US Department of Energy report eviscerates the climate alarmist narrative
By Rhoda Wilson on August 4, 2025
At the end of July, the US Department of Energy released a draft report evaluating existing peer-reviewed literature on the impacts of greenhouse gases.
It eviscerates the climate alarmists’ narrative about CO2, extreme weather events and rising sea levels. It also points out the data limitations, climate model deficiencies and overstated scenarios and trends used to create “exaggerated projections of future warming.”
On 29 July, the US Department of Energy (“DoE”) released a draft report titled ‘A Critical Review of Impacts of Greenhouse Gas Emissions on the U.S. Climate’. The report evaluates existing peer-reviewed literature and government data on climate impacts of greenhouse gas emissions and provides a critical assessment of the conventional narrative on climate change.
It was developed by the 2025 Climate Working Group, a group of five independent scientists assembled by Energy Secretary Chris Wright, with expertise in physical science, economics, climate science and academic research. The reports’ authors are John Christy, Judith Curry, Steven Koonin, Ross McKitrick and Roy Spencer.
Key findings include the conclusion that CO2-induced warming appears to be less damaging economically than commonly believed, and that aggressive mitigation strategies may be misdirected or potentially more harmful than beneficial. It also finds that US policy actions are expected to have undetectably small direct impacts on the global climate, with any effects emerging only after long delays.
more:
https://expose-news.com/2025/08/04/report-eviscerates-climate-alarmist-narrative/