High temperatures in St. Louis unrelated to climate change, says Executive Director of the Climate Science Coalition

High temperatures and the record setting rainfall in St. Louis are unrelated to climate change, according to the Executive Director of the Climate Science Coalition of America. St. Louis recorded 7.02” of rainfall Tuesday, surpassing the old record of 6.85” set in 1915.

Steve Goreham joins Ryan Wrecker, filling in for Mark Reardon on The Mark Reardon Show, to speak about the climate change controversy.

“We’ve gotten into a situation where every alarmist in the news media, in order to help their ratings, calls all this due to man-made climate change,” Goreham said, “and it’s really not the case.”

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According to Goreham, 23/50 state high temperature records were set in the 1930s, proof the high temperatures are unrelated to climate change.

“The world is spending $500B a year on renewables to try and stop the planet from warming, yet we’ve had only 1 degree celsius of warming in 140 years.”

“If you go back a thousand years…it was warmer than it is today, and that was long before we had SUVs or power plants,” Goreham said. “So, natural cycles appear to dominate climate, not what your neighbor is doing.”

Marc Cox, of The Marc Cox Morning Show, shares his opinion on the topic: “It’s 103° again in St. Louis when we know the record was 110° back in the 1950s…What was the excuse then?”

Goreham advises listeners to research the subject and not just accept what is being shared in the media everyday.

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Featured Image Photo Credit: (Photo Credit: Liudmila Chernetska)