Report: UN climate conference COP19 tells blatant lies to the public about sea level rise & snow cover

Fact Check:

Sea levels have been rising naturally for the past 20,000 years since the peak of the last ice age, and at much, much faster rates in the past (up to 40 times faster than today). Sea level rise greatly decelerated about 8,000 years ago to rates similar to today:

Sea levels are currently rising 4 to 8 inches per century, and there is no acceleration, which means there is no evidence of a human influence on sea levels.

References finding either no acceleration or a deceleration of sea level rise during the 20th and 21st centuries:

Chen et al 2013

JM Gregory et al Journal of Climate 2012

M Beenstock et al 2013

NOAA 2005-2012 Sea Level Budget

Dean & Houston 2011 & 2013

Scafetta 2013

Holgate 2007

Boretti 2012

Morner 2004

Jevrejeva et al 2006 & 2008

Wöppelmann et al 2009

Roemmich et al 2013

IPCC 2007:

“no long-term acceleration of sea level has been identified using 20th-century data alone.”

IPCC 2013:

“It is likely that GMSL [Global Mean Sea Level] rose between 1920 and 1950 at a rate comparable to that observed between 1993 and 2010”

…the authors find that sea level rise is a localized rather than global phenomenon, with 61 percent of tide gauge records demonstrating no change in sea levels, 4 percent showing a decrease, and a minority of 35 percent showing a rise. This implies relative sea level change is primarily related to subsidence or post-glacial rebound (land height changes) rather than melting ice or steric sea level changes (thermal expansion from warming). Steric sea level rise from thermal expansion turned negative in 2007. Sea levels during the last interglacial were 31 feet higher than the present, and Greenland 8 degrees C warmer than the present, without anthropogenic forcing. There is no evidence suggesting the current interglacial is any different.
The Northern Hemisphere snow cap has been increasing and hit record levels in 2012:

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