A recent Axios story, “How climate change is impacting Central Ohio,” suggests that central Ohio is suffering various effects from climate change, such as, hotter temperatures, longer allergy seasons, and more intense rain. These claims are misleading, at best, and simply false in most instances. Also, proposals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions as planned by Columbus, Ohio’s “Climate Action Plan” will limit freedoms and cost the economy while having little or no beneficial impact on regional or global climate.
Axios reported that Columbus, Ohio mayor Andrew Ginther is very concerned about climate change, to the point that while he served as vice president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, he “led a delegation of U.S. officials at the U.N. Climate Change Conference COP28 in Dubai.”
Columbus has a “Climate Action Plan” that “calls for a 45% reduction in greenhouse gases by 2030 and full carbon neutrality by 2050.”
Ginther insisted to Axios that climate change “is real” and Columbus has been harmed. Axios reports that central Ohio has suffered various effects from climate change. These include:
- Warmer seasons, with Axios saying 2024 was the “hottest year on record” for Columbus;
- Longer allergy seasons “leading to harsher health effects;”
- Longer “prime wildfire conditions each year;”
- Longer mosquito season;
- “About 98% of Columbus is slowly sinking into the ground, likely driven by water usage;”
- Rainfall intensity has increased, along with flash floods.
None of Axios’ claims are grounded in solid facts or at least the cause of the problems is being misattributed to global climate change, and the evidence that does exist undercuts the need for Ginther’s climate action plan.
Average temperature measurements have trended warmer for Ohio since 1900, by about 1.5°C, but this is not caused by or even accompanied by an increase in “very hot” days. Data from the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) show that extreme or dangerous heat has actually trended downwards since the 1930s peak. (See figure below)

The warming experienced in the late 19th and the early part of the 20th century in Ohio, as elsewhere, is most likely attributable to the natural response to the end of the little ice age.
What has gradually increased since the 1960s is the number of warm nights, accompanied by a slight decline in the number of very cold nights. This is indicates that something other than greenhouse-gas emissions is driving average warming. There is no reason in physics for why increased greenhouse gas concentrations would selectively or primarily cause warming at night.
A large portion of this nighttime warming, especially around cities like Columbus, is probably due to the Urban Heat Island Effect (UHI). Climate at a Glance: Urban Heat Islands explains that many urban temperature stations are influenced by the heat-trapping effect of hard surfaces like concrete and asphalt, not to mention the outputs of air conditioning units and thousands of vehicles on the road. This effect grows as population and urban sprawl does. Previous Climate Realism posts have shown that rising average temperatures recorded in Phoenix, Houston, Boston, and across the U.S. in general over the past few decades, is driven by a decline in nighttime low temperatures due to the UHI.
Regarding allergy seasons, Climate Realism has discussed how this problem is due to a longer growing season in articles here, here, and here, for example. More pollen production does exacerbate allergies. However, the lengthened growing season and increased pollen is a boon for plant life and pollinating insects. It is resulting in more food production and a general greening of the Earth. This means that the suffering that those with seasonal allergies experience is offset by more wildlife habitat and less hunger and malnutrition. Surely that’s worth a few extra days or weeks of taking antihistamines.
Wildfire weather usually involves high winds and dry conditions. Drought has not increased in frequency or intensity in Ohio, and the amount of acreage lost to wildfire fires and the number of fires shows no sustained trend that might be attributed to long-term climate change since records begin in 2006.

As for mosquito season, once again entomology shows that mosquito prevalence is more complicated than merely being driven by temperature. Disease carrying mosquitoes were, in fact, endemic to Ohio before its largest swamps were drained for development and suppression efforts were instituted in the 1950s through 1970s, which included the widespread use of DDT. As Climate Realism covered here, and here, for example, trade, transportation, changed development and landscaping trends, and reduced or less effective mosquito control efforts have resulted in a slight increase in mosquito borne illnesses, although the instances are still much fewer annually than in late 1800s through the mid-twentieth century.
The land sinkage issue mentioned by Axios isn’t even a climate issue. It is called subsidence and is a result of the overuse of ground water, making it a civil engineering issue, that Climate Realism has discussed previously but need not discuss here.
The last climate impact that Axios lists is an increase in intense rainfall and related flash flooding.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s NCEI data show that precipitation has increased modestly over the past few decades in Ohio, and 2-inch “extreme” precipitation has slightly increased since the 1960s, but this has not correlated to more extreme flooding. The worst flood in Columbus Ohio’s Scioto River occurred in 1959 according to existing river gage data, but a worse flood is reported as having occurred in 1913. Specific “flash” flood data is harder to come by, but in general even the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has only “low confidence” that there has been an increase in flooding attributable to climate change.
In short, the available data lends refutes Mayor Ginther’s claims about climate change harming central Ohio, or the state in general. Weather and damaging weather-related events , like wildfires and flooding, have not become appreciably worse during the recent period of modest warming, the measurement of which is likely due localized UHI impacts, not global warming.
A single city’s pledge to go “carbon neutral” will have absolutely no impact on global warming, but it could limit peoples’ freedoms and undermine its and the surrounding region’s economic fortunes. If Columbus wants to see less intense heat and fewer warm nights, the city should look into things that reduce the heat-capturing effect of hard surfaces. These techniques usually involve planting more trees along the streets, and other ways to shade concrete and asphalt for more of the day. And in response to land subsidence and mosquitoes it could implement better water use policies and improved pest controls, which might include public service announcements admonishing residents to reduce standing water.
As for Axios, it would better serve its readers by checking the facts before publishing false, alarming climate claims. That’s what legitimate journalistic enterprises have done historically.
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There is I suppose a chance that Andrew Ginther is right and climate change, which is happening as usual, may be causing some of the things that worry him, but CO2 is not the cause.
More propaganda, less science.
Omg, Columbus is SINKING.
Now I’m really scared about climate change.
(This is ridicule)
Too bad it isn’t Ann Arbor.
I graduated from Michigan State. 🙂
I live in the area. Retired from the City of Columbus. I was one of the operators at one of its 3 water plants.
I’m in my early 70’s and I’m a bit shorter than I used to be. I used to think that that was due to spinal disk compression over time.
Comforting know that the ground is sinking rather than my spine!
I’ll add that only one of those 3 plants uses wells.
That plant is close to a river. It has never produced it’s designed capacity.
Why not? The infiltration galleries from the river it uses have unforeseen limits.
Those are not “deep well” withdrawals that could add to local land subsidence.
Ginther is full of … what most people flush.
Me too, and I can’t afford to lose too much height.
Mine’s caused by man-made CO2.
Where do I sign up for the class action?
Funny thing here-isn’t Cleveland over massive salt deposits that are mined for-well-salt? I had an Uncle who lived just outside Cleveland on 10 acres and had to use bottled water because the well was unusable because of salt. He was paid in 1million bucks for his useless land by I think Morton salt for the mineral-salt-rights. So it would be sinking why?
Oooops-lost track of where I was at…Nevermind.
Very embarrassing.
What was the name of that Saturday Night Live character? 😄
The real key is that this is just Central Ohio, implying four other sections of Ohio, or possibly 8 if they want to include corners too. It’s a new strategy for the climate warriors. Think how may regions of how many states they can pull this same story on.
Of these two policy choices and branched paths, one involves an easier execution and political arm waving that is potentially paved with money. Ignoring the many hundreds of square miles of black asphalt is the main clue.
Ohio mayor Andrew Ginther is very concerned about climate change, to the point that while he served as vice president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, he “led a delegation of U.S. officials at the U.N. Climate Change Conference COP28 in Dubai.”
The story here is how many citizens knew their mayors were trekking off to Dubai on tax dollars? How much was spent? What was the total Carbon Dioxide output? How long will the reductions in Columbus’ CO2 take to neutralize that amount?
Further, to get to a 45% reduction in 2030 and full carbon neutrality by 2050 will require “the impossible”. Move The Ohio State University out of state. I don’t think that’s going to happen.
What the hell does a local mayor even has to do in Dubai?
There is absolutely nothing that a Ohio mayor has to deal with for his citizens there
nor does he has the their order or approval to be there.
The only reason he is there is for his globalists bosses to do globalist stuff = treason.
On top of that : Dubai is superhot and built one leaf above sea level.
It should no longer exist according to his climate beliefs.
And on top of that Dubai is absolutely violating all his beliefs in terms of human rights,lgbt,feminism and all the other crap he pretends to believe in
and has killed 10000s of asian slave workers in the process of turning Dubai from a desert into a modern city.
Dunno.
In other news:
Dubai sex-trade ring boss held by police after BBC investigation
TIP
Note that the U. S. southeast coast has developed a bad case of body odor, halitosis, or something (suggestions?). Storm Imelda has decided to make a U-turn and head up Newfoundland way. (I thought the hurricane post of 2 days ago was too old for this.)
No this turning away of hurricanes approaching the US east coast is one of the benefits of “climate change.” 😁
Unless Ohio is totally different from the bulk of the USA, there has been basically no warming since at least 2005 (apart from a tiny step at the 2016 El Nino)
Is there evidence that this supposed climate change is causing a population drop in central Ohio because residents can’t handle the increasing heat? If that were the case, the population of much of the US would be similarly affected; yet regions in the southern half of the country continue to grow fastest. So here we have another example of alarmism based on disputable facts, while as usual residents of the mentioned area continue to prove they’re a lot more resilient, creative and resourceful in handling any climate threats, real or exaggerated. One thing is certain: central Ohio residents haven’t begun a large-scale exodus to cooler states like Alaska, North Dakota or Maine.
Living in the area, I’d say that if people are moving out of Columbus, it’s to get out of its green/wokeism.
(If you want to move but can’t afford it, look to your LOCAL officials.)
“There is no reason in physics for why increased greenhouse gas concentrations would selectively or primarily cause warming at night” I don’t agree – if the greenhouse heat is retained in the atmosphere then it gets reradiated back to earth when the earth cools, ie overnight. Now that’s a big if, but it is a feasible mechanism.
H2O in the air (i.e., humidity) at night slow cooling of the air. In summer, this result in uncomfortable, muggy nights.
Yes but the proof that that is not happening is deserts are not seeing nighttime low temperatures rise.
So water vapor and clouds are shown to be what matters, not the PITTANCE of CO2.
The craziness is widespread. In the UK, always an invaluable leading indicator of this sort of thing, more than 300 local councils have declared a climate emergency. Most of them have adopted net zero targets and measures which include things like installing solar panels, moving to EVs etc. If you scan the list of larger cities to see where this is happening, you find the usual suspects – Bristol, Manchester, Brighton, Edinburgh. But its not confined to them, as an example a tiny little place called Thetford, Norfolk.
How is it all going? Well, maybe the UK is a leading indicator on this too?
In Thetford something called ‘Thetford Council Watch’ has been formed to scrutinize the actions of the council, including on net zero, Council meetings have seen protests and disruption requiring a police presence and the hiring of security for meetings, and the Council has recently been warned that it is at risk of insolvency. Which risk seems to be due to its green spending.
https://www.thetfordandbrandontimes.co.uk/news/25277833.thetford-town-council-hit-insolvency-risk-warning/
And in Kent, the new Reform Council has simply rescinded the previous administration’s declaration of a climate emergency.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0jq4l8dpxlo.
So maybe its going fairly well!
This is how the mania comes to an end in Britain – with mockery, ridicule and local revolts. A naked emperor. The country that gave the world Monty Python may be ‘leading the world’, as its political class so dearly wishes to do, but in a direction 180 degrees different from what the political class want.
And by the way, who is winning local council elections in the Thetford area? Reform. The area in question is Breckland. and the latest win was in the Thetford Castle seat. Tiny elections, tiny turnout, tiny places. Hundreds of voters, not thousands. But when Reform routinely wins every by-election that is held, and when they get (as in the last one) over 40% of votes, something is happening, and its not enthusiasm for local net zero and climate emergency plans..
Net Zero is nonsense because there will always be very cold and snowy winters not only in Ohio but also many countries and regions in the Northern Hemisphere like the northern tier states, Canada, Europe, Asia, Siberia and the Arctic, for example. Large amounts of fossil fuels will always be used for space and water heating and for cooking.
More nonsense is the alleged “climate change”. Most of the earth’s climate ls water, ice, snow, rocks, and sand. Humans are not going to alter the “climate” of the vast Pacific ocean, the Rocky Mountains, or the Sahara Desert.
Net zero is also nonsense because you can’t produce the endless stream of worse-than-useless wind and sun energy collection devices without coal, oil and gas.