Earlier this week, depending on where you live, you may have noticed a bit of a heat wave during your 4th of July celebrations. But as Bege pointed out on Thursday, simply noting that it was a hot day in July wasn't good enough for the climate cult members in the legacy media. They dredged up "experts" to declare that Tuesday and Wednesday were the "hottest days on record" if not the "hottest days ever." It was such a peculiar story that others began digging into the details to see if there was any merit to the idea or if it was all malarkey. At the Wall Street Journal, Steve Milloy of the Energy and Environment Legal Institute dug even deeper....
https://hotair.com/jazz-shaw/2023/07/08/about-those-hottest-days-ever-n563208Quote:
One obvious problem with the updated narrative is that there are no satellite data from 125,000 years ago. Calculated estimates of current temperatures can't be fairly compared with guesses of global temperature from thousands of years ago.
A more likely alternative to the 62.6-degree estimate is something around 57.5 degrees. The latter is an average of actual surface temperature measurements taken around the world and processed on a minute-by-minute basis by a website called temperature.global. The numbers have been steady this year, with no spike in July.
Moreover, the notion of "average global temperature" is meaningless. Average global temperature is a concept invented by and for the global-warming hypothesis. It is more a political concept than a scientific one. The Earth and its atmosphere is large and diverse, and no place is meaningfully average.