Scientists begging for a global assessment. Source ChatGPT

Climate Scientists Demand “A Global Assessment” of Risks

Essay by Eric Worrall

If we don’t act quickly, the tropical city of Belém in the Amazon Jungle might become uninhabitable!

COMMENT 25 February 2026

We need a global assessment of avoidable climate-change risks

To understand the urgency of emissions reductions, policymakers and citizens need a full analysis of what is at stake.

By Peter A. StottY. T. Eunice LoJohn H. MarshamDavid OburaTom H. OliverMatthew D. Palmer, Nicola RangerSimon Sharpe & Rowan Sutton

Climate change presents many threats to life on our planet: a worsening global food crisis, extreme heat that could lead to millions of deaths, intense droughts, floods and the collapse of crucial ecosystems. Some island countries and cities might disappear beneath rising seas. Conflict, state failure and mass migration could escalate.

Policymakers and citizens are aware of some of these risks, but not necessarily how severe they will be, how rapidly they might emerge or which risks are avoidable. Government leaders need to know the severity and urgency of such risks to help them to make well-informed decisions and set priorities. So far, they have only a partial view.

For example, policymakers might realize that sea-level rise requires spending more money on flood defences, yet neglect the possibility that parts of large cities such as London, New York City or Mumbai might have to be abandoned (see ‘London flooded by rising seas’). They might be aware that more people will die in heatwaves in a hotter climate, yet be unprepared for mass casualties if tens of thousands in one region were to die in conditions exceeding the limits of human tolerance.

Reflecting wide perspectives. The broad nature of risk assessments means that they are hard to produce. First, they are interdisciplinary. For example, the expertise necessary to identify an impact threshold relevant to a society (such as mass casualties in a city from extreme heat; see ‘Intolerable heat stress’ and ‘Boiling in Belém’), which requires socio-economic and health data, differs from that needed to assess the likelihood of crossing that threshold, which requires climate-modelling information. Experts and practitioners from different fields must thus work together.

Read more: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00544-6

It’s kind of sad seeing scientists in this situation.

Before I read the Climategate emails, I thought they were all frauds, but after reading Climategate I came to realise many, possibly all of them actually believe the nonsense they are peddling. Climategate is full of activist scientists acting to suppress contrary evidence, not as part of a conspiracy to deceive, but because they believe their mission to save the world is so important, nothing can be allowed into the public domain which might create doubt.

Now the world has moved on, and climate action is no longer a priority, climate scientists are still trying to fight a battle which has been lost, a cause which other people increasingly find irrelevant and implausible. If it wasn’t for all the damage their nonsense climate warnings did to the world economy, all the lives blighted or cut short by soaring energy prices, I would feel a little sorry for them.

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strativarius
March 1, 2026 10:07 am

uninhabitable

Like Belem and its progressive paper free toilet arrangements.

The Expulsive
March 1, 2026 10:15 am

If they had been professional engineers, they would have been aware that all models are subject to revision through debate.

Reply to  The Expulsive
March 1, 2026 12:33 pm

It’s not an engineering discussion until someone throws something. 🙂

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Fraizer
March 4, 2026 1:34 pm

Well, that or have pizza served. 🙂

Neo
Reply to  The Expulsive
March 4, 2026 7:24 am

The real difference between scientists and engineers … the engineers have to take economics

March 1, 2026 10:18 am

If real climate scientists are that worried, then we should be terrified and willing to submit to any solution. How ’bout we forget nation-states which are so last century and go with global governance. We’re already half way there anyway! What could go wrong?

Colin Belshaw
Reply to  idbodbi
March 2, 2026 2:17 pm

I tend to look at sets of data – frequency and intensity of hurricanes floods and droughts, and deaths due to extreme weather events, for example – that are entirely at odds with the remarkable ululation as reported above.
People say to me – none of them engineers, by the way – I don’t know where you’re getting your information from.
Does that mean, if one is an engineer, we’re bereft of judgement . . . to a man?!!
Or is there another set of data that engineers are not privy to?

bobclose
Reply to  idbodbi
March 3, 2026 1:47 am

Yes well, that’s what the UN has always wanted, they want to call the shots of how we live – based on socialist principles of course. That’s why they have tried so hard to get rid of capitalist fossil fuel- based economies, initially targeting the USA and using the EU as a proxy trail scheme.
We dummies in Australia have swallowed the climate bait whole and are now choking on the toxic emissions policies, dreamt up by the willing bureaucrats and political time servers who have gained power pushing `save the planet’ BS from modern industry thus emasculating our previous prosperous life-styles and putting our energy and national security at risk. Great job guys!

However, the global energy transition has already failed after 10 years of the Paris Agreement, as the aggressive BRICS developing nations have captured 60% of the global economy without having to reduce their emissions, and we poor sods in the west are suffering regressive policies that are progressively ruining our economies, stupid us! Nationalism is alive and well so the UN can whistle it’s own tune most of us won’t be listening, we will go back to using fossil fuels for everything we need, and the planet can look after itself.

March 1, 2026 10:31 am

‘If it wasn’t for all the damage their nonsense climate warnings did to the world economy, all the lives blighted or cut short by soaring energy prices, I would feel a little sorry for them.’

Please don’t – these people really deserve the back of our hands. They can’t possibly be ignorant of all of the counterfactuals to their ‘consensus’, nor can they claim to be stupid – just ask them. That only leaves the most base alternative that they were willing to inflict harm on all of mankind for personal gain.

Citizen Scientist
Reply to  Frank from NoVA
March 1, 2026 10:45 am

I couldn’t agree more. Please don’t! They were well aware of what they were doing: trading their integrity for a few bucks.

Reply to  Citizen Scientist
March 1, 2026 1:42 pm

sometimes for lots of bucks

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
March 2, 2026 3:17 am

and sows

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
March 2, 2026 5:29 am

Especially at COPS conferences. 😉

John Hultquist
March 1, 2026 10:51 am

 This seems to be an opinion essay by the Climate Monitoring and Attribution team at the Met Office in the UK. It reads like the opening of a science fiction novel. Because the risks are not prohibited by physics, chemistry and so on, the essay differs from a “fantasy” novel. That is, the risks are not foisted on the world by supernatural or magical elements. Hephaestus {god of fire, blacksmiths, and metalworking} could cause “tens of thousands in one region were to die in conditions exceeding the limits of human tolerance” if he existed. He doesn’t. Likewise, we could flood London and burn Belém if we humans controlled the climate. We don’t.

O/T: I frequently check the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) “balancing” page, here: BPA Balancing Authority Load and Total VER
Monday and Tuesday there was almost no wind (VER – green), then three days of high production, and on Saturday 28th, it went to near zero again. I haven’t found a succinct and up-to-date summary of the number or capacity of the towers. Would you buy a car that only ran three days a week?

Reply to  John Hultquist
March 2, 2026 6:47 am

The authors appear to be completely divorced from reality.

All they see is gloom and doom.

They live in a different world. A scary world. I wouldn’t want to be them.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  John Hultquist
March 4, 2026 1:36 pm

If I was paid not to drive on the other 4 I might consider it.

Laws of Nature
March 1, 2026 10:55 am

>> Climate Scientists Demand “A Global Assessment” of Risks
Absolutely, I strongly support this.. but maybe not in the sense those people think.

It is a fact of live and climate science that for many global warming related questions and trends the available data and data quality does not allow for a direct brute force solution.
For example the data might show a global warming trend over the last 150 years, but the contribution of anthropogenic CO2 is uncertain.

Then there are models (on paper or in a computer), which try to estimate or solve the effect of various hypotheses.

What is needed is a honest and fair evaluation of the simplifications made when employing the model, for example the sparse real world data could allow for a long-term trend in the cloud cover, which is ignored in the model.

Actually, once you figured in the effects from everything you don’t know or ignore in your model you will end up with the same uncertainties not using those models at all.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Laws of Nature
March 2, 2026 5:31 am

The first rule of assessing models is to address and challenge all assumptions.

Mac
March 1, 2026 11:02 am

Still banging that same old drum aren’t they?

J Boles
Reply to  Mac
March 1, 2026 11:52 am

It’s the only tune they know! (“The sky is falling! climastrology! send money!”)

mleskovarsocalrrcom
March 1, 2026 11:07 am

I doubt the alarmists will take their ideology to the grave but staying on life support isn’t out of the question for them.

Curious George
March 1, 2026 11:27 am

a full analysis of what is at stake
Did they demand the carbon reduction without a full analysis?

Frank @TxTradCatholic
Reply to  Curious George
March 1, 2026 3:49 pm

Why yes, yes they did.

Rud Istvan
March 1, 2026 11:45 am

The corresponding author of this new drivel is Peter Stott. Per Nature policy, all the authors declared no competing interests—Nature ‘insuring’ them to thereby be unbiased.

So I looked up Peter Stott. He is head of Climate Monitoring and Attribution at the Hadley Center for Climate Prediction and Research at the Met UK. No competing interests, but transparently biased self serving interests. Pig at the trough begging for more swill.

Randle Dewees
Reply to  Rud Istvan
March 1, 2026 12:25 pm

Thanks for doing this check.

bobclose
Reply to  Rud Istvan
March 3, 2026 1:53 am

I’me glad to see they are getting desperate, about time too, as we are desperate to get rid of them and all their dodgy models of doom and gloom!

March 1, 2026 11:52 am

Idiots….

claysanborn
Reply to  MaddMedic
March 1, 2026 9:49 pm

I submit that Man-made Global Warming, er, “Climate Change” is their [false] religion. In their view, righteous scientific skeptics are heretics. They have lost any objective ability for the empirical, and for critical thinking.
Paul’s excellent Romans 1 (below excerpt) perfectly applies to the topic folks too:
Romans 1 18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who suppress the truth in unrighteousness, 19 because what may be known of God is manifest in them, for God has shown it to them. 20 For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse, 21 because, although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful, but became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened. 22 Professing to be wise, they became fools, 23 and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man—and birds and four-footed animals and creeping things.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  claysanborn
March 2, 2026 5:33 am

Attribution has been used throughout history to explain the inexplicable by giving blame or credit to one or another deities. Climate Attribution Science is a religious function.

Ed Zuiderwijk
March 1, 2026 12:39 pm

John Maddox turns in his grave seeing the rubbish his once reputable journal now prints.

gezza1298
March 1, 2026 1:00 pm

The best liars are those that truly believe they are not lying.

Reply to  gezza1298
March 2, 2026 6:59 am

If they think they are telling the truth, it is not lying, but is rather stupidity or ignorance.

The problem is it is hard to read minds so it is difficult to discern motivations.

One thing is for sure: There’s no evidence that CO2 is causing any of the problems they mention.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
March 2, 2026 7:18 am

“Climate sensitivity” appears to be indistinguishable from zero. The control knob is water with its phase changes.

Bob
March 1, 2026 1:55 pm

This is embarrassing, I’m glad these people aren’t on our side. Losing is an ugly thing.

March 1, 2026 2:01 pm

If “the science is settled”, what is there to reassess? The “settled climate science”?

March 1, 2026 3:44 pm

…extreme heat that could lead to..

…countries and cities might disappear…

…state failure and mass migration could escalate…

…how rapidly they might emerge…

Blah, blah, blah. Don’t tell us what might or could happen. Tell us what will happen, and stand by your predictions. Otherwise, you can climb a tree,

March 1, 2026 4:02 pm

“Demand”? By what authority?

KevinM
March 1, 2026 6:05 pm

“They might be aware that more people will die in heatwaves in a hotter climate, yet be unprepared for mass casualties if tens of thousands in one region were to die in conditions exceeding the limits of human tolerance.”

Seems like “the limits of human tolerance” takes more syllables than whatever correct words belong in that space.

“In 2025, Monaco, San Marino, and Hong Kong boast the highest life expectancies, with residents averaging over 85–87 years”

“Monaco has a Mediterranean climate characterized by mild, wet winters and warm, dry summers, offering over 300 days of sunshine annually. Summers (June-August) are generally in the 80s°F (26–29°C)”

“San Marino has a temperate, modified Mediterranean climate (Köppen Cfa) with warm summers and cold, often wet winters. Located near the Adriatic Sea and elevated in the Apennines, it experiences significant seasonal variation, with temperatures ranging to 84F in summer.”

“Hong Kong has a subtropical, monsoonal climate with four distinct seasons: hot, humid, and wet summers (June-August)”

There must be some other factors the scientists didn’t account for.

lynn
March 1, 2026 10:18 pm

Raise your own funds, you ass hats.

Bruce Cobb
March 2, 2026 2:49 am

We need a global assessment of avoidable climate-change alarmism risks dangers.
There, fixed.

2hotel9
March 2, 2026 5:23 am

So, not climate scientists, the thieving hucksters who have been stealing and lying about climate for decades.

Franco Pavese
March 2, 2026 10:03 am

I do not agree at all: assessing risk needs a consistent forecast: with the present ACTUAL uncertainty of most data, this is IMPOSSIBLE.

Neo
March 4, 2026 7:33 am

Seems that yesterday a new term appeared in regard to Iran.
Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly of Experts (RUDE)