Explore Articles: Fact-Checking Climate Data
Browse verified fact-checks and debunks addressing misinformation and disinformation about climate change, curated by European fact-checking organizations.

The bus that burned down in Barcelona was diesel, not electric

Will solar panels save the planet? We explain

The bus that burned down in Barcelona was diesel, not electric

No, the European Commission has not said that “you cannot shower whenever you want, it will be controlled” nor does it have the power to restrict the use of water

The hoax that the European Union asks the population to discard breakfast to preserve the environment

No, the bus in this Barcelona fire isn't electric: it's diesel

Is climate change a natural process? It is caused by man

Did fake hail really fall in Germany?

Georgian PM misinterpreted threat to life from EU

Man has almost no influence on the climate? It has, and it's big

Does the map depict sprayed poisonous chemtrails? It's not true

We can't pin hopes on the Sun to reduce global warming

Child pornography in Germany continues to be punished with imprisonment

Warsaw City Council banned religious symbols in offices, but not in public spaces

The film spreads old claims about climate change

These graphs don't deny the rising seas caused by the climate crisis

Is science ignoring the natural drivers of climate change? They are taken into account

Misinterpretation for clicks of the statement at the Kotor summit

Neither do they pollute more nor do they catch fire more easily: disinformation about electric vehicles is resurrected in the European campaign

Electric vehicles may have higher particulate emissions from tires, but they usually have lower particulate emissions from other sources

He is mistakenly presented as the first Albanian candidate in the European elections