Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeYour LettersCarbon dioxide facts

Carbon dioxide facts

Mr Ed Diery in his letter to SFT (30/6) claims to be a scientist, yet he offers no scientific evidence for his belief in global warming caused by an increase in carbon dioxide from man’s activities. That is probably because there is no scientific evidence for such manmade global warming. His arguments are typical of its genre: “widely acknowledged as a greenhouse gas” and “may reach a tipping point…… consequences may be disastrous”.
There is no doubt that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has increased, but temperatures have not reacted accordingly. In fact, the world’s temperatures decreased between 1940 and 1975 when carbon dioxide emissions were rapidly rising. Furthermore, there has been a slight global cooling over the past 10 years, again with rising carbon dioxide levels. It is obvious therefore that carbon dioxide levels are not driving our temperatures. It is a sad reflection on science that much of it has deteriorated into a belief system in the new environmental religion. Instead of looking at empirical evidence, so-called scientists now refer to majority belief. Labor and Green politicians have done a good job of brainwashing the public against carbon dioxide by continuing to call it “pollution”. As an ex-science teacher, Mr Diery would know that carbon dioxide is in fact the basic food of all our plant life, which in turn feeds every creature on this planet. The more carbon dioxide we have in our atmosphere the better our plants will grow and the more able we will be to feed our rapidly increasing population.
Tony Hassall, Ballandean

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

More News

Dry conditions push lighter stock into yard

Agents and vendors combined again to present 1389 head of sheep and lambs for the weekly sale. The buyers forum was there with two...

Dalveen Sports Day returns after decades on the sidelines

The age-old tradition of Dalveen Sports Day has been resurrected after the Dalveen Sports Club and Dalveen School P&C joined forces to host the...

Wave of support keeps Southern Downs Steam Railway on track

Southern Downs Steam Railway (SDSR) is feeling the overwhelming support from the community after the volunteer-run railway received three grants in the last six...

Hands-on ag education event to debut in Warwick

Warwick students will get a hands-on taste of life in agriculture when the SCOTS PGC College hosts the town’s first Moo Baa Munch event...

Warwick teen earns Boys Brigade’s highest honour

Standing inside Queensland’s Government House alongside an exclusive group of top Boys Brigade members, Warwick teenager Cain Cristina-Holland celebrated an achievement years in the...

Border Rugby League set to kick off

The Border Rugby League competition will start with a Round Robin event on 23 May at Tenterfield. Stanthorpe Gremlins president Roger O’Brien said round...

Stanthorpe voice to lead global women’s group

Stanthorpe’s Sandy Venn-Brown has been voted president-elect of global women’s rights organisation Zonta International. Ms Venn-Brown secured the role at the organisation’s worldwide election earlier...

UniSQ’s global role in groundbreaking space discovery

Researchers from the University of Southern Queensland (UniSQ), alongside those from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Harvard University, have made a groundbreaking...

Free movie day draws a crowd

Churches of Christ's One Table Cafe function room turned into a mini-cinema when "Song Sung Blue" screened for free on the big screen. The free...

Allora farmer to join global climate talks

Allora farmer Sally Higgins will take regional Queensland’s voice to the world stage after being named Australia’s Youth Climate Champion for this year’s COP31...