Zhang’s modeling work may indeed raise valid scientific questions, CNN fails to mention the massive caveats attached to this line of research: sparse observational data, high model uncertainty, and a lack of consensus within the scientific community.

Had CNN done a even a modest amount of fact checking, it would have found that two peer reviewed studies published in a top science journal, Nature, in January and February of this year came to precisely the opposite conclusion as the unpublished study that the “news” organization is touting. Those studies looked at data and models and concluded that the AMOC is showing no sign of decline and was unlikely to do so even under climate extremes.

In addition, CNN ignored the fact that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in Chapter 12 of its Sixth Assessment Report: Emergence of Climate Impact Drivers, has found no correlation between climate change and coastal flooding in the present, and predicts none in the future as shown in the table below, note the yellow highlighted row “Coastal flood.”

IPCC Table 12.12 | Emergence of CIDs in different time periods, as assessed in this section. The colour corresponds to the confidence of the region with the highest confidence: white cells indicate where evidence is lacking or the signal is not present, leading to overall low confidence of an emerging signal.

It is hard to believe there would be no coastal flooding if glacial melt was rapidly occurring which would be necessary for the AMOC to slow abruptly. Even when CNN acknowledges the uncertainty about the research’s claims, quoting Gerard McCarthy, an oceanographer at Maynooth University in Ireland, who candidly admits: “The science is still not clear,” its article then immediately pivots into speculative catastrophe—claiming future foreclosures, economic loss, and insurance shocks—all supposedly based on AMOC’s decline. That’s not reporting. That’s narrative crafting.

Making matters even worse, CNN has been corrected on this issue before. In 2024, Climate Realism published a comprehensive takedown of similar claims in a piece titled “No, CNN and Other Media Outlets: Climate Change is Not Causing the Ocean Circulation to Collapse”. The article points out that the limited time frame of AMOC observations—barely two decades—renders any long-term predictions highly speculative. Simply put: if you haven’t watched something for long, you can’t know with any confidence what it is going to do in the future. Also, climate model projections can’t help this problem, since they are known to be flawed and are dependent upon the quality of the assumptions built into them. If modelers assume climate change will cause an AMOC collapse, one shouldn’t be surprised when the models they create forecast a collapsing AMOC.

CNN compounds the errors resulting from its dubious use of science by projecting even more unjustified economic extrapolations. They tie AMOC-driven flooding to increased foreclosures, credit instability, and higher insurance premiums. This is a sleight of hand: attributing economic pressures caused by real estate inflation, poor zoning, and coastal overdevelopment to hypothetical ocean current changes.

The truth is that insurance losses and flood exposure are driven by where people build and what they build, not by a slow-motion current thousands of miles offshore. This was recently exposed by Climate Realism in CNN’s Climate Con: How Real Estate, Not Storms, Drives Insurance Costs. That article cites NOAA’s own data, such as the Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters database, which consistently shows that the rising cost of disasters is due to increased development in high-risk areas—not increased frequency or intensity of disasters.

CNN’s article on the AMOC is yet another example of how mainstream media misleads the public by dressing up uncertain science as inevitability. By leaning on AMOC modeling that lacks a solid observational foundation and is directly contradicted by other scientific research, then spinning speculative findings into warnings of financial collapse, CNN continues a disturbing trend: using unsubstantiated climate narratives to generate fear and political action, facts be damned. Even thought the experts CNN quotes say, “The science is still not clear,” CNN’s fail to practice any journalistic caution. Instead, CNN peddles science on the AMOC that has already been debunked, using it to support alarming narratives about insurance markets, lending, and housing. The result is a disservice to both science and the public, dismissing real science and sound economic and public policies in the pursuit of progressive political ends, like bigger government intervention in energy markets.

Anthony Watts

Anthony Watts is a senior fellow for environment and climate at The Heartland Institute. Watts has been in the weather business both in front of, and behind the camera as an on-air television meteorologist since 1978, and currently does daily radio forecasts. He has created weather graphics presentation systems for television, specialized weather instrumentation, as well as co-authored peer-reviewed papers on climate issues. He operates the most viewed website in the world on climate, the award-winning website wattsupwiththat.com.

Originally posted at ClimateREALISM


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May 24, 2025 at 04:05PM

Claim: Climate Change Could Bring Mosquito Diseases to Britain

Essay by Eric Worrall

Malaria was the scourge of early 1600s Britain, during the Little Ice Age, but today’s scientists think insect borne diseases need a warm climate.

Climate change could bring insect-borne tropical diseases to UK, scientists warn

Mosquito experts say cuts in aid will lead to collapse of crucial surveillance and control in endemic countries

Anna Bawden Health and social affairs correspondent Sat 24 May 2025 01.31 AEST

Climate change could make the UK vulnerable to insect-transmitted tropical diseases that were previously only found in hot countries, scientists have warned, urging ministers to redouble efforts to contain their spread abroad.

Leading mosquito experts said the government’s cuts to international aid would lead to a collapse in crucial surveillance, control and treatment programmes in endemic countries, leading to more deaths.

This week, the UK Health Security Agency announced the discovery of West Nile virus in UK mosquitoes for the first time. The agency said it had found no evidence of transmission to humans and the risk to the British public was low.

West Nile virus is transmitted by mosquitoes and, like dengue feverchikungunya and zika, used to be confined to hotter regions of the world. But global heating has expanded the geographical spread of West Nile virus and other tropical diseases into cooler areas, including parts of northern and western Europe. In 2024, there were more than 1,400 cases of locally acquired West Nile virus and several hundred cases of dengue, mostly in France and Italy.

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2025/may/23/climate-change-could-bring-insect-borne-tropical-diseases-to-uk-scientists-warn

Gee I wonder how West Nile virus got into UK mosquitoes?

There is zero doubt that insect diseases have no problem thriving in cold climates. Malaria used to be a horrific problem in the far North.

The Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure

Department of Geography and Faculty of History

The not-so tropical disease: malaria in northern Europe

Mathias Mølbak Ingholt 

Many people know that malaria is a mosquito-borne disease that largely occurs in tropical regions. However, it is not so well known that malaria was endemic in parts of northern Europe – including Britain – until relatively recently.  

Unlike Plasmodium falciparum malaria, which today dominates in Sub-Saharan Africa with high mortality rates, European malaria was caused by Plasmodium vivax, a species with low mortality. It was eradicated from Europe only relatively recently, in the 20th century – yet surprisingly little is known about its history, and there is still some debate about how important a disease it was in the past.

Malaria, agues, and fevers 

The word “malaria” comes from the Italian words mal and aria, meaning “bad air”. This was a reference to the miasma theory of disease, according to which disease is caused by exposure to unhealthy vapours that emerged spontaneously. These vapours were believed to have existed in marshes and wetlands, and these ecotypes were stigmatized as very unhealthy in 17th-19th century literature. In the case of Britain, wetlands were associated with “agues” and “marsh fevers”, and in Denmark and Germany, wetlands were associated with “koldfeber” (cold fever) and “fevers” in general.  

Read more: https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/blog/2025/03/13/malaria-in-northern-europe/

We are all used to climate disinformation, but I find nonsensical attempts to link the risk of insect borne disease outbreaks to a failure to install enough solar panels and wind turbines particularly distressing.

Responding sensibly to the risk of outbreaks or outbreaks which occur could save thousands of lives.

Climate alarmists who muddy the water on this issue, who sow confusion with their dogma, in my opinion are endangering people’s lives – including the lives of people I care about.


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May 24, 2025 at 12:05PM

Maryland Governor: Can’t Afford Climate Virtue Projects

Inside Climate News speaking on the side of Climate Virute reported Moore Vetoes Key Maryland Climate Studies, Reversing Course on Environmental Justice Commitments.  Excerpts in italics with my bolds.

The governor nixed a series of high-profile bills that aimed to study the economic impacts of climate change, energy infrastructure and reparations, leaving advocates questioning his commitment to environmental and racial justice priorities.

Maryland legislators and environmental advocates expressed dismay after Gov. Wes Moore vetoed a series of widely supported climate and environmental study bills last week, actions they believe not only mark a sharp departure from his climate promises, but also reflect a breakdown in communication between the governor and members of his own party in the legislature.

Climate Lemmings

On May 16, Moore vetoed more bills than he had in the past two years combined, including multiple proposals that had passed with strong backing from legislative leadership and key climate coalitions.

The vetoes—affecting studies on climate costs, energy reliability, data center impacts and racial reparations—have left activists and lawmakers questioning whether Moore remains a reliable ally in the fight for climate and racial justice and whether his political calculus may have shifted, placing short-term cost savings above long-term structural reform.

Among the vetoed bills was the Responding to Emergency Needs from Extreme Weather (RENEW) Act of 2025, which would have tasked the comptroller and state agencies with assessing the total cost of greenhouse gas emissions and reporting findings by December 2026. Stripped down from its original version, which proposed financial penalties for fossil fuel companies, the bill was seen as an important step toward documenting climate damages and laying the groundwork for future polluter-pay policies.

The estimated cost of the study was about $500,000, drawn from the state’s Strategic Energy Investment Fund (SEIF)—a dedicated fund supported by penalties utilities paid for failing to meet renewable energy targets. It has ballooned to over $300 million in recent years.

Moore also rejected the Data Center Impact Analysis and Report bill, which called for a collaborative study on the environmental and economic footprint of data center expansion across Maryland. The report, required to be completed by September 2026, was meant to guide future zoning and energy decisions as these power-intensive facilities expand statewide.

In a letter to the Senate and House leadership, Moore stated budget shortage, agency workload and redundancy as key reasons for the vetoes. “Many of these reports are never read and simply collect dust on shelves,” Moore wrote, calling the expected $1.28 million cost “an unsustainable commitment given the state’s current financial constraints.”

Also vetoed was the Energy Resource Adequacy and Planning Act, which would have created a Strategic Energy Planning Office within the Public Service Commission to assess long-term electricity reliability, model resource scenarios and recommend planning strategies. It was designed to help Maryland manage increasing energy demands as the state transitions toward clean power. The office would have released a major report every three years, coordinating with state agencies and collecting public input. The veto stalls forward-thinking energy planning, critics said.

In a separate letter to Senate President Bill Ferguson and House Speaker Adrienne Jones, Moore justified his veto of the Energy Resource Adequacy and Planning Act by citing fiscal constraints and overlaps. He pointed to the estimated annual cost of $4.4 million to $5.3 million, warning it would duplicate efforts and pass costs on to consumers. “This cost would ultimately be passed along to Maryland ratepayers at a time when we are actively working to limit their burden, not add to it,” he wrote.

“This veto is extremely frustrating and simply does not support the state’s climate goals.”

— Kim Coble, Maryland League of Conservation Voters

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May 24, 2025 at 11:02AM

Swedish Northvolt Pulls Plug On E-Car Plant…But Germans Keep Denying E-Car Reality

Denial of failure in Germany…leaders insist e-car production plants are needed (even though cars aren’t selling).

The Swedish Northvolt Drama

This drama about the battery factory has entered the next round. NDR German public broadcasting reports on the closure of the main plant in Sweden.

There is more bad news from battery manufacturer Northvolt: The insolvency administrator has announced that battery cell production in Skellefteå in northern Sweden, Northvolt’s main plant, is to be shut down. It is to be completely shut down by 30 June – if no buyer can be found by then. This means that the company will completely cease production in its home country. However, the search for a new investor is still ongoing, according to reports. There are also potential buyers for the various business areas within the Northvolt Group. ‘The talks and negotiations are ongoing and are at various stages,’ said insolvency administrator Mikael Kubu in the press release.”

In Germany, the conservative-green coalition state government in Schleswig-Holstein remains surprisingly still optimistic about the planned plant in Heide. Perhaps it has to be, given the sums that the state and federal government have guaranteed and already paid.

According to a spokesperson for the German Northvolt subsidiary, the events in Sweden have no impact on the planned site in Heide (Dithmarschen district). Northvolt Germany is formally independent of Northvolt AB in Sweden and is therefore not affected by the insolvency proceedings for the time being. The search for investors is continuing, according to the spokesperson. There is great interest in the site near Heide. Insolvency administrator Mikael Kubu in Sweden had not yet commented specifically on the German subsidiary.

Despite the insolvency of the Swedish parent company, construction is continuing at Heide. Currently, the focus is more on the infrastructure on the construction site.

Despite the bad news from Sweden, many members of parliament from Schleswig-Holstein still see the opportunity for the site in Dithmarschen. ‘There will be an investor, I am very confident about that,’ said Lasse Petersdotter (Green Party) to NDR Schleswig-Holstein. Lukas Kilian (CDU conservatives) spoke of Northvolt’s ‘silverware’. ‘If you can sell something, then you have to look at this location and develop it further,’ he said. ‘We have the green electricity, we have the good connections, we have the experts there.’

Kianusch Stender (SPD socialists) expressed a similar view: ‘Over 100 hectares of levelled building land with planning permission already in place. We have virtually everything we need. This is a prime piece of land for any investor.’ Bernd Buchholz (FDP free democrats) was somewhat less euphoric: ‘The chance for Heide really only lies in a strategic investor who is able to operate a battery cell production facility themselves.’

Economics Minister Claus Ruhe Madsen is also in favour of Heide: ‘There are reports that say we need up to 30 production sites in Europe. And we naturally want to ensure that one of them is in Schleswig-Holstein,’ he said.”

How is all this supposed to work? Where has the money gone? How well was it checked in advance?
Northvolt has practically no production and no more customers.

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May 24, 2025 at 10:39AM