Environmental activists have relied heavily on computer models to predict climate patterns confirming their notion that mankind is toxic.
However, recent studies have shown models have failed to consider real world conditions in their calculations.
Exhibit 1 -
Sea ice is more resilient to melting than thought:
Using new satellite data, researchers at University College London reported in Nature Geoscience on Monday that the total volume of sea ice in the Northern Hemisphere was well above average in the autumn of 2013, traditionally the end of the annual melt season, after an unusually cool summer when temperatures dropped to levels not seen since the 1990s.
“We now know it can recover by a significant amount if the melting season is cut short,” said the study’s lead author Rachel Tilling, a researcher who studies satellite observations of the Arctic. “The sea ice might be a little more resilient than we thought.”
Exhibit 2 - The effects of the
vast deserts of the Earth have not been considered, and it appears that a good portion of emitted carbon dioxide is disappearing within them.