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Science of climate change
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  • Volume 3.5, Volumes and issues

Volume 3.5 December 2023

Forside-Science-of-Climate-Change-3.5

With this issue of SCC we finish the 3rd year for this journal. Our goal was to produce quarterly issues. A special issue with proceedings from the Copenhagen Climate Conference in September 2023 was published in the first part of…

  • Jan-Erik Solheim
  • 5 January, 2024
  • Papers, Review Articles, Volume 3.5

Forrest Frantz: The Greening of Scandinavia

Volume 3.5 The four tenets of consensus climate theory are: (1) Increasing CO2 harms the environment. (2) Increasing CO2 causes warming. (3) Increasing CO2 destabilizes climate. And (4), The harmful effects last hundreds of years so, we must act now.…

  • Jan-Erik Solheim
  • 30 December, 2023
  • Articles, Papers, Volume 3.5

Antero Ollila: Carbon Cycle Models and Budget

Volume 3.5 All carbon cycle models referenced by the IPCC have a common feature: Increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere originates from anthropogenic emissions. It is also generally known that the CO2 concentration observations show that about 44 – 46 %…

  • Jan-Erik Solheim
  • 29 December, 2023
  • Essay, Papers, Volume 3.5

Eike Roth: Climate: Man or Nature

Volume 3.5 From a purely logical perspective, humans can only be the main cause of the ongoing warming if two preconditions are met: CO2 must have a strong climate impact and the large amount of CO2 in the atmosphere must primarily be…

  • Jan-Erik Solheim
  • 20 December, 2023
  • Articles, Papers, Volume 3.5

Michael Schnell and Hermann Harde: Model-Experiment of the Greenhouse Effect

Volume 3.5 Radiation exchange of infrared-active gases with their environment is the basis of the atmospheric greenhouse effect (GHE). While the theoretical principles for the energy and heat exchange by infrared radiation were already refined at the end of the penultimate…

  • Jan-Erik Solheim
  • 20 December, 2023
  • Essay, Papers, Volume 3.5

Richard Mackey: Continental Drift and IPCC

Volume 3.5 This essay examines how in the twentieth century established scientists blocked the development of scientific work about the theory of continental drift.  There are many similarities between this blocking behaviour and the manner in which the IPCC and the…

  • Jan-Erik Solheim
  • 11 December, 2023
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Science of Climate Change is a not for profit independent scientific journal dedicated to the publication and discussion of research articles, short communications and review papers on all aspects of climate change. We publish Open Access, but may ask for a small fee by authors to cover publication cost.

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