CNN’s Climate Photo Op Exposed: Environmental Damage Isn’t All Climate Change’s Fault

CNN’s recent photo essay, “Striking images showing environmental destruction aim to ‘inspire action,’” claims that photographs of trash heaps, collapsing homes, and dust storms “show the devastating effects of climate change.” This is false. The images have nothing to do with climate change at all. They depict human-induced environmental degradation, poor land-use decisions, and poverty-related infrastructure collapse—none of which are climate-driven phenomena. Evidence suggests CNN is once again substituting emotive imagery for science in furtherance of the narrative that climate change causes everything bad.

CNN’s short report discusses a pictorial presentation given at the Global Climate Alliance’s (GCA) Right Here, Right Now Summit, hosted to coincide with the UN World Environment Day conference June 4th through 7th. Aside from images that have nothing to do with climate change, other pictures describe the aftermath of extreme weather events, the types of which have been common throughout history. Data show such weather patterns have not become more common or severe. In short, the series of pictures show human tragedy, not the impact of supposedly dangerous anthropogenic climate change.

Let’s start with the obvious: a photo of children collecting garbage from Myanmar’s Inle Lake is not a climate change story—it’s a waste management story. Piles of plastic floating in a lake indicate societal neglect, not a change in atmospheric CO₂ concentrations. CNN attempts to pass this off as evidence of “climate injustice,” when in reality, it is the result of poor sanitation policy and insufficient waste infrastructure. No peer-reviewed science attributes plastic accumulation in lakes to anthropogenic climate change.

The second image CNN chose to highlight from the Right Here, Right Now exhibit shows a house toppling into the River Ganges in West Bengal, India, attributed to erosion. Erosion is a well-understood hydrological process that has been reshaping riverbanks for millennia. It is worsened by deforestation and unregulated building near dynamic river systems—not global temperature anomalies. The real issue here is irresponsible construction in flood-prone areas. Building on the banks of one of the world’s most active sediment transport systems is a risk entirely independent of “carbon pollution.”

Other pictures depict the shrinking Aral Sea, a decline caused by Soviet era policies that diverted water flowing into the sea for irrigation, and garbage heaps in Myanmar, for example, are, once again, problems created by public policies and human actions, but that do not represent impacts of climate change.

The CNN article, in typical fashion, makes sweeping claims without providing empirical backing. We’re told the images reflect the “slow violence” of climate change—a phrase that’s emotionally powerful, but scientifically hollow. Slow environmental degradation certainly exists, but conflating it with climate change is dishonest. CNN wants readers to feel something rather than think critically. This is emotional manipulation.

CNN also attempts to legitimize this narrative by invoking the support of the United Nations Human Rights Office (OHCHR), which calls climate change a “human rights crisis”. This kind of rhetorical overreach dilutes the credibility of both institutions. While climate has always had human consequences, turning it into a platform for political advocacy through photography and activism masquerading as journalism distorts public understanding. It frames all environmental problems, regardless of origin, as symptoms of global warming. It is both scientifically inaccurate and lazy.

Let’s return to facts. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Sixth Assessment Report (AR6), Chapter 12, while some regions are projected to experience more intense precipitation or drought, the report makes clear that attribution of individual events or regional environmental stressors to climate change remains deeply uncertain. The IPCC explicitly warns against oversimplified narratives that turn every weather or environmental anomaly into a climate crisis. CNN, however, ignores this caution entirely.

Unfortunately, for an organization that claims to be a “news” agency, CNN has long record of using images as argument. Whether it’s polar bears on floating ice or orange-tinted skies from wildfires, CNN has a habit of presenting visual anecdotes in place of analytical context. As pointed out by Climate Realism, wildfires, droughts, and floods have always occurred. When an outlet cherry-picks photos of destruction without providing evidence of some cause-and-effect supported by data, they are engaging in narrative-building—not science communication.

Also, CNN never discusses adaptation or resilience in its story. If the problem truly were climate change, wouldn’t it make more sense to focus on solutions like infrastructure investment, urban planning, and better resource management? Instead, they emphasize feelings of doom and helplessness. Emotional pressure, not informed consent, is their goal.

Contrast this with data-driven resources like Climate at a Glance, which document actual trends in extreme weather and climate metrics. For example, contrary to what CNN might imply through imagery, the frequency of U.S. droughts has not been increasing long-term. In fact, the 20th century saw some of the worst droughts on record, including the Dust Bowl—decades before modern CO₂ levels became significant.

Similarly, floods and sea level rise are routinely exaggerated in photo-driven stories. Sea levels have been rising at a rate of about 3 mm per year, as they have for over a century. That’s one foot per century—not exactly a Hollywood-style disaster. Human choices—like building on eroding coasts or floodplains—account for most of the visible damage.

In short, CNN’s article and the exhibit it promotes are nothing more than an elaborate photo-op dressed up as climate advocacy. The images shown may evoke sympathy, but they do not represent scientific causality. Plastic pollution, riverbank erosion, and urban poverty are real problems—but they’re not caused by climate change. Equating every instance of environmental stress with global warming does a disservice to genuine science, distracts from local accountability, and turns a complex issue into a clickbait spectacle.

Anthony Watts Thumbnail

Anthony Watts

Anthony Watts is a senior fellow for environment and climate at The Heartland Institute. Watts has been in the weather business both in front of, and behind the camera as an on-air television meteorologist since 1978, and currently does daily radio forecasts. He has created weather graphics presentation systems for television, specialized weather instrumentation, as well as co-authored peer-reviewed papers on climate issues. He operates the most viewed website in the world on climate, the award-winning website wattsupwiththat.com.

Originally posted at ClimateREALISM

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June 13, 2025 10:50 pm

When reporting on environmental damage or change the MSM in the UK use the words “caused by X, Y and Climate Change”. It is never just whatever bit of misguided human activity caused the problem man-made climate change has to have a large part to play.

oeman50
Reply to  Ben Vorlich
June 14, 2025 5:03 am

It’s right out of the enviro playbook, like the terms “spew” and “belch.”

June 13, 2025 11:03 pm

Sea levels have been rising at a rate of about 3 mm per year, as they have for over a century.

____________________________________________________________________________

Huh? NOAA’s Tides & Currents page says:

 Areas experiencing little-to-no change in relative sea level are illustrated in green,
including stations consistent with average global sea level rise rate of 1.7-1.8 mm/yr.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Steve Case
June 14, 2025 2:17 am

Alaska is just going nuts!

MarkW
Reply to  Steve Case
June 14, 2025 5:28 am

Land level changes impact apparent sea level changes.

strativarius
June 14, 2025 1:52 am

Met Office Dreamin’

Britain could soon be basking under a searing summer sun as new weather models hint at the arrival of a full-blown heatwave before June is out. The latest weather maps reveal temperatures could begin to spike dramatically from June 26, marking the start of a sizzling stretch that may push thermometers to a blistering 34C. – Daily Mirror

Gosh! In midsummer, too…

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  strativarius
June 14, 2025 2:15 am

Oh the humanity!

oeman50
Reply to  strativarius
June 14, 2025 5:06 am

I would conclude from this statement that weather models cause heatwaves. Model outputs are data, correct? /s

Reply to  strativarius
June 14, 2025 9:03 am

Using “heatwave” rather cavalierly.

Reply to  strativarius
June 14, 2025 12:09 pm

Looking forward to it.

Coeur de Lion
June 14, 2025 2:20 am

So let’s stop emitting CO2 then?

oeman50
Reply to  Coeur de Lion
June 14, 2025 5:07 am

Yes! Breathe in and then don’t breathe out. Simple, eh?

June 14, 2025 4:47 am

Therefore the image below is Climate Change and it’s my/the West’s fault and I/the West must hand over large sums of money to give to people that don’t care about their environment.

river-of-plastic
Jeff Alberts
Reply to  sskinner
June 14, 2025 9:19 am

I believe that is a “before” image, and that this waterway has been greatly cleaned up, if I’m not mistaken. It does still illustrate the point of how it got that way in the first place.

June 14, 2025 6:34 am

Unfortunately, for an organization that claims to be a “news” agency, CNN has long record of using images as argument.

Sometimes as an “own goal”. Let’s not forget this one:

As the Washington Times noted at the time: “It’s impossible to dunk on CNN harder than it dunks on itself”.

And viewers are noticing. First quarter 2025 cable viewership from addweek.com:

Fox News Channel

Fox News averaged 3.012 million total primetime viewers and 380,000 Adults 25-54 viewers in Q1 2025. During total day, Fox News had 1.919 million total viewers, and 247,000 demo viewers.

  

Looking at its performance compared to the same quarter in 2024, FNC was up +46% in total viewers and +63% in the demo during primetime. In total day, the network was up a respective +48% and +58% in those measured categories.

According to Nielsen Media Research, Fox News’ rule at the top of cable news has now stretched to 93 consecutive quarters.

Fox News was the most-watched cable network during primetime in total viewers and the second most-watched network in the demo and repeated those positions during total day.

CNN

CNN averaged 558,000 total viewers and 121,000 demo viewers during primetime. Across total day, the network saw 428,000 total viewers, and 79,000 A25-54 viewers.

Compared to Q1 2024, CNN was down -6% in total viewers and -1% in the demo during primetime. In total day, it declined a respective -8% and -7% in those measured categories.

CNN remained the second most-watched cable news network in the demo during primetime and total day. It’s the sixth straight quarter the network has finished in that position. Q1 highlights include CNN NewsNight with Abby Phillip‘s ascension, as it is now the network’s most-watched program in the demo.

CNN finished in eighth place in primetime with total viewers and ninth in the demo. During total day, CNN was No. 4 in total viewers and No. 7 in the demo.

CNN_Mostly_Peaceful_arson_reporting_c0-0-929-542_s885x516
June 14, 2025 7:26 am

“Tree-covered mountains rise behind a pile of trash, children run through the orange haze of a dust storm, and a billboard standing on parched earth indicates where the seashore used to be before desertification took hold. These striking images…show the devastating effects of climate change.”

Someone ought to do something about those tree covered mountains making piles of trash.

John Hultquist
June 14, 2025 8:35 am

I went to the CNN site and looked at the photos. There is a bit more plastic and garbage than there was 50 years ago, and long before I suspect, in the pages of National Geographic magazine. (I had a subscription then.)
I also noticed an additional 80 ‘cookies’ on my system after visiting CNN. Why?

June 14, 2025 5:29 pm

One of the biggest things Trump could do is to develop a means test to require proof of claims being made on attribute of everything “under the sun” to man-made climate change. This had its beginnings in the 1970s with e.g., Stephen Schneider and grown super exponentially as more and more realized they could make a living on making claims that manmade causes are destroying the planet. How many bazillion people at universities and public or government institutions have made their career on “OMG it’s climate change.” Defunding university climate change departments is a good place to start.