2022 Hurricane Season Confirms (Again!) No Connection Between CO2 and Cyclone Energy

by
Steve MacDonald

If you recall, way back in February, the shamans and witchdoctors at NOAA – revered by the Climate Cult for their computer modeling wisdom – predicted a busier-than-normal Atlantic hurricane season for 2022. It wasn’t even just below average.

Related: How Hurricane Ian Wrecked The Climate Cult’s Dire Predictions Business

And it’s a huge problem. And not just in the North Atlantic. Total Accumulated Cyclone Energy in the Northern Hemisphere was down  33% in 2022.

 

The World’s Northern Hemisphere tropical cyclone activity period for year 2022 has passed with the results showing a huge 33% reduction in Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE  – which includes data reflecting frequency, intensity and duration of all Northern Hemisphere tropical storms)

 

The rising bull sh!t CO2 in the atmosphere is supposed to multiply the “frequency, intensity, and duration” of hurricanes,” but the planet has again determined that this is nonsense. The Models are wrong, and there is zero evidence in this graph which, when updated for  2022, will show even less evidence.

 

Cyclone energy down - graph for modern era

 

Compared to atmospheric CO2.

 

 

And look what happens when you overlay CO2 on the Cyclone energy plot.

 

Cyclone energy compared to CO2 v

 

No correlation! No tipping point. Nothing.

So, we’ve learned two things (we already knew). NOAA and the computer models still can’t guess squat, and higher levels of CO2 in the atmosphere are in no way connected to hurricane “frequency, intensity, and duration.”

I just wanted to share that. I hope you’d like to share it too because it’s not just hurricanes they get wrong, right?

 

 

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, blogger, and a member of the Board of directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor of GraniteGrok.com, a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, and a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

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