The translation of the provided text from Polish to English is: "The Sahara is turning green. It is transforming... into a jungle."

Dr. Stefan Kröpelin specializes in research on the eastern Sahara and its climatic history. He has been working in this field for over 40 years. In a recent interview, he said that deserts such as the Sahara are actually shrinking, which means they are becoming greener... thanks to vegetation.

Already in the late 1980s, rains spread across northern Sudan and other parts of North Africa. This affected the greening of the region and reduced the severity of the Sahara.

Based on a vast amount of collected data, Dr. Kröpelin claims that the Sahara will continue to green as rains move northward towards southern Europe.

"All the major studies we have conducted show that after the Ice Age, when global temperatures rose, the Sahara became greener," explained Dr. Kröpelin. "The monsoon rains intensified, and the groundwater level rose."

For many years, new rainfall has led to the growth and spread of both vegetation and wildlife that feeds on it. In other words, the Sahara is slowly transforming into a forested Sahara, or perhaps a jungle Sahara.

Is this caused by climate warming?

In addition to sporadic catastrophic geological events, the climate is constantly changing, says Dr. Kröpelin.

"That's not how nature works," he responds to climate fanatics. "Everything changes gradually."

The claim that "we must be careful not to warm the climate by half a degree, otherwise everything will collapse" is obviously complete nonsense.

A slowly changing climate is completely normal, and people don't need to worry.

Last year, at a meeting in Munich, Dr. Kröpelin commented on the concept of climate tipping points caused by carbon dioxide (CO2), calling them entirely bizarre.

He also noted the media narrative of the Sahara greening due to human-induced global warming. He considers this theory to be completely nonsensical.

This is misinformation - Climate Cult.

source: naturalnews.com

Dr. Stefan Kröpelin specializes in research on the eastern Sahara and its climatic history. He has been working in this field for over 40 years. In a recent interview, he said that deserts such as the Sahara are actually shrinking, which means they are becoming greener... thanks to vegetation.

Already in the late 1980s, rains spread across northern Sudan and other parts of North Africa. This affected the greening of the region and reduced the severity of the Sahara.

Based on a vast amount of collected data, Dr. Kröpelin claims that the Sahara will continue to green as rains move northward towards southern Europe.

"All the major studies we have conducted show that after the Ice Age, when global temperatures rose, the Sahara became greener," explained Dr. Kröpelin. "The monsoon rains intensified, and the groundwater level rose."

For many years, new rainfall has led to the growth and spread of both vegetation and wildlife that feeds on it. In other words, the Sahara is slowly transforming into a forested Sahara, or perhaps a jungle Sahara.

Is this caused by climate warming?

In addition to sporadic catastrophic geological events, the climate is constantly changing, says Dr. Kröpelin.

"That's not how nature works," he responds to climate fanatics. "Everything changes gradually."

The claim that "we must be careful not to warm the climate by half a degree, otherwise everything will collapse" is obviously complete nonsense.

A slowly changing climate is completely normal, and people don't need to worry.

Last year, at a meeting in Munich, Dr. Kröpelin commented on the concept of climate tipping points caused by carbon dioxide (CO2), calling them entirely bizarre.

He also noted the media narrative of the Sahara greening due to human-induced global warming. He considers this theory to be completely nonsensical.

This is misinformation - Climate Cult.

source: naturalnews.com

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