Study Objectives: 

Determine to what extent human-related releases of CO2 into the atmosphere can cause earth surface temperature increases that would have unacceptably harmful effects.

TRCS Reports and Conferences (click on title to open)

1Anthropogenic Global Warming Science Assessment Report   April  2013

2Executive Summary, Bounding GHG Climate Sensitivity for use in Regulatory Decisions February  20

  1. Bounding GHG Climate Sensitivity for use in Regulatory Decisions February  2014
  2. International Conference on Climate Change – The Heartland Institute ICCC-9  Las Vegas, NV  July 7-9, 2014 
  3. “The Technology of the Apollo Flights and the Study of Climate Change” Knoxville TN   July 26-27, 2014
  4. “Climate Change for Engineers” AIAA – Houston Annual Technical Symposium   June 5, 2015
  5. International Conference on Climate Change – The Heartland Institute ICCC-10  Washington DC   June 11–12, 2015 
  6. An Objective Look At The Global Warming Controversy  (University of Louisiana-Lafayette)  Sept. 21, 2015
  7.  AT THE CROSSROADS, Energy and Climate Policy Summit, Texas Public Policy Foundation ConferenceAustin TX   Nov. 19-20, 2015
  8. RECOMMENDATIONS TO THE TRUMP TRANSITION TEAM INVESTIGATING ACTIONS TO TAKE AT THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (EPA)  Nov 30, 2016  Harold Doiron, PhD

  9. Letter to The Honorable Donald J. Trump, President of the United States(May 26, 2017)
  10. THE ICE AGE : What & Why ,  May  3, 2018  Donald Bogard, PhD.
  11. Atmospheric CO2: Causes of Variability, July 2018 Don Bogard, PhD 
  12. HOW CO2 Causes Warming & the Log Effect, Sept. 2018 Donald Bogard,  PhD
  13. Sea Level Rise: Rates & Causes, Sept. 2018  Donald Bogard, PhD
 
Associates of TRCS, Reports and Conferences (click on title to open)

1. A Heated Debate: The Science and Policy of Climate Change 

     Dr. Willie Soon and retired Rice Prof., Dr. Sass

    (RICE UNIVERSITY FEDERALIST SOCIETY, Houston TX) Oct 19, 2016

2. Why Scientists Disagree About Global Warming
    The NIPCC Report on Scientific Consensus, 2nd Edition
    Craig D. Idso, Robert M. Carter, S. Fred Singer

    This small book is based on Chapter 2 of the larger work Dr. Carter and others  were working to finish. It focuses, as its title suggests, on the question of whether

    a “scientific consensus” exists on the causes and consequences of climate change. It discusses the role of consensus in science and reviews surveys and other

    evidence showing agreement and lack of agreement among climate scientists.

    Book posted here with permission of The Heartland Institute

    Suggest $10 donation to Heartland.org/donate