Scientists Say More Marine Life Is Greening The Oceans, So Media Freak Out 

From Tallbloke’s Talkshop

July 16, 2023 by oldbrew

Cumulus clouds over the Atlantic Ocean [image credit: Tiago Fioreze @ Wikipedia]

Knee-jerk alarm goes up yet another notch in the climate-obsessed media. Look what *you’ve done*, they try to insinuate.
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Climate change is benefiting life in the oceans so much that ocean color is becoming noticeably greener as a result, scientists reported this week.

Bodies of water with little life tend to be bluer, the scientists observed, while bodies of water rich in life tend to be greener.

Responding to the wonderful news about the recent burst of ocean life, the media have instead sounded a breathless alarm leading people to believe that climate change making the oceans greener is bad, says Climate Realism (via Climate Change Dispatch).

On July 13, the media acted in concert to inundate people with fear that climate change is “literally changing the ocean’s color.”

A sample of the article titles include:

“Climate Change Is Literally Changing the Ocean’s Color” – The Daily Beast.

“World’s oceans changing color due to climate breakdown, study suggests” – The Guardian

“Climate change is making our oceans change color, new research finds” – CNN

“Oceans are changing color, likely due to climate change, researchers find” – CBS News

“Climate Change Is Getting So Bad that the Ocean Is Changing Color” – The Byte

Searching dozens of media articles reporting on the new study, Climate Realism could not find a single article with a title mentioning green oceans mean more life.

The lead sentence of the CNN article reads, “The color of the ocean has changed significantly over the last 20 years and human-caused climate change is likely responsible, according to a new study.”

Only later in the article – for people who bother to read that far down – is the explanation:

“The color of the ocean is derived from the materials found in its upper layers. For example, a deep blue sea will have very little life in it, whereas a green color means there are ecosystems there, based on phytoplankton, plant-like microbes that contain chlorophyll.

“The phytoplankton forms the basis of a food web, which supports larger organisms such as krill, fish, seabirds and marine mammals.”

Full article here.


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