Climate Fact-Check December 2025

A scenic view of a glacier with blue ice and mountains in the background, featuring a sunburst effect, overlaid with the text 'Climate Fact Check: December 2025 Edition' in bold white font on a blue background.

From The ClimateRealism

Guest Post by: The Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow, The Heartland Institute, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, the Energy & Environmental Legal Institute, and the International Climate Science Coalition, and Truth in Energy and Climate.

Editor’s note: This summary serves as a fact check on the top false claims made about climate change by the media in December 2025. 

UN temperature goals ‘plucked out of thin air’ – ‘Climate roller coaster’ debunked – Ocean currents not on the verge of collapse – Your ‘favorite holiday foods’ NOT threatened by climate

Text excerpt discussing a climate change claim about global temperature limits and presenting a fact-check regarding its scientific merit.
Links: The Associated Press X post, station coverage, leaked email from Phil Jones.
A graph depicting temperature trends across the contiguous United States from 1979 to 2008, comparing compliant and non-compliant weather stations with different data adjustments.
Links: Phys.org post, UHI contamination, station siting concerns.
A fact-check article discussing claims about the stability of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and its impact on climate, featuring a section from Yahoo News and rebuttals from experts.
Links: Yahoo News article, AMOC stabilityresiliency to freshwater flux, NOAA comments.
A fact-check article discussing the link between climate change and recent flooding in Indonesia, highlighting the main causes as land use change, rapid deforestation, and inadequate infrastructure.
Links: Al Jazeera post, Indonesian precipitation.
A summary of claims and fact-checks regarding climate change, focusing on sea level rise and its acceleration over time, accompanied by relevant data graphs.
Links: Washington Post articleAGU Advances studyJournal of Marine Science and Engineering study.
A chart showing the production trends of cocoa, vanilla, coffee, and cinnamon from 1990 to 2025, highlighting significant increases in crop production despite claims of decline due to climate change.
Links: The New Republic post, United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization data.

Until next month, enjoy these and other great climate fact checks at:

ClimateRealism.com

ClimateDepot.com

Wattsupwiththat.com


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