Natural climate change: Why sun and wind play a bigger role than we’ve been told
When man-made climate change started to be discussed more and more from 2015 onwards, the spanish microbiologist and biochemist Javier Vinós analyzed a number of scientific papers and studied data on climate factors which are not part of official theories. He’s now an expert in the theory of natural climate change which he explained in his 2022 book „Climate of the Past, Present and Future“.
His theory states that an increased solar activity has a great impact on a change in climate. Variations in the transport of energy (heat) from the tropics to the poles have been neglected as a cause of a changing climate, and solar activity variations affect climate by modulating this transport. Besides solar activity, so-called „planetary waves“, huge atmospheric winds, are factors not considered enough in climate discussions. These waves cause a transport of heat (energy) from the greenhouse gas-rich region, the tropics, to the poles where the amount of greenhouse gases is lower. This increases the amount of energy lost at the top of the atmosphere. The effect resembles a reduction in the greenhouse gas content which he forecasts for the coming decades. Vinós concludes that the climate is changing in a natural manner and that most of factors identified in warming the climate were misinterpreted. He asks politicians and scientists to investigate and discuss alternative theories on a broader level.
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