The Weather Channel launched a scathing attack on Breitbart, accusing the right-wing site of 'cherry-picking' facts to 'mislead' the public about climate change.

'Science doesn't care about your opinion,' Weather Channel Meteorologist Kait Parker said, 'Cherry picking and twisting the facts will not change the future nor the fact, note, fact, not opinion, that the Earth is warming.'

Parker said that the alt-right, opinion-led site, had used a 'completely unrelated video' about La Nina to try and prove that climate change was a myth.

The Brietbart article she was addressing, published last month, titled Global Temperatures Plunge. Icy Silence from Climate Alarmists.'

The Weather Channel launched a scathing attack on Breitbart, accusing the right-wing site of 'cherry-picking' facts to 'mislead' the public about climate change

It stated that global land temperatures had 'plummeted' by one degree Celsius in the last year but the news had been met by an 'eerie silence by the world's alarmist community.'

'The last three years may eventually come to be seen as the final death rattle of the global warming scare,' the article stated.

The misleading piece was then tweeted out by the U.S. Committee on Space, Science and Technology.

Breitbart has a legal right to use the video clip through a content sharing agreement with the Weather Channel.

While the Weather Channel does not typically offer its opinion outside of the weather and climate science, ' in this case we felt it important to add our two cents,' the channel wrote in a post on its website Tuesday.

'Science doesn't care about your opinion,' Weather Channel Meteorologist Kait Parker said

Parker denied the Breitbart, and other climate change skeptics, claims that global temperatures are decreasing, and proceeded to pick apart the article piece by piece.

Adressing the claim that global land temperatures had their 'biggest and steepest fall on record', the meteorologist pointed out that this 'trend' was based on just one satellite estimate.

While looking solely on land temperature, when the Earth is 70 per cent water, was misleading, she added.

When data from the land and ocean satellites were combined, they revealed that ' Earth's lower atmosphere actually set a record high in November 2016.'

The weather experts also disputed Breitbart's claim that any recent warming was simply the result of El Niño.

'El Niño clearly added to the strength of the record global warmth observed since late 2015,' Parker said. 'However, if the El Niño spike is removed, 2016 is still the warmest year on record and 2015 the second warmest.'

Weather Channel Meteorologist Kait Parker said that the alt-right, opinion-led site, had used a 'completely unrelated video' about La Nina to try and prove that climate change was a myth

The Weather Channel said that thousands of researchers and scientific societies are in agreement that 'greenhouse gases produced by human activity are warming the planet’s climate and will keep doing so.'

Climate change experts for the channel, Bob Henson and Jeff Masters, warn that 'artificial debates' over climate change were a distraction from the important discussions which should be taking place.

'Scientific debate in this area is real and perfectly legitimate. Likewise, how we respond to climate change is a matter of public policy, one that demands healthy debate and engagement from citizens and political leaders.

'It’s something else entirely to foster suspicion about the very bedrock of climate change science, which is based on thousands of peer-reviewed studies and accepted by every major scientific organization on Earth.

'Human-produced greenhouse gases are causing the Earth system to warm, and this trend will continue, along with shorter-term ups and downs. There are too many important debates and decisions ahead of us to waste time on artificial ones.'

The Weather Channel ended its piece, by offering to help Breitbart next time they needed to fact check an article.