What if the climate narrative is not what you’ve been told?
Canary in a Climate World: Climate Realism vs. the Net Zero Myth is the bold third volume in the bestselling Canary series.
Following the bestselling earlier Canary volumes exploring propaganda, censorship, money, fear, and power during the Covid era, this new volume turns to one of the most consequential issues of our time: climate change, global warming, and the policies being enacted in their name.
Bringing together 38 experts from across physics, climate science, geology, engineering, economics, medicine, law, journalism, public policy, psychology, and independent research, this book argues that the public has often been given an incomplete and deeply one-sided picture.
Contributors include Nobel Prize-winning physicist Dr. John F. Clauser, Greenpeace co-founder Dr. Patrick Moore, MIT atmospheric physicist Dr. Richard S. Lindzen, Princeton physicist Professor William Happer, physicist Professor Henrik Svensmark, astrophysicist Professor Nir Shaviv, oncologist Professor Angus Dalgleish, British parliamentarian Sir Christopher Chope, historian and former newspaper publisher Conrad Black, and many other internationally recognized scientists, economists, engineers, physicians, investigative journalists, and independent researchers.
Together, they examine the evidence behind climate change and global warming claims, the role of carbon dioxide (CO2), the costs and consequences of Net Zero policy, the realities of modern energy systems, and the powerful influence of narrative, psychology, and public messaging on how these issues are understood.
Several contributors also identify striking parallels between the Covid era and the climate debate, including fear-based messaging, censorship, institutional incentives, and the use of crisis narratives to justify expanding control.
Fascinating, thought-provoking, and highly readable, this collection brings the climate debate and its far-reaching consequences vividly to life.
Whether readers agree with every conclusion or not, this book challenges assumptions, provokes thought, and invites a deeper examination of one of the defining narratives of our time.
Together, the Canary books examine propaganda, censorship, money, fear, power — first during Covid, and now within the climate narrative shaping the modern world.