Good news, folks. Recent scientific analysis has found that green vegetation on Earth has increased significantly due to higher levels of carbon dioxide (CO₂), a.k.a. "the Gas of Life."
A paper called "Greening of the Earth and its drivers" was published in 2016 by 32 authors from 24 institutions in eight countries that analyzed satellite data, and concluded there had been a roughly 14% increase in green vegetation over the last 30 years.
The biggest driver of this increase, according to the study, is the extra carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which has added the equivalent of a new continent of green vegetation twice the size of the mainland United States.
Notably, this fact is incredibly inconvenient to the World Economic Forum and global governments seeking to control their populations with deindustrialization measures in the name of tackling climate change.
This greening is, in fact, good news. It means more food for insects and deer, for elephants and mice, for fish and whales. It means higher yields for farmers; indeed, the effect has probably added about $3 trillion to farm incomes over the last 30 years. So, less land is needed to feed the human population and more can be spared for wildlife instead. Additionally, due to
increased photosynthesis , oxygen levels have also increased, which is a ggod thing for all creatures who require oxygen to live.
Yet this never gets mentioned in the mainstream, alarmist press. In their desperation to keep the fearmongering on track the activists who make a living off the climate change scare do their best to ignore this inconvenient truth. When they cannot avoid the subject, they say that greening is a temporary phenomenon that will reverse in the latter part of this century. The evidence for this claim comes from a few computer models, which are always fed with extreme assumptions in order to get predictions that favor the Globalist agenda.
This comes as globalists in business, finance, and governments gathered earlier this month for the United Nations' COP27 summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt to "take action toward achieving the world's collective climate goals as agreed under the Paris Agreement and Convention."
Such goals include "climate reparations" and the reduction of fossil fuels and farming in industrial nations to reduce carbon emissions.
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