No, New York Times, Climate Change Isn’t Driving Inflation

In The New York Times (NYT) article “Is Climate Change Making Inflation Worse?,” writer Lydia DePillis suggests that extreme weather linked to global warming is quietly raising the price of everyday goods like food, electricity, and insurance. The framing is, at best, misleading and, at worst, flat-out false. Inflation is a monetary phenomenon driven by fiscal policy, central banking decisions, supply-chain disruptions, and energy policy choices — there is no evidence climate change has altered in a way that impacts any of those factors. The NYT erroneously substitutes weather anecdotes and speculative projections for demonstrated economic causation. However, since instances of extreme weather haven’t become more frequent or severe in recent decades, climate change can’t be causing “inflationary” impacts.

The NYT opens by asserting that there is “mounting evidence that extreme weather is making some everyday stuff more expensive.” That claim is presented as a settled fact. It’s not. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) assigns low confidence to global increases in most types of extreme weather and emphasizes regional variability. The IPCC AR6 does not claim that extreme weather trends are uniformly intensifying in a way that would systematically impact global inflation.

The NYT then turns to food prices, citing drought in Eastern Europe and China, coffee impacts in Brazil, and ranchers culling cattle. Agricultural output, however, fluctuates every year due to natural variability. Long-term production data in the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization’s FAOSTAT database, shown in the figure below, illustrate that global grain production has generally trended upward, amid modest warming and the recent claims of the “three hottest years ever” from 2022 to 2025.

Commodity markets automatically adjust; when one region underperforms, trade reallocates supply. The NYT acknowledges that tariffs and export controls can amplify price spikes. That is policy-driven inflation, not climate-driven inflation.

When discussing energy, the article points to grid repairs and increased electricity demand during heat waves. U.S. electricity prices have risen sharply in recent years, but that’s not due to a changing climate but rather is primarily due to fuel mix changes, regulatory mandates, and grid reliability challenges tied to rapid renewables integration driven by climate policies. It’s not climate change, but climate policies that have driven higher energy prices. Historical pricing data available through the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) electricity database show that price increases correlate more closely with political decisions that cause fuel supply volatility and shifts to expensive, intermittent, wind, solar, and battery storage power rather than with long-term temperature trends.

The NYT also cites a study projecting that weather-related disruptions could raise electricity infrastructure costs by as much as 25 percent toward the end of the century. That is a modeling projection, not an observed cost trend. The United States has already experienced roughly 1°C of warming since the late nineteenth century, yet official inflation tracking in the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Consumer Price Index database attributes recent inflation primarily to pandemic-era stimulus, supply chain disruptions, and energy price shocks, not temperature changes.

The article presents insurance costs as the clearest climate-related inflation driver. But insurance markets respond more to litigation environments, construction costs, regulatory frameworks, and development patterns in high-risk areas. Long-term normalized hurricane damage trends discussed at Climate at a Glance Hurricanes  show no upward trajectory after population growth and coastal development are accounted for. The same is true for rising wildfire costs. They are due to shifting policies on public lands and increased development in areas historically prone to wildfires, not significant changes in the climate in those regions. Indeed, acreage lost to wildfires has declined significantly over the past two decades. Rising premiums reflect higher rebuilding costs and denser development in vulnerable zones, not necessarily stronger storms.

The article pegs global warming’s impact at “between $400 and $900 per person annually,” but concedes the wide range stems from difficulty separating weather variability from climate change. That uncertainty is not incidental, it is central. Without a clear attribution chain linking long-term warming trends to persistent price acceleration in specific sectors, the NYT claim remains purely speculative; it’s not just that there is no causal link, there isn’t even a correlation between experienced weather trends and inflation related price increases.

The NYT further notes that U.S. commodity crops like corn, soybeans, wheat, and rice “have been less affected by shifting weather patterns.” Those crops form the backbone of global calorie supply. If staple production remains broadly stable, sweeping claims about climate-driven food inflation collapse.

Finally, the article cites mitigation policies, such as emissions trading systems and regulatory mandates, as contributors to rising prices. That is not climate inflation. That is climate policy inflation. When governments impose carbon pricing, trade barriers, or compliance costs, consumers pay more by design. Conflating the cost of political decisions supposedly designed to fight climate change with the cost of climate change itself obscures the true driver.

Inflation over the past five years has been historically elevated across advanced economies, driven primarily by unprecedented fiscal stimulus, monetary expansion, pandemic supply disruptions, and geopolitical energy shocks. None of those are climate variables. Economic research consistently identifies monetary policy as the dominant long-term determinant of inflation.

Weather variability can affect specific commodity prices in specific years. That has always been true. Droughts affected grain markets in the 1930s. Hurricanes disrupted supply chains in the twentieth century, yet sustained inflation requires sustained monetary imbalance.

The New York Times frames climate change as an emerging inflationary force poised to accelerate, but observational economic record refutes any such economy-wide climate-driven inflation trend. Weather anecdotes, modeling projections, and policy cost provide no proof of climate-driven inflation. Inflation is fundamentally a monetary and policy phenomenon. Blaming it on the weather may make compelling click-bait copy, but it does not withstand economic scrutiny.

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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William Howard
March 7, 2026 6:04 am

Buyden created the inflation now democrats want to blame Trump

Scissor
Reply to  William Howard
March 7, 2026 6:22 am

Biden was especially harmful but neither party is without blame, and inflation is a feature of fiat money systems. The federal reserve even has a long term inflation rate target.

Curious George
Reply to  William Howard
March 7, 2026 8:03 am

Climate change brought Joe Biden upon us. Inflation follows.

gyan1
Reply to  William Howard
March 7, 2026 9:40 am

Washington State pays about a $1.40/gal more for gas than neighboring Idaho due to Climate related regulations. A fundamental propaganda technique is to accuse the opposition of what you are doing. The NYT’s bread and butter exemplified by the lying article.

strativarius
March 7, 2026 6:40 am

Has the New York Times really not heard of our ‘Rachel from Accounts’ (Customer Service)?

She claimed to be a chess champion…

…hacks haven’t bothered actually checking whether Reeves ever was a “champion” chess player. Scour the archives and the results of official championship tournaments are available to see. Reeves did indeed play in the British Under 14 championship. She came 26th…
https://order-order.com/2024/10/15/investigation-rachel-reeves-british-chess-champion-myth-busted/

Similarly she fantasises that she was an economist…

Rachel Reeves has been doing some digital back-tracking, editing her LinkedIn profile to “reflect” that she wasn’t an economist at Halifax for three years but instead worked in “retail banking.” As Guido also revealed, she was in fact, part of a small complaints team at HBOS, handling routine tasks far away from the economists’ desk…
https://order-order.com/2024/11/15/reeves-peddled-hbos-economist-myth-to-get-into-parliament/

Hence Amateur Hour…

Budget watchdog downgrades growth forecast for 2026 as Rachel Reeves defends Government’s plan
https://www.business-live.co.uk/economic-development/spring-statement-2026-budget-watchdog-33522551

UK inflation forecast revised higher for 2026, says OBR
https://uk.investing.com/news/economy-news/uk-inflation-forecast-revised-higher-for-2026-says-obr-93CH-4391069

Net zero sense, net zero policies.

Reply to  strativarius
March 7, 2026 6:51 am

Was that 26th out of 25?

strativarius
Reply to  JeffC
March 7, 2026 7:27 am

Horsey to King Bish 3…

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  strativarius
March 7, 2026 7:20 pm

Ahh! You’re a waffle man!

strativarius
Reply to  Jeff Alberts
March 7, 2026 11:53 pm

No smegging flapjacks!

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  strativarius
March 8, 2026 6:43 am

Smeg! What the smeggin’ smeg’s he smeggin’ done!

March 7, 2026 6:50 am

Carbon taxes and renewable energy do make things cost more so it’s oddly true.

Reply to  Thomas Finegan
March 7, 2026 11:59 am

Exactly what I was going to say.. It is the idiotic “solutions” to climate change that have cost western societies HUGE amounts of wasted money, causing inflation and economic/energy degradation.

John the Econ
Reply to  Thomas Finegan
March 7, 2026 1:09 pm

And printing money to subsidize it all helps even more.

March 7, 2026 6:50 am

The NYT is said to be the paper of record. Time for a new designation. Suggestions? 🙂

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
March 7, 2026 7:29 am

Toilet Paper of Record, is the obvious choice, though not subtle.

Reply to  Jeff Alberts
March 7, 2026 8:54 am

sanitary napkin of record

John Hultquist
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
March 7, 2026 8:49 am

 Enclosed Avian guano receptacle (EAGR)

Mr.
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
March 7, 2026 11:51 am

On my first visit to NYC in 2010, I was so looking forward to reading the print copy of the ‘iconic’ NYT – journal of record – left outside my hotel room door.

What a disappointing let-down that whole experience was –
the NYT was by then just a sad rag, and the coffee was crap too.

Have these things improved in the last 16 years?

anyone? . . . anyone? . . .

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Mr.
March 7, 2026 7:22 pm

I don’t drink coffee or read the NYT, so can’t help ya.

mleskovarsocalrrcom
March 7, 2026 7:14 am

More proof the MSM does no fact checking or author verification. They just skip journalism 101 when the content matches the approved narrative.

Denis
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
March 7, 2026 9:15 am

I do not believe that Journalism 101 is taught any more to anybody.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Denis
March 7, 2026 7:23 pm

Some of the contributors to The Daily Wire still practice honest journalism. Luke Rosiak for one.

Bruce Cobb
March 7, 2026 7:32 am

Fake manmade climate change (which is what they mean) can’t even drive Miss Daisy, let alone inflation.

Beta Blocker
March 7, 2026 8:32 am

The NYT article is another piece of manufactured ammunition in a general campaign being mounted before the 2026 and 2028 election cycles to convince American voters that the use of fossil fuels to generate electricity is a primary driver of the energy affordability crisis.

The focus of the larger campaign against fossil fuels and nuclear has already shifted away from climate change as the primary anti-carbon talking point and towards energy affordability as the primary concern. It’s a concern which has recently been proven to be far more effective as a political talking point than is climate change.

2025 elections held in Virginia, in New Jersey, and in New York City demonstrate the appeal of that talking point. Wind and solar backed by batteries and pumped storage was being touted in 2025 as being cheaper than gas-fired, coal-fired, and nuclear. The voters bought the claim in those three places in 2025 and likely will buy it in other states this coming spring and fall.

gyan1
Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 7, 2026 9:33 am

“The voters bought the claim in those three places in 2025 and likely will buy it in other states this coming spring and fall.”

Only in Progressive nutcase cities. I predict the radical move to the left by clueless idiots will ensure Republican majorities in Congress. A lot of people don’t like Trump but most like Democrats even less.

Denis
March 7, 2026 9:11 am

The warm Florida and cold Maine average temperatures differ by about 30F. Therefore according to the thesis, inflation in Florida must be really bad.

jvcstone
March 7, 2026 10:53 am

Inflation is mostly caused by an increasing money supply—something central banks (fed included) were invented for.

John the Econ
March 7, 2026 1:11 pm

Fake news prints fake science and fake economics.

Edward Katz
March 7, 2026 2:24 pm

How about wars like the current conflict with Iran? In Canada we’ve seen it jump 17 cents/liter in less than a week from the already high previous price. No doubt the alarmists will soon be telling us that such a spike is actually good because it will discourage gas consumption whose emissions are the principal reason for climate change, etc., etc., ad nauseam. Except what it will really do is drive up living costs which have been high enough already, while the climate will do whatever it intends, as is always the case.

March 7, 2026 4:46 pm

Inflation is defined as too many dollars chasing too few goods.

Therefore, if inflation causes global warming (which climate change actually is), it can all be prevented by stopping the printing of dollars.

Has the New York Times informed the Federal Reserve of this? If not, why not?

observa
March 8, 2026 1:30 am

What the Gummint orta do for the poor people is control the prices-
Cocoa beans rot and West African farmers seek other options after commodity crash
Oh that’s right they can control the price or the quantity but never both at the same time 🙁