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Frits Buningh trained in the 1970s at Delft University of Technology (TU Delft) to become a mining engineer, specializing in ventilation. After working in a German coal mine in 1974, he worked in a Canadian copper mine in 1976-77—the Kid Creek Mine near Timmins, Ontario, one of the deepest underground mines in the world. Kid Creek’s #2 mine shaft was almost two miles deep (9800 feet = 1.85 Miles), and he experienced going down that deep when it was being developed. These experiences gave him a profound appreciation for geological time scales, something that seems lost amid the climate crisis hysteria of today.
00:00 Introduction and Guest Introduction
00:01 Questioning Climate Data
01:08 United Nations and Personal Background
02:15 Joining the CO2 Coalition
03:20 Challenging the Climate Change Institute
05:49 Audit Methodology and Findings
09:01 Temperature Data Analysis
24:15 Northern Hemisphere Midsection Analysis
26:30 Tropics Temperature Trends
33:46 Southern Hemisphere Midsection Analysis
35:53 Exploring Antarctica: A Personal Journey
36:33 Temperature Models and Discrepancies
37:27 Antarctica's Melting and Global Impact
38:20 Calculating World Temperatures
40:23 Audit Results: A Closer Look
40:50 Northern Hemisphere Trends
41:25 Southern Hemisphere and Tropics Analysis
43:12 Challenges with Satellite Data
46:11 Concluding Thoughts on Climate Data
57:36 Final Remarks and Future Plans
About Frits: https://co2coalition.org/teammember/frits-buningh/
The Audit of Antartica's Average Daily Temperature Survey: https://www.aaadts.com/
https://x.com/FBuningh
Slides for this podcast: https://www.aaadts.com/nelson2025
=========
Slides for the podcast are also here, along with AI summaries of all of my podcasts: https://tomn.substack.com/p/podcast-summaries
My Linktree: https://linktr.ee/tomanelson1
By Thomas Nelson4.9
3636 ratings
Frits Buningh trained in the 1970s at Delft University of Technology (TU Delft) to become a mining engineer, specializing in ventilation. After working in a German coal mine in 1974, he worked in a Canadian copper mine in 1976-77—the Kid Creek Mine near Timmins, Ontario, one of the deepest underground mines in the world. Kid Creek’s #2 mine shaft was almost two miles deep (9800 feet = 1.85 Miles), and he experienced going down that deep when it was being developed. These experiences gave him a profound appreciation for geological time scales, something that seems lost amid the climate crisis hysteria of today.
00:00 Introduction and Guest Introduction
00:01 Questioning Climate Data
01:08 United Nations and Personal Background
02:15 Joining the CO2 Coalition
03:20 Challenging the Climate Change Institute
05:49 Audit Methodology and Findings
09:01 Temperature Data Analysis
24:15 Northern Hemisphere Midsection Analysis
26:30 Tropics Temperature Trends
33:46 Southern Hemisphere Midsection Analysis
35:53 Exploring Antarctica: A Personal Journey
36:33 Temperature Models and Discrepancies
37:27 Antarctica's Melting and Global Impact
38:20 Calculating World Temperatures
40:23 Audit Results: A Closer Look
40:50 Northern Hemisphere Trends
41:25 Southern Hemisphere and Tropics Analysis
43:12 Challenges with Satellite Data
46:11 Concluding Thoughts on Climate Data
57:36 Final Remarks and Future Plans
About Frits: https://co2coalition.org/teammember/frits-buningh/
The Audit of Antartica's Average Daily Temperature Survey: https://www.aaadts.com/
https://x.com/FBuningh
Slides for this podcast: https://www.aaadts.com/nelson2025
=========
Slides for the podcast are also here, along with AI summaries of all of my podcasts: https://tomn.substack.com/p/podcast-summaries
My Linktree: https://linktr.ee/tomanelson1

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