I'm once again struck by how easy it is to just throw so many claims into an article, cite none of them, and rely on readers to just assume that the author knows what they are talking about. At least I had the decency to link you to a whopping research review that you can peruse at your leisure.
The 3% human v. 97% natural claim on C02 emissions, for example. Funnily enough, I'd understood this to be true as well, but in recent reading it seems more a question of how you do the accounting (see, for example, all the links I gave above). But in either case, the point is that this is gross, ignores the net change, and then also ignore that human activities are driving emissions up and absorptions down at the same time. Again, see the links above, that comment on the, conspicuously absent from Ancell's piece, rate of CO2 removal. Even Mr Micawber from David Copperfield understood this, for crying out loud: "annual CO2 emissions 102 units, absorptions 103 units, result: happiness! annual CO2 emission 103 units, absorptions 102 units, result: misery!" It doesn't take much to disturb a relatively stable system.
I wouldn't mind if her article were sourced, so that we could read and, if necessary, critique those sources, but, no... no primary sources at all. Just weird digs at Thunberg and Attenborough. Hard to comment further on what substance there is without knowing what her primary sources are. Also, even the claim, "that 97 per cent of scientists agree global warming is man-made... is false", is itself disputed still. Probably the issue is that the original claim made the mistake of referring to scientists in general, rather than climate science researchers in particular, but in any case, see
https://climate.nasa.gov/faq/17/do-scientists-agree-on-climate-change/ . But then again, you wouldn't ask climate scientists what the consensus is on, say, general relativity, so if for whatever reason they all thought it was hogwash, it means nothing if astrophysicists who understand general relativity agreed on the point.