UN has been asked to cover up the truth about Earth's temperature
The leading scientists of the United Nations, responsible for research on Earth's climate change, are now facing the need to cover up the fact that our planet's temperature has not increased in The past 15 years.
A leaked photo of a UN report, prepared by hundreds of scientists, shows that politicians in the US, Belgium, Germany and Hungary have expressed concern about the draft report. final.
As planned, the report will be officially announced next week and is expected to mention the fact that 1998 was the hottest year in Earth's history and since then, the world temperature has never surpassed. cross this threshold. Until now, scientists are still struggling to find a way to explain that phenomenon.
The report is the six-year research result of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). However, leaked documents that the AP news agency has revealed reveal deep concerns by world politicians about the invariant of global warming in the last few years.
The authors report that the Earth's temperature has not increased since 1998. (Photo: Alamy)
Germany has called for the deletion of information to address the slowdown of global warming in the report, citing the reason that the study period is only 10 - 15 years "misleading" and should be Authors must focus on consideration for decades or centuries.
Hungary is worried, the report will provide more arguments for those who deny climate change as "artificial disaster". Belgium also objected to the use of 1998 as a starting point for statistical research, as it was an unusually hot year and made the graph appear to be on par. The country proposed, instead, used 1999 or 2000 as the starting point for statistics to create a graph with a higher upward path.
The American delegation even intervened, demanding that the authors report the lack of global warming, using the current "popular hypothesis" that warming is caused by oceans. absorbing more heat and that process is causing sea water to heat up.
The most recent IPCC assessment report was published in 2007, and was also a hotly debated topic after revising the claim that the Himalayas would disappear by 2035.
The incident was later considered a "Climategate" scandal, as a series of leaked e-mails seemed to uncover the fact that relevant scientists were trying to manipulate the data collected, to make the report more convincing. . However, many investigations at the time did not detect any mistakes.
The upcoming report, about 2,000 pages thick, will be presented to representatives of 195 governments around the world next week, at a conference in Stockholm, Sweden. Delegates can discuss the modifications they want. But due to the 20-page report summarizing the report, it was sent to the policymakers of the preview countries in June, so it received hundreds of objections.
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