June 7, 2019 By H. Sterling Burnett Climate Change Weekly #325
A new report by Drs. Craig Idso, David Legates, and S. Fred Singer, released by The Heartland Institute, shows the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and other government and nongovernment organizations are wrong to claim sea levels are increasing at an unusually rapid rate due to anthropogenic climate change. The scientists analyzed peer-reviewed literature examining long-term data from tidal gauges and other sources and found the amount of sea level increase the Earth has experienced over the past century is not unusual historically, nor has the rate of rise increased significantly over the past few decades.
Though the amount and rate of sea level rise has varied considerably at different locations over varying time periods due to factors such as land subsidence, land rebound or emergence, erosion, and other localized factors, on average global sea levels have risen approximately 400 feet since the beginning of the end of the most recent ice age approximately 20,000 years ago........
A 2017 report released by The Heartland Institute, by geophysicist Dennis Hedke, analyzed data collected from ten coastal cities with relatively long and reliable sea-level records, including Ceuta, Spain; Honolulu, Hawaii; Atlantic City, New Jersey; Sitka, Alaska; Port Isabel, Texas; St. Petersburg, Florida; Fernandina Beach, Florida; Mumbai/Bombay, India; Sydney, Australia; and Slipshavn, Denmark. Hedke found there was no correlation between changes in sea levels at these locations and rising carbon dioxide levels........
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Though the amount and rate of sea level rise has varied considerably at different locations over varying time periods due to factors such as land subsidence, land rebound or emergence, erosion, and other localized factors, on average global sea levels have risen approximately 400 feet since the beginning of the end of the most recent ice age approximately 20,000 years ago........
A 2017 report released by The Heartland Institute, by geophysicist Dennis Hedke, analyzed data collected from ten coastal cities with relatively long and reliable sea-level records, including Ceuta, Spain; Honolulu, Hawaii; Atlantic City, New Jersey; Sitka, Alaska; Port Isabel, Texas; St. Petersburg, Florida; Fernandina Beach, Florida; Mumbai/Bombay, India; Sydney, Australia; and Slipshavn, Denmark. Hedke found there was no correlation between changes in sea levels at these locations and rising carbon dioxide levels........
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- CHINA CHEATS ON CFCs
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