Right on. Thanks for sharing.
Posts by Alt NOAA Climate
Now cover this story!
💪🖕😁
Read the article here: www.motherjones.com/politics/202...
Screen cap of a Mother Jones website article whose headline says "Climate scientists raise a middle finger to trump's censorship efforts" with a photo of protestors holding signs that say things like, "More biologists, less broligarchs".
Climate scientists raise a middle finger to Trump's censorship efforts. You can too! Go support Climate.us!
Sharing and engaging with the content can be just as important!
Sources say transfers of employees from NOAA research to other line offices are being denied. Does the administration fear the corrupting influence of those engaged in NOAA research? Or maybe it's punitive? Either way, seems like NOAA research personnel are being blacklisted.
Hey Alt NPS - can you share about the Climate.us project? They just re-launched the Fifth National Climate Assessment report! nca5.climate.us
You can read about it here:
bsky.app/profile/clim...
They just relaunched the NCA5!
Here's their Bluesky account: bsky.app/profile/clim...
You can find the NCA5 here: nca5.climate.us
You know who isn't afraid of speaking up? The folks at Climate.us! Please share with your followers about the work that they're doing! They just re-launched the Fifth National Climate Assessment website, after it was taken down.
Photo of the "love triangle" meme. Showing a young woman, labeled "the people who cancelled the NCA5", looking shocked and angrily at her boyfriend, labeled "the science interested general public" who is appreciatively whistling at an attractive woman walking by, labeled "Climate.us".
Climate.us has relaunched the Fifth National Climate Assessment! Long live nca5.climate.us! This is a living site - not a flat PDF. It's searchable and it links to a working version of the NCA5 Interactive Atlas. #climate #memes #science #ClimateChange #ClimateAction #StandUpForScience #DataForAll
I know there are people who think all these 'alt' sites are bogus. But here's the real deal - Climate.us! Give them a like and a follow, and if you have a couple bucks, make a donation to keep the facts alive.
Thank you!
Expanding brain meme that says: hearing Climate.gov was shut down; reading CNN article about climate web ninjas; watching Climate.us being stood up; making a donation to fight back. Juxtaposed next to images of an increasingly active brain inside a transparent skull.
Fighting back feels good! Go support Climate.us! Every $1 makes a difference. If you can't donate, you can always share!
Go follow Climate.us!
"We currently face a firehose of social media disinformation . . . The public may not know how to filter and decipher good climate science information. That makes the efforts of climate.us a great service to our nation, the world, and humanity."
“What’s happening can feel so overwhelming that it’s easy to feel like you’re powerless to do anything about it,” said Lindsey’s team member. “But sometimes you have to just look out and see what’s within your reach. And this problem is within our reach, so we just see it as doing our part.”
@diannariparian.bsky.social could you say more about how you used Climate(.)gov when you worked for your county?
Check it out! Secret climate web ninjas!
More than a month ago, the Trump administration told the NWS to hire meteorologists and other specialists for 126 vacant positions in depleted forecast offices around the country.
But those jobs have yet to even be posted on the federal government's official hiring website. Why?
In the mid-latitudes, summer is still ahead, but in the Galapagos Islands, the hottest days of the year have already arrived. NOAA Climate.gov cartoon of tortoises climbing into an ice box.
The ENSO blogs (along with the Polar Vortex and Beyond the Data blogs) were a popular part of Climate.gov, accounting for over 15% of the site's traffic. They also, largely, had little to do with climate change, which contradicts assessments that Climate.gov was about stoking climate anxiety. [4/4]
The Climate.gov ENSO blog was a plain language version intended for the public. The blogs were written by NOAA scientists in a conversational and often humorous voice. They made frequent reference to previous blogs that explained basic ENSO concepts, like this one. [3/4]
April 2025 sea surface temperature compared to the 1985-1993 average (details on climatology from Coral Reef Watch). The box indicates the location of the Niño-3.4 ENSO-monitoring region in the tropical Pacific. The surface of the east-central tropical Pacific is near average, while much of the global ocean remains warmer than average.
ENSO is a climate pattern whose influence reaches across the globe, affecting weather, ecosystems, and economies. It is one of the most important drivers of year-to-year climate variability. The EDD, aimed at technical experts, assumes familiarity with meteorological terms and climate dynamics.[2/4]
Line graph showing observed and predicted temperatures (black line) in the key ENSO-monitoring region of the tropical Pacific from spring 2025 through the fall.
Today is the top of the month release of the NOAA CPC ENSO diagnostic discussion (EDD), and it will be the first time in 11 years that Climate.gov isn't releasing an associated ENSO blog update. It would have contained an updated version of this graph. [1/4]