homehome Home chatchat Notifications


This 1912 newspaper article shows we've known about climate change for long time

People have been talking about man-made climate change for more than a century and we're still not listening.

Mihai Andrei
February 15, 2023 @ 7:48 pm

share Share

In August 1912, an article from a New Zealand newspaper called the Rodney and Otamatea Times, Waitemata and Kaipara Gazette discussed what was, at the time, a relatively new concept: climate change. They linked coal burning to greenhouse gas emissions and these emissions with a warming atmosphere.

Which is exactly what we’re seeing now.

It was a succinct passage, but one which definitely does a good job at describing the general mechanism of climate change: carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, leads to global warming.

“The furnaces of the world are now burning about 2,000,000,000 tons of coal a year. When this is burned, uniting with oxygen, it adds about 7,000,000,000 tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere yearly. This tends to make the air a more effective blanket for the earth and to raise its temperature. The effect may be considerable in a few centuries.”

Well guess what — a century passed, and we’re already feeling the changes! Congrats, Rodney and Otamatea Times, Waitemata and Kaipara Gazette — your prediction was pretty good.

There were some skepticism regarding the article’s authenticity, and it’s always good to be a bit skeptical with things like this. In this case, however, the newspaper article can be found in the digital archives of the National Library of New Zealand. Furthermore, as Snopes points out, an identical story appeared in the 17 July 1912, issue of The Braidwood Dispatch and Mining Journal, as found in the digital archives of the National Library of Australia. Another remarkably similar aticle came up in the March 1912 report in the magazine Popular Mechanics titled “Remarkable Weather of 1911: The Effect of the Combustion of Coal on the Climate – What Scientists Predict for the Future.” No doubt, climate change was a known topic in the early 1910s.

In fact, this fits very well with the evolution of our understanding of climate change. The first person to discuss the effects of greenhouse gases was a Swedish scientist named Svante Arrhenius in 1896. In a paper he published (and several subsequent works), he describes how greenhouse gases can make changes in the Earth’s atmosphere and alter our climate’s planet.

Climate change was gradually given more attention, but a turning point happened in the 1970s, when big oil companies figured out that they were causing climate change and decided to hide this and sow disinformation about the population.

Just imagine, we knew about climate change since the early 1910s! It certainly wasn’t a well-understood concept, but in 1912, people were realizing that coal and other fossil fuels can affect the climate. If only we’d started acting a century ago, we’d be in a very different situation now.

share Share

Miyazaki Hates Your Ghibli-fied Photos and They're Probably a Copyright Breach Too

“I strongly feel that this is an insult to life itself,” he said.

The Roundest (and Most Rectangular) Countries, According to Math

Apparently, Sierra Leone is both very round and quite rectangular.

A Cartoonish Crash Test Raises Real Questions About Tesla’s Autopilot

Mark Rober pits Tesla against lidar in a real-life Wile E. Coyote experiment.

Speedrunners Just Discovered a Strange Problem With Old SNES Consoles: They're Sounding Faster

An old hardware choice means that the music is speeding up with the passing years.

The Return of the Bookstore: Brick and Mortar Shops Making Stunning Comeback

Young readers are fueling a surprising bookstore renaissance.

The smallest handmade sculpture in the world is no bigger than a blood cell

An artist has created the world’s smallest LEGO sculpture — so tiny it’s barely larger than a white blood cell.

Meet the Teen Who Can Add 100 Numbers in 30 Second and Broke 6 Guinness World Records for Mental Math

The Indian teenager is officially the world's fastest "human calculator".

From Fika to Friluftsliv: Four Scandinavian Concepts that Will Make Your Life Happier and Healthier (and a Bonus)

Sweden’s “Lagom,” and Denmark’s “Hygge,” aren’t just trendy words — they’re philosophies that promote well-being and balance.

What would happen if a (small) black hole passed through your body?

Imagine a supervillain attacking you with his unique superpower of creating small black holes. An invisible force zips through your body at unimaginable speed. You feel no push, no heat, yet, deep inside your body, atoms momentarily shift in response to the gravitational pull of something tiny yet immensely dense — a primordial black hole […]

Dutch scientists left a hamster wheel outside. Then, all the animals started playing with it

It seems that animals simply love to play.