The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) unveiled an alarming climate report last week that is so outrageous that climate realists should print copies and use it to win over alarmists.
The media, nevertheless, are trumpeting without scrutiny the report’s “findings,” and even adding to the alarm. But don’t panic, New Jersey will be just fine. Let’s debunk some of the report’s claims.
Among the top Google News search results today for “climate change” is an article by The Press of Atlantic City.
The article, titled “State climate change report offers sobering predictions for South Jersey,” provides a useful summary of the DEP report’s claims.
According to the opening paragraph of the Press article, “Imagine flooding in Atlantic City almost every day of the year, blueberries and cranberries [are] no longer grown in the state, and birds like the American goldfinch, the state bird, at risk because of changes in the climate.”
Let’s start with blueberries. The DEP report, which was required under an executive order signed by New Jersey’s Democratic governor, and the report’s fawning, uncritical media coverage claim that New Jersey will soon become too hot to grow blueberries.
Nevertheless, three of the top 10 states for blueberry production are Florida, Georgia, and Mississippi. Indeed, Florida hosts a large number of blueberry festivals every year during April, May, and June to celebrate the local blueberry harvest.
Yet, the alarmist DEP report and the fawning media coverage claim New Jersey will soon become hotter than present-day Tampa, Florida, which hosts many of the local blueberry festivals.
To show how preposterous the blueberry claim is, Atlantic City, New Jersey has an average high temperature of 64 degrees and an average low of 45 degrees.
Tampa, Florida, where blueberries grow quite well, is 19 degrees hotter, with an average high temperature of 82 degrees and an average low of 65 degrees.
The claim that New Jersey will soon become so hot that blueberries “will no longer be grown in the state” is clearly a preposterous lie.
Let’s move on to New Jersey’s state bird, the American goldfinch.
As shown here, the American goldfinch lives year-round as far south as Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, and Louisiana. It is also a common winter resident in Florida.
Yet, New Jersey bureaucrats and their media sock-puppets claim it will soon become too hot in New Jersey for the goldfinch.
Even the most alarmist of alarmists do not claim New Jersey will become hotter than Louisiana and Florida. The claim that global warming will soon drive goldfinches from New Jersey is also clearly a preposterous lie.
Finally, let’s examine sea level and Atlantic City flooding. Atlantic City sits at an elevation of 7 feet.
During the past 100-plus years, sea level at Atlantic City has been rising at a steady pace of approximately 4.12 millimeters per year, or 1.6 inches per decade.
There has been no recent increase in the pace of sea-level rise. Atlantic City has dealt with the slow, steady sea-level rise quite well utilizing 20th-century technologies.
Sand dunes and sea walls protect Atlantic City and cities all over the world from sea level rise and floods.
Despite this, New Jersey bureaucrats claim that, even with the advantages of 21st-century technologies, a city that sits at 7 feet above sea level will see flooding “almost every day of the year” if it experiences just a few more inches of sea-level rise? That is simply ridiculous.
So, the media tee up three key “findings” in the New Jersey DEP climate report, while objective science shows each finding is an alarmist lie.
Time to cancel the New Jersey climate crisis.
Read more at Climate Realism
I lived in N.J. for all my 64 years. The weather climate has not changed even one speck! The reason why the New Jersey Philadelphia area has so many people become meteorologists is because our weather is always changing from year to year. Some winters we may get 30-” of snow, with temperatures below 0 F. Other years, no snow with some hardy flowers blooming in winter and days and temperatures in the seventies at times. I have experienced it all here and it has not changed at all.
The one thing I did not care for regarding this article is that it states that the changes are occurring but will not be drastic. They are NOT occurring! Also, southern states grow a different type of blueberry that can not compare with the ones we grow here. BTW. Amazing sets of blueberries this season in my yard anyway! The other commentator regarding the bird pictured above is correct. That is not the Gold Finch as we have here in N.J. Ours is brilliant yellow with a little black in the summer and the becomes a duller olive/ brown color in the winter.
Good article but it would be better showing an American rather than European Goldfinch.
New Jersey needs to clean out its Dept of Enviromental Protection there are way too many nuts loose