There’s a curious smell in the air when a movement shifts its tone. It’s not ozone, and it isn’t coal—call it humility cut with narrative damage control. Bill Gates, the technocrat-in-chief of climate alarm over the past decade, just told the world that the apocalypse is, well, off schedule. He didn’t use that phrasing, of course. But in a new pre-COP30 message, the billionaire who popularized the phrase “climate disaster” has traded in catastrophe rhetoric for calm talk about welfare, adaptation, and priorities.
The money quote everyone will remember isn’t about “stopping” anything. It’s this: climate change is “not civilization-ending.” That’s Reuters summarizing and quoting from Gates’s own blog post published on October 28, 2025, in which he urges leaders to stop using temperature targets as the only scoreboard and to focus on human welfare—health, energy access, and agricultural resilience—instead.
That’s not the tune from 2016. Back then, Gates told the world we needed an “energy miracle” to prevent catastrophic climate change. The World Economic Forum captured his language succinctly when it reported: “the world needs ‘an energy miracle,’ and [Gates and Melinda] are willing to bet such a breakthrough will arrive within 15 years.” The headline: “Bill Gates: We will have a clean-energy ‘miracle’ within 15 years.” Here’s WAPO’s contemporary take

The contrast matters. In 2016, the miracle framing did two things at once: it acknowledged that existing tools couldn’t deliver the demanded decarbonization at tolerable cost, and it smuggled in a theological vibe—deliverance by innovation, soon, just trust the funders and the modelers.
Nine years on, the pitch is different. Now the billionaire steward of climate messaging says the target shouldn’t be a global thermostat at all, but outcomes people actually feel: fewer deaths, cheaper energy, more resilient crops. As Reuters summarized his new post: “rather than [focusing] on temperature as the best measure of progress, climate resilience would be better built by strengthening health and prosperity.”
That doesn’t sound like imminent doom. It sounds like triage. It also sounds like an overdue concession to arithmetic. You can’t centrally plan a planetary rebuild of steel, cement, fertilizer, shipping, aviation, and the grid on activist timelines without running headlong into physics, cost, and public patience. Gates himself now warns that temperature isn’t the best scoreboard and that the right investments—health, energy access, and farming—“offer more equitable benefits” and should be central to strategy. That’s not me paraphrasing; that’s the news copy reflecting the core of his blog.
The rhetorical step-down continues. Gates points to a long-run decline in deaths from natural disasters—down roughly 90% over the last century, thanks to forecasting, infrastructure, and prosperity. That’s not a civilization on the edge; that’s a civilization getting safer as it gets richer and smarter. Again, this statistic is highlighted in the same Reuters write-up on his post.
Now compare that to the older Gates canon. In the 2010s and early 2020s, his climate content leaned into emergency framing—“avoid a climate disaster,” “largest crisis response in human history,” and so on. His book marketing and COP essays weren’t shy about using disaster language. (See, for example, Gates’s 2023 COP28 message: “By investing in innovation that works for everyone, we won’t just keep the planet livable. We will make it a better place to live.” The premise was still framed as averting a looming disaster via innovation.)
Now, in time for COP30, the message is effectively this: Disaster isn’t imminent. Yes, climate change is a challenge—especially for poorer regions—but people “will be able to live and thrive,” as one widely circulated report of his blog phrased it, again emphasizing adaptation and welfare over temperature fetishism.

Skeptics didn’t need Gates’s permission to say these things. The evidence has been sitting there, unglamorous and stubborn. Direct climate-related mortality has fallen across the century because wealth and infrastructure stop weather from becoming disaster. You don’t “fight” a hurricane with a pledge; you fight it with concrete, drainage, pumps, and early warnings. Gates is finally talking that language in a way that undercuts the emergency theater he helped inflate.
He’s not alone. The broader media coverage today captures the pivot clearly. Reuters leads with the “not civilization-ending” line and the call to prioritize human welfare over temperature targets. The line is impossible to square with the idea that the next decade is a pass-fail test for humanity. If it isn’t civilization-ending, then the policy question becomes familiar: what mix of gradual mitigation and robust adaptation does the most good per dollar without wrecking prosperity? That’s Cost-Benefit 101, not a crusade.
Gates’s revised pitch also lands at a politically convenient time. COP30, in Belém, will arrive amid visible public fatigue with Net Zero mandates that do not add up on infrastructure or price. Europe keeps discovering that planned economies cannot will grids, mines, transmission, or baseload into existence on cue. Voters notice when bills rise and reliability wobbles. Gates’s new emphasis on “health, energy access, and agricultural resilience” looks like a hedged bet on what is actually workable—and saleable—to an impatient public.
If the new doctrine is “pragmatism,” then let’s be rigorous about it. The claim that temperature isn’t the only or best metric is correct. The claim that welfare outcomes—mortality, morbidity, poverty—are the right things to optimize is also correct. But prudence forces the next two steps:
First, stop pretending models with kilometer-scale blind spots can justify multi-trillion dollar central plans. The uncertainties are large enough to make single-path mandates reckless. Suitably humble policy would diversify bets, not lock in brittle, expensive pathways based on heroic assumptions about storage, transmission, mining, and public compliance.
Second, strip out the moral absolutism. Gates’s 2016 “energy miracle” language worked as a fundraising narrative for Breakthrough Energy and other ventures, but as public policy it was a tell. When the best case for a plan is that a miracle might occur, you don’t have a plan. The WEF summary at the time—even as a Gates-friendly venue—made the miracle premise explicit.
In place of miracle talk, Gates now sells incrementalism married to adaptation. That’s an upgrade. The line about disaster not ending civilization quietly neuters the keystone of the activist case for emergency powers. If ordinary people will “live and thrive,” then the rationale for coercive timelines and rationing collapses into a milder argument about trade-offs. And once trade-offs are on the table, public choice returns with a vengeance. Voters will pick affordable reliability over centrally-planned scarcity every time.
There’s also a moral clarity here that Gates edges toward without quite saying it: If your dollar buys more life and welfare by funding health, malaria control, or resilient agriculture than by chasing marginal degrees on a global average, you fund the former. The FT’s coverage of his remarks today makes that point in plain English as a resource-allocation pivot toward vaccines and poverty relative to climate goals. That is, to his credit, a very different hierarchy of needs than the movement has sold for years.
What happens next? Expect a two-track narrative. The political class will try to frame this as maturity, not retreat. The activist class will insist nothing has changed, that “of course” the work was always about health and equity. But the text says otherwise. As recently as 2022–2023, Gates’s public writing still leaned on “avoiding a climate disaster” as the central mission. Today, he’s overtly calling temperature an unhelpful metric and casting climate risk as manageable with the tools of prosperity: innovation, infrastructure, and public health.
And that brings us back to first principles. If the problem is manageable, then the appropriate response is measured. You don’t declare economic war on modernity to shave a tenth of a degree off a model output while neglecting malaria nets, vaccines, or agricultural R&D. You test, you compare, and you buy the most life per dollar. That’s the same logic Gates applies in global health when he isn’t wearing a climate sash. It should never have taken a decade to import that logic into climate policy.
The final irony is almost too neat. The man who said we needed an “energy miracle” is now arguing, in substance, that miracles aren’t necessary—competent governance is. Build warning systems. Harden grids. Expand reliable power. Improve crops. Get poor countries rich. You don’t need to save the climate to save lives. You need to stop treating the economy like a lab bench and people like reagents.
Disaster isn’t imminent. It never was, at least not in the all-caps sense that justified the last round of grand designs. The world’s a messy, resilient place. The historical record on disaster deaths, the brute fact of adaptation, and the unglamorous triumph of infrastructure all say the same thing Gates now says out loud: civilization is not ending.
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CO2 as input, IR as transfer function, temperature as output (aka climate models) is not an energy system.
To determine that burning fossil fuels does not cause or even contribute to climate change:
More experiment is not needed. At least five ‘experiments’ have already taken place and the data all already exist.
Models aren’t needed. The analysis consists of simple arithmetic on the existing data. The average global water vapor increase, as limited by the Clausius-Clapeyron relation and rational compounding producing the 6.7 % per degree factor, is calculated from the average global Surface Temperature increase.
The observation is that the measured average global WV increase is up to substantially (about twice or more) more than possible from just average global SST increase. Because the only significant effect that CO2 could have on climate is temperature increase, CO2 is ruled out as a significant contributor to climate change.
That’s it. There are probably several factors contributing to climate change but CO2 (burning fossil fuels) isn’t one of them.
https://watervaporandwarming.blogspot.com
If you click on graph it will expand and be come clear. Click on the “X” in the circle to return to comment text.
What is the link to the five experiments?
What could possibly go wrong with unfocused billionaires throwing their opinion weight and tax-deductible donations behind subjects outside their area of expertise? Well, he and Microsoft can’t hide the energy rush taking place now and its growing impact on public utilities for the masses. They can’t build enough behind the meter projects to avoid the trainwreck. These issues explain the recent tone difference, not humble fact checking of models, modelers, or data quality.
Don’t forget, Bill Gates was a college dropout who never finished enough college courses to even qualify for an associates degree.
Apparently, winning the “dirty operating system” in a poker game and selling it to IBM was enough for the media to follow him around and report on his ” social enlightenment” forever more.
It is good to hear the language tone down a bit. I am not that impressed. I don’t trust Gates I think he will always say the thing that will benefit him and those like him. For me this is predictable, it is the next step to move the language away from catastrophic anthropogenic global warming. The language went from CAGW to global warming to climate change to climate disruption and so on. The 1.5C increase in temperature from pre-industrial times worked great until we arrived at 1.5C and there was no catastrophe. The next logical move was to 2.0C and lots of people have been warning us of that. The problem is this tactic isn’t working like it used to. With a hard benchmark like 1.5 or 2.0 we can clearly see they are wrong, better to move to something less physical. So now it is purely climate change a worthless phrase that means nothing therefore can mean anything. Any change good bad or neutral proves climate change. The point is that catastrophe or not in their view government needs to be calling the shots. No sir. Government is the problem. Bill Gates can go to hell I don’t care what he says or thinks.
Rahm Emanuel will be disappointed there is no crisis opportunity to take advantage of. The same goes for UN money hounds and the other wealth redistribution crowd.
Still refusing to believe he has been royally scammed by simpletons like Michael Mann.
Maybe it’s a case of Good Climate Cop/Bad Climate Cop. Bill has decided it is more advantageous for him to be a Good Climate Cop. The ultimate goal remains the same, just different tactics involved.
Gates knows that when the absurd endangerment finding is rescinded the grift impoverishing humanity is over. Vaccines are the eugenicists best hope.
The irony behind Gates’s admission is that the overwhelming majority of the global population was skeptical about these doomsday proclamations from Day 1 because they didn’t see any rapid series of extraordinary weather/climate events that gave them any credence from the outset. There were just the normal fluctuations from year to year , none of which warranted governments, businesses or consumers to take drastic measures to fight what has turned out to be nothing more than a quasi-fad. Now that fossil fuel consumption and carbon emissions continue to rise and renewable energies prove to be unreliable, at least some climate alarmists are seeing the light and toning down their hysterics. As well, as the likelihood increases of another COP conference achieving nothing, the whole climate crisis argument becomes undermined even further.
This is yet another of Bill’s scams. He’s been running them since his DOS days. Look at the language used…”reducing the Green Premium to zero”…what the hell is a ‘Green Premium’? Taking a few minutes to try to read the slop he posted (trust me, trying to read it all will make your head hurt) demonstrates he’s simply trying to pivot to pushing more of his green scam. While he sprinkles a bit of fact in his post he still promotes far more fantasy than fact. The idea that Wind, Solar & batteries are cheaper than fossil-fuels is absolutely ludicrous but hey if Bill says it, it must be true. He promotes that a significant reduction in projected CO2 output is also because of these unreliable energy sources rather than a switch to NatGas. He pushes fantasy technologies that just need to ‘be scaled’ and farmers just need to ’embrace them’…sure Bill and farmers are just dumb right? They just need you to show them the way to your ‘green paradise’.
And he does this all while trying to maintain his green cred by paying his tithes…e.g. “which I fully offset with legitimate carbon credits”…as opposed to those ‘illegitimate ones’ that everyone else trades on & ‘recycle’.
Your a scam artist Bill, and potentially a pedophile, when you were just holding back computing for decades it wasn’t so bad, now your holding back all human progress. Admit your wrong, the green scam is collapsing and please go hide and stay away from children.
One big admission of defeat for man, one modest step away from disaster for mankind, possibly. But he didn’t say to give up on net zero. The NYT commenters were wailing about their hero’s betrayal of the doom cult.
Four-letter Anglo-Saxon expletive Bill Gates.
He’s been nothing but a vile destructive sociopath for years, preaching population culls, mRNA injections, and catastrophic Green swamp gas, all the while living and flying in luxury.
Bill Gates, the new Bjorn Lomborg?
Not the tradeoff Bill the blasphemer-
“If given a choice between eradicating malaria and a tenth of a degree increase in warming, I’ll let the temperature go up 0.1 degree to get rid of malaria,”
Bill Gates says a ‘doomsday’ outlook on climate is driving people to focus on the wrong things
You need to understand that the screechy ones only deal in absolutes and don’t do tradeoffs so you’re immediately a heretic and beware the Musk treatment with Microsoft infrastructure now.
To me, it looks like Gates is merely publicly hedging his bet on the AGW grift, in case the climate change pseudoscience continues to be unmasked.
Whatever. Billy boy is guilty of thinking impure thoughts with the cult and spiralling out of control so he’ll have to be excommunicated-
Climate change spiralling out of control: 22 of Earth’s 34 ‘vital signs’ are at record highs
To Bill, “funding health” means conducting bio research on unknowing, non-consenting, and usually third world human test subjects. Malaria was solved by prevention using DDT, then other pesticides, and treated with quinine (and later hydroxychloroquine), Bill caused the insane prohibition and deprecation of many of those chemicals and drugs, and profited by “investing” in more expensive, less effective quack alternatives. Resilient agriculture was provided with fertilizers derived from petroleum, coal, and gas. Bill would rather do more bio research, and bribe government and UN officials to make the real solutions more expensive, while profiting through unsuitable substitutions.
Bill knows better than you. Bill isn’t going anywhere. This isn’t backing off, but Bill doubling down.
At https://www.gatesnotes.com/contact-us, I posted this comment:
There is no such phenomena as climate change because most of the earth is water, rocks, sand, ice and snow. Activities of humans will have no effect on the climates of the vast Pacific and Atlantic oceans, the Andes and Rocky mountains or the Sahara and Gobi deserts. Activities of humans can effect the climate of cities due to the UHI effect.
Rotter: “The uncertainties are large enough to make single-path mandates reckless.”
The uncertainties are large enough to make *any* mandates reckless, be they single-path or multi-path.
Or in other words, one of the richest and supposedly smartest people in the world has now realized what everyone in this room understood over a decade ago.
Lord, save us from the smart people.