C3: NOAA States That 96% of Deadliest U.S. Tornadoes Occurred Before 1960, Prior To The "Global Warming" Hysteria
Alarmists claim that severe weather incidents are becoming more frequent and more deadly.Higher floors, lower roofs: the town being shrunk by climate change angst | The Australian
Concerning U.S. tornadoes, that is an outright prevarication (a fancy word for a 'lie').
PORT Albert, on Victoria's southeast coast, is a pretty-as-a-picture fishing village that is at war with the science of climate change.Live Animals In A Climate Change Simulator Reveal Which Species Adapt | Fast Company
Residents in the village have been told that because of rising sea levels, new housing has to be built on stumps almost 1.5m above ground level, despite the fact many of the town's original colonial buildings have withstood time and tide on ground level without ill effect since the 19th century.
At the same time, a heritage overlay in the village, introduced more than a decade ago, prevents roof lines being built higher than the roof of the local pub, which is claimed to be Victoria's oldest continuously licensed hotel.
Residents have seen land values plummet by 38 per cent in the past year under the weight of the overlays. Investment in the town has stalled. And Port Albert Progress Association president Donna Eades says that, with rising floor levels and roof lines limited by the height of the pub, "the next generation of Port Albert residents will have to be pygmies".
Here's how it will work: machines will pump CO2 into closed-off rooms. Each climate-controlled room will stay at temperatures that reflect climate projections from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. ADAPTA's researchers will examine how the species adapt over time by performing genetic sequencing on new generations born in these controlled climate-simulating conditions.Carbon-Trading [Swindler] Dips Toe Into Water Markets - WSJ.com
CHICAGO—The principal architect of trading in greenhouse gases and other emissions is turning his attention to another commodity that needs some liquidity: water.
Richard Sandor has revived the Chicago-based firm that spawned the world's dominant emissions-trading franchise, turning its focus to using financial markets to tackle allocating scarce water supplies in parts of the U.S. and Canada.
1 comment:
Re, Carbon-Trading [Swindler] Dips Toe Into Water Markets - WSJ.com.
I've noticed that the policy makers want us to use less water. Why? My suspicion is that they want to sell the excess water we don't use to foreign nations.
I'd keep an eye out for water related news...
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