Recently, Fox News rightly called out CBS News for making a preposterous claim about the air turbulence passengers regularly experience on airliners.
After a video surfaced of terrifying moments of turbulence experienced on a flight from Phoenix to Hawaii, CBS News posted a story on December 19, 2022, titled “Here’s what causes airplane turbulence — and how to stay safe on a rough flight.”
In that story, CBS News posted this quote:
Severe weather increases chances of turbulence, and due to climate change, these kinds of incidents will only continue to grow,” Taylor Garland, spokesperson for the Association of Flight Attendants, told CBS News.
Garland said that the instances of turbulence that led to injuries this summer may have been weather related.
That claimed linkage between climate change, severe weather, and increased air turbulence has no factual basis.
CBS News even tweeted [about] the false link between climate change and turbulence, gathering more than 177,000 views.
Previously, Climate Realism took CNN to task on the same claim in the story CNN Falsely Claims Airline Turbulence Will Increase due to Climate Change.
As Climate Realism noted at the time, a 2021 report by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) plotted accident data related to turbulence, finding no statistically significant increase since 1989, despite a tremendous increase in passengers and miles flown.
See Figure 1 below:
In fact, if turbulence had increased due to climate change as CNN, CBS, and the Association of Flight Attendants spokesperson claims, there would be a clear upward trend demonstrated in the graph.
Instead, the values of turbulence-related aircraft accidents have held steady since about 1995 as seen in Figure 1.
The ICAO accident graph agrees with what was found in Climate at a Glance: Deaths from Extreme Weather. From that publication comes these facts:
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) AR6 report, Chapter 11, Weather and Climate Extreme Events in a Changing Climate, concludes that changes in the frequency and intensity of most severe weather events have not been detected nor can they be attributed to human-caused climate change.
Real-world data shows that there has been no increase in drought or heatwaves; no increase in flooding; no increase in tropical cyclones and hurricanes; no increase in winter storms; and no increase in thunderstorms or tornadoes, or associated hail, lightning, and extreme winds from thunderstorms.
Bottom line: Data from the ICAO, the authority on global civil aviation, does not support Garland or CBS News’ claim that climate change is producing more flight turbulence.
In addition, the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has not indicated atmospheric turbulence is increasing.
Gina Martinez, the writer of CBS News’ false story, failed to do even a little basic research on turbulence numbers.
Had she, or the editors who approved her story for publication done so, they would have found that neither turbulence nor injuries due to in-flight turbulence have been increasing.
Instead, Martinez quoted a non-scientist spokesperson for the Association of Flight Attendants as the basis for the assertion that turbulence is increasing due to climate change. Readily available facts refute that claim.
CBS News compounded its error by converting that baseless claim from Garland into a headline tweeted around the world.
This is sadly indicative of the shoddy state of journalism today where beliefs about climate change trump easily accessible facts. Both CBS News and the Association of Flight Attendants deserve derision for misleading the public.
Read more at Climate Realism
See B.S. News their infamous for fake news See B.S Sunday Morning and 60 Minutes are good examples but NBC and ABC follow the same lead but CNN is the worst
At a local municipal airport, there’s a pond across the road. If your landing approach crosses above that pond on a hot summer day, you experience a sudden drop of several feet. It’s an interesting example of what goes up must come down. Hot air rises from pavement and sinks to cooler water. Airliners are designed to withstand severe turbulence. Unbuckle your seat belt at your peril.