Cancelled Climate Dissenter Professor Norman Fenton Speaks Out

In this special episode of the Sceptic, Laurie speaks to fearless, peerless climate sceptic Professor Norman Fenton, about his life and times and the professional consequences he has suffered for speaking truth to power about Covid and climate science. Professor Fenton is a mathematician and computer scientist and Emeritus Professor of Risk Information Management at Queen Mary University London.

Follow him on X. Visit his website here. Follow Laurie on X.

Subscribe
Notify of

To join in with the discussion please make a donation to The Daily Sceptic.

Profanity and abuse will be removed and may lead to a permanent ban.

15 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
WillP
7 months ago

Nearly all my regular friends think I’m a moron who is lead astray by “dodgy websites” because I try to point out the idiocies of the climate narratives. I often cite the acedemic credentials of people such as Norman Fenton, Judith Curry, John Clauser, Ivar Giaever, William Happer and so on, but by that point you may as well be reciting the names of saints to Marxists. If they’re not on the BBC, then they can’t be right.

NeilParkin
7 months ago
Reply to  WillP

For anyone who has lived a long time and is now seeing the climate emergency Mk 8, while experiencing very little change if any, it seems obvious what is happening and why. In 20 years time, assuming we’re still here, unless your friends wake up they will still be awaiting the climate apocalypse, blaming dodgy websites, and fretting over summer days over 24c.

Tonka Rigger
7 months ago
Reply to  WillP

I think most of us can identify with that.

Derry104
Derry104
7 months ago
Reply to  WillP

Luckily there is another band of people who are sceptical of those commentators who are acceptable to the BBC and other MSM. Naturally they are probably retired and so no longer dependent on government approval for future income.

pjar
7 months ago

No news review this morning… that’s thrown me a bit, to be honest.

Perhaps they pulled it because they realised they’d actually, finally, sourced the entire thing from the Daily Telegraph today?

NeilParkin
7 months ago
Reply to  pjar

Even if that were true, it saves me actually having to read the DT site. I find it a most useful service, and not something to criticise it for.

David Norman
David Norman
7 months ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Seconded; my thanks to those who take the trouble to do it.

JohnK
7 months ago

Good to hear the Norman Fenton interview. I’ve got a lot of time for his output, and bought a copy of his “Fighting Goliath” book last year.

EUbrainwashing
7 months ago

By the time it should be evident to all and sundry that the anthropogenic CO2 driven climate change woo woo is all just a hoax, (to manipulate us into multiple agendas including the building nuclear power stations all over the country without any local planning approval), the weather will not have changed and the accolades will all be for the climate change camp for having prevented terrifying runaway global warming from occurring.

Hip hip hooray for our saviours!

IMG_4297
varmint
7 months ago
Reply to  EUbrainwashing

Multiple agenda’s for sure, but conning us into Nuclear is not one of them. Nuclear is a sound and safe technology, and France is getting 60-70% of its electricity from Nuclear plants. I would sooner have a few Nuclear facilities tucked away out of sight here and there than the whole country plastered in turbines and solar panels that can only give us part time energy at astronomical cost. We now have the highest electricity prices in the world and so do other countries using lots of wind. We do this not for common sense or practical reasons but for ideological and Political ones. —The Politics of the UN and Sustainable Development.

EUbrainwashing
7 months ago
Reply to  varmint

Overview of Major Nuclear and Radiation Accidents

  • 1950s: Chalk River (Canada, 1952), Windscale fire (UK, 1957), and Mayak/Kyshtym (USSR, 1957) exposed the dangers of reactor fires and waste explosions, with significant contamination and health impacts.
  • 1960s: Accidents at SL-1 (USA, 1961), Fermi-1 (USA, 1966), and Lucens (Switzerland, 1969) highlighted risks of criticality and coolant failures.
  • 1970s: Three Mile Island (USA, 1979) became the most serious U.S. accident, eroding public trust, while Church Rock (USA, 1979) caused major radioactive waste pollution.
  • 1980s: K-431 submarine (USSR, 1985) and other incidents underscored military risks. The Chernobyl disaster (USSR, 1986) was catastrophic (INES 7), spreading radiation across Europe, killing dozens outright and many more long-term.
  • 1990s: Tokaimura (Japan, 1997 & 1999) saw criticality accidents and worker deaths, prompting regulatory reforms.
  • 2000s: Mihama (Japan, 2004) and Marcoule (France, 2011) showed industrial hazards, though radiation release was limited.
  • 2011: Fukushima Daiichi (Japan), triggered by earthquake and tsunami, caused multiple meltdowns and long-term evacuations, also rated INES 7.
  • 2020s: Recent events include a Category A nuclear incident at Faslane submarine base (Scotland, 2025) and an unusual jellyfish swarm shutting down Gravelines plant (France, 2025).

Safe & effective?

EUbrainwashing
7 months ago
Reply to  varmint

In reply to your advocacy for a fully nuclear-hydro powered electrical grid in the UK, complete perhaps with hydrogen fuel for heavy trucks in a zero-emissions future, I appreciate your enthusiasm for what seems like a clean, reliable energy solution. However, having delved deeply into the vulnerabilities of such systems, I must highlight the long-term threats they pose—not just to infrastructure but to public health and national security. While the vision is appealing, the risks are substantial and multifaceted, amplified by the UK’s dense population and island geography. Below, I’ll outline key scenarios based on recent analyses, including the ever-present danger of direct attacks, which could turn this “green” dream into a nightmare. 1. Direct Attacks (Military or Terrorist) A widespread nuclear-hydro system (e.g., 30-50 nuclear reactors plus hydro dams for ~600 TWh/year) creates numerous high-value targets. Direct strikes—via bunker-busters, missiles, or ground invasions—could cause catastrophic releases. Scenario: Bunker-busters penetrate containment domes, or terrorists seize control (e.g., via strike forces infiltrating sites). Russia’s hypersonic missiles or non-state actors like ISIS have demonstrated capabilities against nuclear facilities, as seen in 2022 attacks on Zaporizhzhia. 17 Hydro dams are equally vulnerable—e.g., explosive breaches flooding downstream. 0  Long-Term Threats: Nuclear fallout (Cs-137, I-131)… Read more »

varmint
7 months ago

In science you question everything. If you cannot question climate change “science”, then it really isn’t science at all , it is POLITICS

EUbrainwashing
7 months ago

Is Norman Fenton a victim of snobbery too, not ‘one of us’ – a bit earthy in his spoken voice. If he was pandering to the agenda they would think him ‘accessible’ to the everyday folk. But since he’s not he is brushed off and tarred as just being a far right yapper instead. I have my suspicions – I hear so often the higher ‘academics’ rise the longer they try to stretch their vowels.

DrDan
DrDan
7 months ago

I really enjoyed this interview. What a treasure Norman Fenton is. So disappointing he was sidelined for being sceptical as a true scientist not a $cientist should.