Former head of CSIRO's division of space science says global cooling may be on the way

From Australia’s Canberra Times:

27/08/2008 9:39:00 AM
Climate change has been the most important and complex issue on my plate in 15 years as a science and technology correspondent for The Canberra Times. So an appropriate topic for a farewell commentary for this newspaper is an emerging scientific debate with the potential to complicate the already difficult relationship between scientists and politicians on this issue.The effect of the sun’s activity on global temperatures has loomed large in arguments from climate change sceptics over the years. Several Russian scientists have argued that the current period of global warming is entirely due to a cycle of increased solar activity.

NSW Treasurer Michael Costa is understood to be among a small group of Australian politicians and other opinion-shapers to embrace this notion.

It is wise to be sceptical of many Russian scientists and all politicians, so I have given this ”solar forcing” explanation of global warming little credence until I attended a forum at the Academy of Science earlier this year and heard it from a scientist of undoubted integrity and expertise in this area. A former head of CSIRO’s division of space science, Dr Ken McCracken was awarded the Australia Prize the precursor of the Prime Minister’s Science Prize in 1995. Now in his 80s, officially retired and raising cattle in the ACT hinterland, he is still very active in his research field of solar physics.

McCracken is adamantly not a climate change sceptic, agreeing that rising fossil-fuel emissions will be a long-term cause of rising global temperatures.

But his analysis of the sun’s cyclical activity and global climate records has led him to the view that we are entering a period of up to two decades in which reduced solar activity may either flatten the upward trend of global temperatures or even cause a slight and temporary cooling. In a paper given in 2005 to a ”soiree” hosted by then president of the Academy of Science, Professor Jim Peacock, McCracken said the sun was the most active it had been over 1000 years of scientific observation. This made it inevitable that its activity would decrease over the next two decades in line with historically observed solar cycles.

”The reduced ‘forcing’ might compensate, or over-compensate, for the effects of the increasing concentration of greenhouse gases,” he said. ”It is likely that there will be a cessation of around 20 years in the increase in world temperature, or possibly a decrease by 0.1 [degrees] or more.”

I put this to Dr David Jones, head of climate analysis for the Bureau of Meteorology’s National Climate Centre, whose overarching judgment is that the warming effect of fossil fuel emissions is an increasingly dominant factor on global temperature to the extent that it will not be slowed by lower solar activity.

After an email conversation, Jones said he and McCracken are in general agreement but differ on emphasis and one key judgment. ”Natural solar variability is potentially important, but the climate history and physics tell us that the probability of this factor sufficiently cooling the planet to offset the enhanced greenhouse effect is distinctly remote,” Jones wrote.

The main point of disagreement was McCracken’s view that the rate of global warming could be eased or reduced by a fall in solar activity. ”I have never seen a credible paper published using a climate model that shows this,” Jones wrote.

He points to recent data which indicates that global temperatures are probably rising faster than previously thought, raising the urgency of calls from climate scientists for political action to reduce emissions. Yet any uncertainty over the sun’s influence creates a lever that climate sceptics and developing nations will seize upon to stall such action.

If McCracken is wrong and temperatures continue to climb during a decade or two of low solar activity, the need for emissions reductions will be dramatically reinforced.

However, if temperatures do not rise over this period, steeling the political will for such action by all nations will be much more difficult.

The dilemma for the science sector is a classic: how to communicate uncertainty.

As McCracken rightly observed in 2005, a lull in temperature rises would provide a wonderful opportunity for political and technological effort to gain the initiative in the fight against climate change by turning global emissions around and thus hopefully avoid worst-case warming scenarios when the sun’s fires stoke up again mid-century.

But he also noted the risk that mainstream climate science, led by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, would be seen by its critics and others to have been ill-informed at best or misleading at worst, diminishing its credibility and eroding political commitment to emission reductions.

McCracken believes science should be upfront. ”I believe that we must state firmly that a cooling is possible in the near future, but that the warming would then resume 10-20 years hence,” he said via email. ”It will be very hard to argue for public trust if we say nothing about the possibility, and then try to argue our way out after it happens. Using an Aussie rules analogy, that would be like giving the climate sceptics a free kick 10m in front of goal.”

Australia is definitely entering a footy finals period, and the Earth may be entering a period where human-induced global warming slows temporarily. Many scientists will not be comfortable to consider this possibility, and even less comfortable that journalists canvas it, because in good faith they want nothing to deflect efforts to combat global warming.

However, I have always aimed to tell readers what they deserve to know, not what they may want to hear or what governments, scientists or interest groups would prefer they were told. This has earned me brickbats and bouquets over the years, as it should do, and as I expect it will on this occasion.

Simon Grose is Canberra correspondent for Science Media.

www.sciencemedia.com.au

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statePoet1775
August 28, 2008 7:29 am

“at least if you’re fat and a bigot.” Ric Werme
Bigot: One who is strongly partial to one’s own group, religion, race, or politics and is intolerant of those who differ.
Intolerant: refusal to accept differences: unwillingness or refusal to accept people
Well, I am fat and do have strong opinions but I’m willing to live and let live to quite an extreme. The problem is my countrymen think they know what is best for me.
Mr. FatBigot has not shown himself to be a bigot. I am always entertained by his posts. But you know the Brits have conditioned us to love them, the rascals.

statePoet1775
August 28, 2008 7:32 am

Lucy,
Your site is quite impressive. I doff my non-existent hat to you. The people who post on this site are amazing (myself excluded).
Lucy’s site:
http://www.greenworldtrust.org.uk/Science/Curious.htm

old construction worker
August 28, 2008 7:34 am

This could be interesting. The moon seems to be a player in our climate/weather.
‘Research by Mr. Dilley shows a near 100 percent correlation between the PFM gravitational cycles to the beginning and ending of global warming cycles. Global warming cycles began right on time with each PFM cycle during the past half million years, as did the current warming which began 100 years ago, and it will end right on time as the current gravitational cycle begins its cyclical decline.’
Posted on greenie watch august 26, 2008 third story down.
http://antigreen.blogspot.com

old construction worker
August 28, 2008 7:56 am

The moon correlation
icecap has it on their site. Blogosphere Aug 25, 2008
The release of the book “Global Warming- Global Cooling, Natural Cause Found” culminates 19 years of research clearly linking gravitational cycles as the cause for fluctuations within the earth’s climate.
http://icecap.us/index.php

August 28, 2008 8:20 am

Lucy, I too found your site impressive. As you say, we can and must get the science right, and it can be communicated to non-scientists.

Bruce Cobb
August 28, 2008 9:03 am

Yes, excellent site, Lucy. I enjoyed reading about your discovery and eventual acceptance of the skeptic, or climate realist side, from initial total belief in AGW. Many of us have followed similar paths. It’s funny how the knee-jerk AGWers have this desperate need to put us all in this box, saying we’re all simply motivated by politics, listen to Limbaugh, get our news from FOX, are creationists, and hate the environment, etc. etc. It can’t possibly be because we were actually curious to discover what the actual truth was, inconvenient or not.

Ed Scott
August 28, 2008 12:04 pm

Lucy Skywalker
I concur with your other admirers, that your website is an outstanding example of objective thinking and exposition. With your permission, I will use information from your website in future discussions of AGW = ACO2 (anthropogenic carbon dioxide). I don’t concern myself with global warming/climate change. Nature takes care of that without my help or hindrance.
A scientist is not necessarily defined as one who has a degree in a scientific pursuit from an institution of higher learning.

August 28, 2008 1:29 pm

Ed Scott said:
“A scientist is not necessarily defined as one who has a degree in a scientific pursuit from an institution of higher learning.”
That is true. I have to laugh at the Alarmists’ constant appeal to authority arguments, when those same authorities, as shown in the Wegman Report to Congress, are the same small clique of back-scratching government employees who uncritically peer review each others’ work for the primary purpose of getting ever more grant money.
Here are three googled definitions of “scientist,” from the first one to the last one:
A person who uses observation, experimentation and theory to learn about a subject.
One whose activities make use of the scientific method to answer questions regarding the measurable universe. A scientist may be involved in original research, or make use of the results of the research of others.
A scientist, in the broadest sense, refers to any person that engages in a systematic activity to acquire knowledge or an individual that engages in such practices and traditions that are linked to schools of thought or philosophy.

Ed Scott
August 28, 2008 3:49 pm

To Leif Svalgaard,
If you have been following the progress of Hurricane Gustav, you will see the the application of computer models to only a small portion of reality. Real-time data is available and up to 14 computer models are constantly computing predicted wind velocities and directional movement of the hurricane and yet cannot predict, reliably, the wind velocity and direction of movement, a day in advance. Is it possible, given the same data, that an experienced meteorologist could produce results as accurate as the computer models? He might use a computer for computational purposes but not as a CYA device.

August 28, 2008 4:16 pm

Ed Scott (15:49:04) :
Is it possible, given the same data, that an experienced meteorologist could produce results as accurate as the computer models?
I wouldn’t think so. He/she might from time to time do better [and those will be remembered]. but also from time to time to worse [and those will be forgotten]. For one thing, it is not possible for a human to hold all that data in ‘memory’ such as to be able to make use of it. I have followed weather modeling since the 1960s, when I also were constructing such models at the Danish Meteorological Institute where I worked [and studied]. There has been small [measured on a yearly basis], but steady, progress in the ‘skill score’. This leads me to believe that we will get to a point were models are useful. At least, the models are more ‘consistent’ than human forecasters [evil tongues might say more ‘consistently wrong’].
If there is anything wrong with models it is more in the area of misplaced confidence in them for reasons that have to do with personal or political agendas.

statePoet1775
August 28, 2008 4:41 pm

I agree with Leif. I would say any human thinking not involving imagination can be systematized and coded in a computer model.

Editor
August 28, 2008 10:01 pm

Ed Scott (15:49:04) :
“Is it possible, given the same data, that an experienced meteorologist could produce results as accurate as the computer models?”
I don’t think so any longer, especially for hurricanes. Humans are still useful to judge differences between the models, assess the biases models have, know when they should be discounted, etc. We’re also better at figuring out where models go wrong. For example, the southerly jog in Gustav’s path was due to dry air getting pulled into the storm and the center relocating to convection to the south, it didn’t really move that way.
Hurricanes are inherently tough, tough things to forecast, but over the last several years have gotten quite a bit better at forecasting tracks. Intensity is a tougher thing to forecast and progress there has been slower.
I’ve watched a professional TV meteorologist prepare for a news segment, and there’s still a lot of work to do to interpret the model output and figure out some of the smaller scale things the models don’t handle well.

Ed Scott
August 29, 2008 11:33 am

To Ric Worme,
I have been following Gustav on the NOAA website that provides a dynamic satellite picture of the Gulf area. At two o’clock yesterday, the 28th, Gustav was over Jamaica. There is a low proceeding NE from the vicinity of Vera Cruz. There is a wind loop from south Texas toward the Yucatan Peninsula and then to Florida. It seems to non-meteorologist-me that Gustav could be deflected to the east. I don’t see where the highs are located. What is the attraction of Gustav along the predicted path? Is the Texas-Florida loop an indicator of the counter-clockwise rotation of a lower-low?

Ed Scott
August 29, 2008 12:01 pm

To Leif Svalgaard,
I realize that I am giving the impression that I am anti-computer model. That is really not the case. I have used computer programs for computational purposes. I realize that my problem is an over-reaction to a reliance on computer models which are not capable, that is, computer models designed to prove a preconceived premise: Anthropogenic cause of global climate change. A previous email conveyed my feeling that we are on the same page and there is agreement with your assessments on the use of computer models.

August 30, 2008 6:43 am

[…] Former head of CSIRO’s division of space science says global cooling may be on the way. Read it very carefully — it is interesting. Read it in the light of the New Scientist quote […]

November 7, 2008 10:12 pm

[…] 20 years in the increase in world temperature, or possibly a decrease by 0.1 [degrees] or more.” Former head of CSIRO’s division of space science says global cooling may be on the way « Watts… __________________ Rather than commodifying and exploiting our ecological demise, we need to […]

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