Kuwait Times

Climate deniers use past records to sow doubt

-

BARCELONA: With Europe gripped by successive heatwaves, climate-change deniers are spreading skepticism by publishing data on social media on extreme temperatur­es allegedly recorded decades ago to imply scientists are exaggerati­ng global warming. But experts say the figures cited from the past are often incorrect or taken out of context - and even if accurate do not change the fact that heatwaves are becoming more frequent and intense. The posts typically include heat records from almanacs or newspaper reports from the past, arguing that they are similar to the record highs set during this year’s heatwaves in Europe.

One post that has gone viral on Facebook includes a screen grab of a brief article published in the New York Times on June 23, 1935, which said the mercury had hit 127 degrees Fahrenheit (52.7 degrees Celsius) in Zaragoza, in northeaste­rn Spain, the day before. That temperatur­e is much higher than the record for the highest temperatur­e in Spain of 47.6 degrees Celsius recorded on August 14, 2021 by national weather office Aemet at the La Rambla meteorolog­ical station in the southern province of Cordoba.

Contacted by AFP Fact Check, Aemet spokesman Ruben del Campo said the highest temperatur­e recorded in Zaragoza that day in 1935 was just 39 degrees Celsius. “The figure of over 52 degrees in incorrect. It is not a figure that is in our climate database, and in fact, there is no log of a temperatur­e above 50 degrees Celsius,” he said. And “even if the figure was correct, which I stress it is not, that is not proof that climate changes does not exist”, he added.

Spanish daily newspaper La Vanguardia in 1935 also reported that temperatur­es had hit the low 50s in Zaragoza but explained that the measuremen­t was taken “in the sun”. Scientists recommend a series of strict criteria to ensure an accurate temperatur­e reading. “Sensors must be protected from the sun and the rain, and the temperatur­e inside the weather station must be the same as what it is outside,” said Aemet meteorolog­ists Ricardo Torrijo. Another post that has gone viral on Facebook, Telegram and Twitter since last June shows a front page of Spanish weekly magazine El Espanol from August 1957 with the headline: “The hottest summer of the century”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait