
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
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
4.8
3030 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
439 Listeners
485 Listeners
34,064 Listeners
299 Listeners
1,996 Listeners
322 Listeners
335 Listeners
479 Listeners
1,184 Listeners
5,248 Listeners
2,335 Listeners
263 Listeners
141 Listeners
224 Listeners
374 Listeners