Extreme Temperature Diary- Tuesday May 19th, 2026/Main Topic: Scientists Tweaked the Global Warming Outlook, Trump Weighed In.

Future carbon emissions scenarios will be determined by politics. The warming *associated with* those scenarios will be determined by physics. If you fail to acknowledge the fundamental difference between these two things, you're either as dim-witted or dishonest (or both) as Donald Trump.

Michael E. Mann (@michaelemann.bsky.social) 2026-05-18T21:03:38.287Z

Good take here by Eric Niiler for the @nytimes.com:www.nytimes.com/2026/05/18/c…

Michael E. Mann (@michaelemann.bsky.social) 2026-05-18T21:38:11.715Z

Scientists Tweaked the Global Warming Outlook. So Trump Weighed In. – The New York Times

Eric Niiler

By Eric Niiler

Scientists are dialing back their worst-case scenario for how hot the world might get from climate change. That’s a small bit of good news. But over the weekend, President Trump falsely claimed it was evidence that scientists had been wrong.

Here’s a look at what’s changing, what it means and what the president said.

Researchers said a worst-case climate scenario that’s been used in science and policymaking for more than a decade had “become implausible” and would be revised downward.

That hothouse scenario assumed the highest realistic future greenhouse gas emissions. It predicted that, by the end of the century, global average temperatures could rise by 5 degrees Celsius, or 9 degrees Fahrenheit, over preindustrial levels.

It was also one of several scenarios developed by researchers — including the worst-case estimate, an optimistic best-case scenario, and one that fell in-between.

Now, because of the growth in renewable energy, the worst-case outlook is being revised downward. In a paper published in April, a committee of top climate experts from around the world said that now the worst-case scenario would be that the planet could heat up by an average of 3.5 degrees Celsius, or just over 6 degrees Fahrenheit.

And it said that a likelier range would be warming of 2.5 to 3 degrees Celsius by the end of the century, based on current emissions trends in the real world.

Detlef van Vuuren, lead author of the paper and a senior researcher at the PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, said the new numbers were based on revised emissions projections and that more climate computer-modeling work would help researchers refine their work.

The planet has already warmed by 1.4 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, according to the Copernicus Climate Change Service, a branch of the European Commission. That may not sound like much. But every fraction of a degree of global warming causes discernible, dangerous increases in extreme weather, crop failures and sea level rise.

The update was part of a planned reassessment ahead of upcoming reports by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the international expert committee that assesses climate science for the United Nations. According to the authors, less burning of coal and a flattening of fossil fuel use overall caused them to adjust their estimates.

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At the same time, renewable sources of energy like solar and wind power are becoming cheaper, and electric vehicles are becoming more affordable and more reliable. Some climate policies, such as requiring industries to rely less on fossil fuels, have also started to show results.

No, but it’s taken a while.

Many climate scientists have been arguing for years that the worst-case scenario, technically known as RCP 8.5, is unrealistic and should be scrapped. (RCP refers to a kind of climate blueprint, and 8.5 is essentially a rating of the warming caused by greenhouse gasses in Earth’s atmosphere.)

Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist at Berkeley Earth, published a paper in 2020 in the journal Nature arguing that policymakers and the media were portraying the RCP 8.5 scenario as an expected outcome rather than a worst-case scenario.

At the same time, Dr. Hausfather noted that the lower-end estimate of climate warming has been moved upward, so the likelihood of keeping warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius, a target set in the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change, is now receding. He said more extreme heat waves, more extreme wildfires, heavier precipitation events, sea level rise and loss of many ecosystems were all “going to continue and become worse.”

Others, including Roger Pielke, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and professor emeritus at the University of Colorado Boulder, said that some climate scientists and environmentalists have been exaggerating the effects of climate change by using the RCP 8.5 scenario to scare people. “If you want the public to trust climate research, which they have to if we’re going to decarbonize over many decades, then playing it straight is always the right response,” he said.

“GOOD RIDDANCE!” Mr. Trump said of RCP 8.5 in a social media post over the weekend.

The president, who has long called climate change a hoax, said falsely that the international expert committee admitted it had been wrong. “For far too long Climate Activism has been used by Dumocrats to scare Americans, push horrible Energy Policies, and fund BILLIONS into their bogus research programs,” he said.

The Trump administration has made huge budget cuts to climate research throughout the federal government, is dismantling a leading weather and climate research lab in Colorado, and has made it more difficult for scientists to collect, study and present their findings on how the environment is changing.

At the same time, the administration has blocked development of offshore wind power, ended support for solar energy and electric vehicles and encouraged more burning of oil, gas and coal. Those moves pushed U.S. greenhouse gas emissions up by 2.4 percent in 2025.

See more on: Donald TrumpU.S. Politics

"Heat wave roasts Philadelphia region, could reach hottest May temps on record"6abc.com/post/heat-wa…

Michael E. Mann (@michaelemann.bsky.social) 2026-05-19T13:56:43.856Z

If it hits 98, it will break the hottest May peak temp for DC Dulles and Philadelphia. 1-in-100 year + events for both cities in a historical climate. But these records are now a lot more possible – in fact probable – as our #climate heats. #heatwave

Jeff Berardelli (@weatherprof.bsky.social) 2026-05-19T12:04:12.075Z

The first post is a video I made explaining how the ice shelf holds back the Glacier and how the grounding line is destabilizing. Audio up! Article from GBN: www.gbnews.com/science/scie…

Jeff Berardelli (@weatherprof.bsky.social) 2026-05-19T00:56:22.569Z

A study in Nature Sustainability shows sea-level rise is already causing population retreat in coastal Louisiana and uses geological history and demographic data to argue that early, planned relocation can guide global climate adaptation. go.nature.com/4eHOh6q 🌍🌊🧪

Nature Portfolio (@natureportfolio.nature.com) 2026-05-19T01:03:01.608Z

“From hockey sticks to EV fires: The circular economy of climate disinformation” by Michael Barnard for @reneweconomy.com.au: reneweconomy.com.au/from-hockey-…

Michael E. Mann (@michaelemann.bsky.social) 2026-05-19T16:21:56.905Z

ICYMI: Kevin O’Leary might possibly be the most hated man in Utah right now. Read more…jodymacpherson.substack.com/p/opposition…#pensionFunds #followthemoney #AIDataCentres #AIDataCenters #WonderValleyAlberta #WonderValleyUtah #Stratos #utahpolitics #cdnpoli #environment #climate #abpoli

JEmphatically (@jemphatically.bsky.social) 2026-05-19T02:49:04.710Z

ICYMI: Kevin O’Leary might possibly be the most hated man in Utah right now. Read more…jodymacpherson.substack.com/p/opposition…#pensionFunds #followthemoney #AIDataCentres #AIDataCenters #WonderValleyAlberta #WonderValleyUtah #Stratos #utahpolitics #cdnpoli #environment #climate #abpoli

JEmphatically (@jemphatically.bsky.social) 2026-05-19T02:49:04.710Z

Climate hazards in Bhutan can trigger natural disasters such as extreme flooding and landslides."we see climate-driven changes such as erratic rainfall and more crop-pest infestations, which make agriculture and other rural livelihoods harder—accelerating the emptying of rural areas."#climate

(@umsonst.bsky.social) 2026-05-19T08:54:09.275Z

Forget shark week — It's climate solutions week y'all This year the theme is LOCAL solutions – ways that cities and states and neighborhoods are stepping up when the federal government backtracks on climate action.I'll thread the stories here as the week goes on…Here's our intro ⬇️📻🎧

Julia Simon (@juliaradio.bsky.social) 2026-05-18T22:00:25.444Z

Drought to Deluge! Developing El Niño gives us an early preview of the pattern for late fall and winter. A strong Subtropical Jetstream will hover near Texas, Louisiana and the lower MS Valley through the next 1-2 weeks… 1/

Jeff Berardelli (@weatherprof.bsky.social) 2026-05-19T11:40:03.254Z

Don’t let oil and gas executives and warmongering autocrats tell you we can’t run modern societies on #renewables.Here are 5 reasons why renewables are ready to protect people from fossil fuel instability, energy shocks, and rising bills.act.gp/4fm3pq5

Greenpeace International 🌍 (@greenpeace.org) 2026-05-14T09:43:30.558Z

Europe's #renewables share reached 25.2% in 2024 with solar and wind combined accounting for most of the increase. There has been undeniable progress, but the pace matters to reach 42.5% renewables in gross final energy consumption by 2030, while aiming for 45% #ActOnClimate #ClimateActionNow

(@alexvonwitzleben.bsky.social) 2026-05-18T15:44:13.262Z

#China can see the future, and it’s not fossil fuels.#auspol #renewables #solar #FossilFuels

Mark (@mark-melbin.bsky.social) 2026-05-17T07:34:39.456Z

Solar alone is now around 10–11% of China’s electricity generation depending on season/month, with #wind + #solar together already pushing above 25% in some periods. And it’s still scaling insanely fast.Nuclear is the seasoning. #Renewables & #BESS storage are the main course. #Bettrification

Chris Meder (@evcurvefuturist.com) 2026-05-19T04:58:45.507Z

World installing grid batteries at a blistering pace. A total of 112 gigawatts of batteries were deployed around the world in 2025 — 10 times the amount added just four years prior. www.canarymedia.com/articles/bat…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2026-05-16T08:27:52.697Z

🔋⚡✨ youtu.be/EbEVOa9IEgQ Finland is heating an entire town with a giant box of… sand? #engineeringbasics #renewables #batteries #innovation #science #technology #polarnight #finland #EU

Sam (@sfsutcliffe.eurosky.social) 2026-05-19T12:45:17.788Z

The world’s largest sand battery got through Finland’s harshest winter in years. 2,000 tonnes of sand, heated to 500-600°C by cheap power, feeding district heating in Pornainen.And it worked.Result from one install: oil down 100%, emissions down 70%.Industrial process heat is the real prize.

Jan Rosenow (@janrosenow.bsky.social) 2026-05-19T08:51:58.540Z

Gas prices are rising. So is public transit ridership. #Climate

Climate Tracker (@climate.skyfleet.blue) 2026-05-18T08:58:07.473Z

Even moderate levels of wildfire smoke are damaging. For PM2.5 in the yellow AQI range (10-25 micrograms/m^3): 10% increase in emergency department visits for acute respiratory conditions; 25% increase for asthma. But people don’t avoid exposure until the AQI hits 137.www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/…

Dr. Jeff Masters (@drjeffmasters.bsky.social) 2026-05-19T02:32:50.736Z

Very interesting paper teasing out the nuances of flood risk distribution in the US using an incredible individual-level dataset. Documents a huge concentration of flood risk among the very highest income group – lots of wealthy people enjoying the coast and river views from their second homes.

ClimateFran (@climatefran.bsky.social) 2026-05-18T18:30:49.264Z

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