EPA Administrator In Town Today To Warn Us That We Are Overheating

February 11, 2014

Gina McCarthy, Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Nancy Sutley, Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality; and David Agnew, Director of the White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs will join Fort Collins Mayor Karen Weitkunat to tour projects to restore the Cache la Poudre River and strengthen its resilience to climate change impacts such as higher temperatures and extreme weather events.

ScreenHunter_480 Feb. 11 05.31

We have been above freezing for a total of three hours this month

ScreenHunter_482 Feb. 11 05.44

h/t to Michael D. Smith

About Tony Heller

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16 Responses to EPA Administrator In Town Today To Warn Us That We Are Overheating

  1. theyouk says:

    Keeping the Poudre clean/vibrant? Fine.

    Tying this dog and pony show to ‘Climate Change’? Pure BS charlatanism.

    What irks me is that our tax dollars are going to clothing and feeding these incompetent (criminal?) b__bs.

  2. Justa Joe says:

    I hope the libtards bundle up well when they lecture us about global warming. A light wrap won’t be sufficient.

  3. Gamecock says:

    “Strengthen its resilience” sounds a lot like “endeavor to persevere.”

    ‘We thought about it for a long time, “Endeavor to persevere.” And when we had thought about it long enough, we declared war on the Union.’ – Chief Dan George, “Outlaw Josey Wales,” 1976

  4. geran says:

    One of the indicators of a “cult” is that the more evidence against them, the more they believe! The colder it gets, the more it proves global warming. See how it works?

  5. Andy DC says:

    Are you sure that chart is not showing disgraced alarmists jumping off a cliff?

  6. ian005 says:

    The US Energy Information Agency has a nice summary assessment of your 2013-14 winter season, which it has just released. Maybe they should send a copy along to the EPA? Relevant excerpt below:

    Short-Term Energy Outlook
    February 11, 2014 Release

    Highlights

    • Temperatures east of the Rocky Mountains have been significantly colder this winter (October – January) compared with the same period both last winter and the previous 10-year average, putting upward pressure on consumption and prices of fuels used for space heating. U.S. average heating degree days were 12% higher than last winter (indicating colder weather) and 8% above the previous 10-year average. The Northeast was 11% colder than last winter, the Midwest 17% colder, and the South 20% colder, while the West was 3% warmer.

    […]

    http://www.eia.gov/forecasts/steo/

  7. Gail Combs says:

    Fall (October) Northern Hemisphere Snow Cover is on the increase link

  8. Brian H says:

    The Egregious Prevarication Airheads.

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