Climate change activists have spewed an environmental doomsday narrative for decades now, but the United Nations Climate Chief says there is no “existential threat to humanity.”
Professor Jim Skea is the newly elected head of the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) which monitors and assesses the science related to climate change.
Learn the benefits of becoming a Valuetainment Member and subscribe today!
During an interview with the German news agency DPA over the weekend, Skea said “If you constantly communicate the message that we are all doomed to extinction, then that paralyzes people and prevents them from taking the necessary steps to get a grip on climate change.”
However, Skea told Der Speigel magazine, “We should not despair and fall into a state of shock” if global temperatures were to increase by this amount and that, “The world won’t end if it warms by more than 1.5 degrees.”
Skea, a distinguished climate scientist with an extensive background spanning over four decades, emphasized that surpassing a 1.5-degree Celsius rise in global temperatures from the pre-industrial era does not present an “existential threat to humanity.”
Though Skea stated that the world will not be dying out, he did mention that humanity will be entering a more dangerous world due to social tensions rising. He did note that “man-made” climate change is here, and it can no longer be ignored.
“Man has caused this global crisis and caused massive damage to the planet,” Mr. Skea said. “The task now is to prevent something even worse from happening.”
According to The Epoch Times, Skea’s comments of climate change have differed since July 26 when he allegedly declared climate change “an existential threat to our planet.”
Some of these experts, including Nobel prize-winning physicist John F. Clauser, have been censored when sharing their skepticism over climate change and the narrative being constantly pushed.
Clauser, who has openly voiced his disagreement with the Biden’s administration’s climate policies, was set to speak at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) about climate models on July 25 but was pulled from the event.
It seems there may be too much money to lose if these experts had their voices heard in contrary to the climate crisis narrative.
Add comment