‘Climate Change’ Causing More Home Runs in Baseball, Study Claims

A new study has claimed that the upward trend of home runs in professional baseball has been caused by “climate change.”

The Dartmouth study, which has attracted widespread media attention, claims that over 500 home runs in Major League Baseball since 2010 can be attributed to “climate change.”

CNN reported on the study and raised the alarm about the alleged “climate crisis.”

According to the outlet, the claimed phenomenon is evidence that radical green agenda policies must be implemented.

The study claims that the increase in home runs is owed in part to rising temperatures making the air less dense.

The warmer allows baseballs to travel farther when hit, the researchers allege.

Scientists acknowledged, however, that there are other factors as well to account for the increased amount of home runs in baseball.

It predicted that rising temperatures could end up accounting for 10% of all home runs that will occur this century, provided “climate change” solutions aren’t implemented.

The study, which was published in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society on Friday, sought an answer to why the last 13 years have seen an upswing in the number of homers.

According to the numbers, the time period has seen hundreds of more home runs compared to its preceding decade.

Chris Callahan, lead author of the study and a doctoral student in climate modeling and impacts at Dartmouth College and avid baseball fan, told CNN that “strong” evidence showing climate change affecting batting distances “surprised” him.

Callahan stated, “I remember being surprised at how strong the finding was.

“We’re not saying that every home run now is because of climate change, but you take the data and slice it any way you want, you find the same thing.”

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He added, “And as a fan, I indeed am a little bit frustrated that home runs may continue to dominate, as it does now.”

The study claimed that due to warmer temperatures making the air less dense, balls were able to carry farther in the air and thus more likely to leave the yard.

The study’s co-author, Dartmouth assistant professor of geography Justin Mankin, corroborated the science behind the phenomenon.

“Passenger jets fly at 30,000 feet, because air density is really low up there, and it just means that planes are more efficient, given the same fuel,” Mankin said.

“We don’t fly passenger jets low in the atmosphere because there’s just so much more stuff in the way.”

The study’s methodology involved the researchers analyzing “more than 100,000 MLB games and 220,000 individual hits.”

They then overlayed those numbers with data about “unseasonably warm temperatures” the CNN piece explained.

They found a “clear connection” between home run numbers and rising temperatures.

The study found that “games that were held in open stadiums during the day, when the sun is out, saw a spike in home runs, while games held at night or in domed stadiums would see a smaller number of home runs.”

Their observations allowed them to propose that for every one degree Celsius increase in temperature, the number of home runs in a game goes up almost 2%.

The phenomenon would make it so that outdoor locations, like Chicago Cubs’ open-air Wrigley Field, would see a rise in home runs as the temperatures increased over time, whereas a domed stadium like Tropicana Field of the Tampa Bay Rays would not see a significant increase.

Beyond inclement weather, climate change has been cited as a factor in a number of trends and societal ills, including hate speech, obesity rates, the rise of the Islamic State terrorist group, and violent crime.

READ MORE: JPMorgan: Government Must Seize Private Land from Citizens to Fight ‘Climate Change’

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By Frank Bergman

Frank Bergman is a political/economic journalist living on the east coast. Aside from news reporting, Bergman also conducts interviews with researchers and material experts and investigates influential individuals and organizations in the sociopolitical world.

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