
this Associated Press (AP) recently published an article titled “From deluges to drought, climate change accelerates the water cycle and triggers more extreme weather.” This article is wrong. The evidence clearly shows that no changes in extreme weather trends were found in the data, and therefore, no changes were associated with climate change.
“For decades, scientists have warned that rising global temperatures will juice the water cycle, leading to storms, more severe droughts and chaotic changes between the two,” the Associated Press article said. This tired telescope assumes climate change drives individual weather events, which is actually repeatedly refuted in the rebuttal Climate realism.
Check the actual data blows the AP's extreme weather “juicing” fantasy faster than the house of cards in the storm.
Let's start with the flood. For example, Climate Realism The article “No, Reuters, climate change has not increased the impact of flooding”, citing Noaa's historical flood records to prove that these events have been eliminated and naturally flowed for centuries while SUVs roamed the planet.
Then there is drought: A glance at the climate: drought lists the U.S. Palmer drought severity index, and despite rising carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere, no longer long-term trend has worsened in the past 120 years. Intergovernmental groups on climate change, often the top choice for climate alerters, even admit that they have less confidence in transferring extreme weather to human CO2 emissions, which is nuanced. Seattle Timeswhich brings the Associated Press story to skip conveniently.
But that doesn't stop there. The Associated Press' obsession with the El Niño phenomenon and the “juicing” water cycle on natural climate drivers such as La Niña has masked thousands of years of weather fluctuations.
Strong evidence comes from “variability of El Niño/Southern oscillation activity in the Holocene millennial time standard”, published in nature. This study analyzed 10,000 years of sediment records to reconstruct Holocene variability (last approximately 11,700 years). The study found that El Niño and La Niña (ENSO) events (markers of change with precipitation and sediment deposition) occurred for at least 10,000 years, and their frequency and intensity fluctuated naturally over decades and centuries.
“The variability of ENSO has been a continuous feature of the tropical Pacific climate system throughout the Holocene,” said the authors of the study. They linked these cycles to a large number of weather fluctuations, such as from wet conditions to dry conditions.
this Seattle Times The Associated Press article cannot be critically republished. What about the wet and wet cycles of the Pacific Northwest to Seattle? Historical Records – 2011 National Academy of Sciences conference record titled “Drought Variability in the Pacific Northwest from 6,000 Years of Lake Sediment Records” Analyzing the sediment core of Castor Lake, Washington, reconstructing the 6,000 Years of Flood/drought/drought history in the Pacific Northwest. It found that the cycle of wet and dryness fluctuates naturally over thousands of years, lasting decades of drying periods, driven primarily by natural climate patterns such as Elniño/LaNiña.
Back to the Associated Press article, it also claims:
The ocean absorbs most of the extra heat of the Earth. This causes water to expand and melt at the poles, thereby increasing sea level. Warm water also fuels larger hurricanes and cyclones that can dump large amounts of water in a short period of time.
These claims are easily refuted. Data presented in the climate are clear at a glance: hurricanes have proved that global cyclone activity has remained stable without fingerprints of climate change. Moreover, before “climate change”, sea levels naturally gradually rose.
Other data suggest that Wilder swing in extreme weather occurred in the early 20th century, and in Dust Bowl in the 1930s, CO2 levels were much lower than those currently. The floods of the past dwarfed many modern events, like the devastating Green Valley floods of 1911 or the huge floods of Mississippi in 1927, should we believe this is completely new? The Associated Press also overlooked the truth of inconvenience, such as improving infrastructure, better forecasts and improved warning systems that reduced weather-related deaths by more than 90% in the last century. A 2021 World Health Organization report confirmed that the death toll from extreme weather has dropped sharply.
“The death toll has almost tripled due to improved early warnings and improvements in disaster management,” WMO reported.
Next to the donation button next to the article above the AP is: “The Associated Press sets the standards for political reporting. Support independent, fact-based news. ”
However, the evidence is clear, and although the AP is based on an unproven, vague expert claim to “juicing” water cycles, the agency ignored government research and peer reviewed this conclusion. Climate Realism Dozens of articles have been published citing real-world data that show that the trends in wildfires, hurricanes and tornadoes have not worsened, for example, here, here, here, and here, have become worsened in response to claimed climate change.
“Factual-based?” hardly, because the agency often ignores a lot of easily discovered data that undermines the world's climate crisis as the “reporter” does in this story. shame Associated Press For such news stories.
The fourth estate should be informed rather than indoctrinated. In this story, AP gets a “F” for false reports.

Anthony Watts
Anthony Watts is a senior researcher in the Environment and Climate at the Heartland Institute. Watts has been in the weather business in front of and behind the camera since 1978 and currently broadcast forecasts are being made every day. He created a weather graphics demonstration system for television, professional weather instruments, and co-authored a peer-reviewed paper on climate issues. He runs the most viewed website in the world on the award-winning site wattsupwiththat.com.
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