The Climate Scaremongers: The BBC’s Weather Disaster Swindle
Are weather disasters becoming more common? You’d have thought so because we keep on being told so.
A few months ago, the BBC informed us:
“The number of weather-related disasters to hit the world has increased five-fold over the past 50 years,” says the World Meteorological Organization.
“As global temperatures have risen in recent decades, there has been a significant uptick in the number of disasters related to weather and water extremes.”
They even gave us this convenient chart:
Now, you might ask, if this is all true, why has the number of disasters declined in the last decade?
Every year, we are fed similar claims. Last week, it was the UN’s turn to publish its latest report on natural disasters. They say:
As with the BBC chart, we see that there has been no increase since 2000. But why the startling increase since the 1970s?
The answer is simple: there was no formal reporting system for disasters before 1998, when EM-DAT, the International Disaster Database, began to be published.
Consequently, many disasters were not formally recorded.
Indeed, CRED, the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters, which maintains the database, made this clear in 2004, when they had this to say about the collection of disaster data in their Annual Report:
“Until recently the needs were addressed on an ad hoc basis … As a result, data were incomplete, outdated, or unusable…
“Since 1900, more than 9,000 natural disasters have been registered in EM-DAT. Of these, about 80 percent have happened in the last thirty years. [This] might lead one to believe that disasters occur more frequently today … however reaching such a conclusion would be incorrect …
“Over the past thirty years, development in telecommunications, media, and increased international cooperation has played a critical role in the number of disasters reported.
“In addition, increases in humanitarian funds have encouraged reporting of more disasters, especially smaller events which were previously managed locally.”
Indeed, the latest UN report emphasizes that ‘99.7 percent of all disaster events between 1990 and 2013 were smaller disasters, involving fewer than 30 deaths or 5000 houses destroyed. Thousands of these smaller-scale events are unreported every year.‘
If thousands are still being unreported now, heaven knows how many were missed in the 1970s!
Still, it gives ample opportunity for the bureaucrats to record ever higher numbers of disasters in years to come.
The formal reporting of disasters in the 1970s was so poor that the database does not even include the Red River flood in August 1971, which killed an estimated 100,000 in North Vietnam.
Experts in these matters know all about this, from international aid agencies to charities. But they all turn a blind eye each year when the UN publishes fraudulent reports like this one.
And every year they are faithfully reported by the likes of the BBC, in an attempt to persuade the rest of us that we are heading for climatic Armageddon if we don’t do as we are told.
See more here: climatechangedispatch.com
Editor’s note: Here is the chart showing the number of weather-related deaths between 1920 & 2021
Image: Bjorn Lomborg
The graph below shows global Tropical Cyclone frequency between 1971 – May 2021. The trend has basically remained static for the last 50 years.
Image: Ryan Maue
The chart below shows US major landfallinghurricanes between 1900 – 2020
Image: Roger-Pielke
In a warmer world you get less storms not more, but the powers that be will continue to tell you the exact opposite.
Please Donate Below To Support Our Ongoing Work To Defend The Scientific Method
PRINCIPIA SCIENTIFIC INTERNATIONAL, legally registered in the UK as a company incorporated for charitable purposes. Head Office: 27 Old Gloucester Street, London WC1N 3AX.
Trackback from your site.
Saighdear
| #
Huh, when is a disaster not a disaster ? or no longer ( classed as ) a disaster? For a clue look here ( no need to sing about it ) List-of-prepositions. https://duckduckgo.com/?q=prepositions+list&t=opera&ia=web Each disaster is an opportunity for something / one else.
Reply
Geraint HUghes
| #
Scrap the BBC Licence and prosecute all climate crisis doom-mongers.
Reply
Andy
| #
Not a bad idea that 🙂
Reply