A Climate Conversation rejects the climate of extremism in favor of a constructive debate on climate change. Devised and produced by geophysicist Walter Johnson and filmmaker Colton Moyer, A Climate Conversation offers viewers a welcome opportunity to reach a consensus based on shared values of environmentalism and humanitarian compassion.
The film features scientists and economists with deep expertise in the subject of climate change. In addition to Johnson, the film features Ken Gregory, director of the Friends of Science, Gregory Wrightstone, Executive Director of the CO2 Coalition and an Expert Reviewer for the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and Ronald Stein, Founder of PTS Advance and author of four books on the economics of clean energy.
Radio host Kim Monson of The Kim Monson Show moderates the film. In plain English, Kim asks the most elemental questions at the core of the climate debate:
Is global warming a threat to human flourishing, and is it likely to lead to catastrophic consequences for mankind?
Is the warming trend we’re experiencing unprecedented in world and human history, and is it already causing hurricanes and forest fires that threaten our way of life?
What is the cost to achieve Net Zero in the United States?
What is the availability of natural resources necessary to create fossil-fuel-free electricity, and what are the costs in human terms?
Is it true that there is a consensus among scientists that climate change poses an existential threat to humanity?
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1 Comment
Thank you so much for your documentary “A Climate Conversation”. As a former geologist and petroleum engineer I completely agree with all the evidence you have presented. However, I am a little disappointed that you did not suggest an alternative cause of the climate change.
To my mind, the massive heat source in the core of the earth has been the cause of all tectonic activity and thousands of climate change events for hundreds of millions of years and is still having a big influence on the world’s climate. The heat emanates via mantle plumes into hotspots in the earth’s crust, most of which are on the ocean floor thereby heating the oceans from below. It is the warming oceans, not a warming atmosphere, that is causing the current warming event. Increasing volcanic activity and serious earthquakes support the theory that more heat is emanating.
I have written a thesis of my own along these lines and I would very much appreciate if one of your experts would be willing to peer review it, and if you could provide an email address or other means of transmission (11 page .pdf document).
Nick Loades, Queanbeyan, NSW, Australia