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by Kevin Stocklin
Reporter
October 28, 2025
from
TheEpochTimes Website
Article also
HERE

Billionaire 'philanthropist' Bill
Gates
during an
interview in Berlin on Jan. 27, 2015.
TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP
via Getty Images
'People will be able
to live
and thrive in most places on Earth
for the
foreseeable future,'
Bill Gates
said in a hotly debated op-ed...
Tech billionaire
Bill Gates's recent blog post
stating that,
the "doomsday view" of environmental and
social catastrophe from
global warming is wrong,
...appears to mark a significant shift in the debate over climate
change.
While reiterating the orthodoxy that climate
change will have "serious consequences" and will hurt poor people
the most, Gates goes on to say that,
"it will not lead to humanity's demise."
"People will be able to live and thrive in most places on Earth
for the foreseeable future," he said.
Written as a message to attendees of the
U.N. Climate Change Conference in Brazil (COP30),
which begins on Nov. 10,
Gates's op-ed states that the biggest problems the world
faces are poverty and disease, not rising temperatures.
This contrasts with his previous statements
on the subject, including his 2021 book, "How to Avoid a Climate Disaster,"
in which he says,
climate change is one of humanity's
greatest challenges and predicts that it could cause more
deaths than the COVID-19 'pandemic,'
which
killed millions of people worldwide.
Similarly, U.N. Secretary-General
António Guterres,
declared in 2022 that,
all nations must end their reliance on
fossil fuels "before climate catastrophe closes in on
us all."
Video also
HERE...
Gates joins others who,
are stepping back from
'dire predictions' about rising temperatures attributed to the
burning of oil, gas, and coal...
Ted Nordhaus, founder of the
climate-focused Breakthrough Institute, wrote in 2007,
"If we continue to burn as much coal and
oil as we've been burning, the heating of the earth will
cause the sea levels to rise and the Amazon to collapse,
and, according to scenarios commissioned by the Pentagon,
will trigger a series of wars over the basic resources like
food and water."
In an August blog post, Nordhaus
said:
"I no longer believe this hyperbole. Yes,
the world will continue to warm as long as we keep burning
fossil fuels. And sea levels will rise...
But the rest of it? Not so much."
Critics of the claims that the climate
changes as a result of human action and that the changes
constitute an urgent existential crisis say that the most dire
predictions from climate change models:
...appear to be overstated.
While climate change activists continue to
maintain that their predictions are largely correct, the
scientific debate on global warming has become more nuanced,
upending the view that there was a scientific consensus
regarding climate "catastrophe".... [sic]
"The media, until recently, has had a
stranglehold on what gets put out there, and most of the
public have only heard extreme alarmist scenarios of climate
and planetary doom," Greg Wrightstone, executive
director of the
CO2 Coalition, which has challenged
the so-called consensus regarding climate change, told The Epoch Times.
"We've been saying all along that once
the dam breaks - and hopefully it's breaking now - we will
be able to get the truth in front of not just the American
people, but the world."
A July
report by the
Department of Energy, authored by a
working group of five independent experts in physical science,
economics, climate science, and academic research, concluded
that warming
caused by carbon dioxide (CO2),
"appears to be less damaging economically
than commonly believed, and that aggressive mitigation
strategies may be misdirected."
"Additionally, the report finds that U.S.
policy actions are expected to have undetectably small
direct impacts on the global climate and any effects will
emerge only with long delays," the report reads.
Coinciding with the release of that report,
U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright said:
"The rise of human flourishing over the
past two centuries is a story worth celebrating.
Yet we are
told - relentlessly - that the very energy systems that
enabled this progress now pose an existential threat."
This reflected a shift in the debate over
climate change, in which the benefits of fossil fuel energy and
carbon dioxide were taken into account, as well as the potential
harm from rising temperatures.
"By almost every metric we look at,
Earth's ecosystems are thriving and prospering," Wrightstone
said.
"It's quite obvious that there are huge
benefits that are due to climate change - longer growing
seasons, crop productivity is outpacing population growth
year after year, extreme weather-related deaths have dropped
more than 90 percent since 1900, deserts are shrinking, and
forests are expanding."
A
2024 report by Fred Pearce published by Yale
School of the Environment stated that,
"despite warnings that climate change
would create widespread desertification, many drylands are
getting greener because of increased CO2 in the
air - a trend that recent studies indicate will continue."
However, Pearce also notes the downside to
this, namely that,
"vegetation may soak up scarce water
supplies."
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