Completed volumes

  • Volume 4.3 December 2024

    This is a special issue of the Journal Science of Climate Change (SCC) which contains programme and extended abstracts from the International CLINTEL Scientific Conference in Prague, November 12 and 13, 2024, in the premises of the Chamber of Deputies of the Czech Republic. It also contains a climate declaration given by the end of…

  • Volume 4.1 June 2024

    Volume 4 is planned to appear in two issues. This first issue contains a longer review paper of Roy Clark, who explains in detail, why the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, who awarded part of the 2021 Nobel Prize for Physics to Syukuro Manabe, failed to recognize that the climate models used to justify the…

  • Volume 3.5 December 2023

    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 December 2023 as volume 3.4. To our surprise we had interesting papers to fill another…

  • Volume 3.4 December 2023

    This is a special issue of Science of Climate Change which contains extended abstracts from the 4th Nordic Climate Conference which took place in Copenhagen September 14-15, 2023. The previous Nordic Conferences were held in Stockholm October 7-9 2016, Göteborg, February 16- 17 2018, and in Oslo October 18-19 2019. Proceedings from the Oslo-conference are…

  • Volume 3.3 September 2023

    In this issue we present three articles which all show that there is no dangerous warming created by antropogenic release of CO2. The so called greenhouse effect is impossible or very small. The first article is written by Ferenc Miskolczi presenting fundamental theoretical equations for understanding the observed global average radiative equilibrium. It is shown…

  • Volume 3.2 June 2023

    In this issue we start with an essay by Richard Mackey on how the many observed oscillating atmospheric and oceanic systems are largely responsible for the Earth’s weather and climate. The Earth’s rotation forces the oscillations and is the primary reason for the climate change we observe. This is completely overlooked by IPCC: