New Paper from Roy Spencer: PDO and Clouds

Global Warming as a Natural Response to Cloud Changes Associated with the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO)

Reposted here from weatherquestions.com

UPDATED – 10/20/08 See discussion section 4

by Roy W. Spencer

(what follows is a simplified version of a paper I am preparing to submit GRL for publication, hopefully by the end of October 2008)

A simple climate model forced by satellite-observed changes in the Earth’s radiative budget associated with the Pacific Decadal Oscillation is shown to mimic the major features of global average temperature change during the 20th Century – including two-thirds of the warming trend. A mostly-natural source of global warming is also consistent with mounting observational evidence that the climate system is much less sensitive to carbon dioxide emissions than the IPCC’s climate models simulate.

1. Introduction

For those who have followed my writings and publications in the last 18 months (e.g. Spencer et al., 2007), you know that we are finding satellite evidence that the climate system could be much less sensitive to greenhouse gas emissions than the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, 2007) climate models suggest.

To show that we are not the only researchers who have documented evidence contradicting the IPCC models, I made the following figure to contrast the IPCC-projected warming from a doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide with the warming that would result if the climate sensitivity is as low as implied by various kinds of observational evidence. The dashed line represents our recent apples-to-apples comparison between satellite-based feedback estimates and IPCC model-diagnosed feedbacks, all computed from 5-year periods (Spencer and Braswell, 2008a):

Fig. 1. Projected warming (assumed here to occur by 2100) from a doubling of atmospheric CO2 from the IPCC versus from various observational indicators. (click for larger image)

The discrepancy between the models and observations seen in Fig. 1 is stark. If the sensitivity of the climate system is as low as some of these observational results suggest, then the IPCC models are grossly in error, and we have little to fear from manmade global warming.

But an insensitive climate system would ALSO mean that the warming we have seen in the last 100 years can not be explained by increasing CO2 alone. This is because the radiative forcing from the extra CO2 would simply be too weak to cause the ~0.7 deg. C warming between 1900 and 2000… there must be some natural warming process going on as well.

Here I present new evidence that most of the warming could actually be the result of a natural cycle in cloud cover forced by a well-known mode of natural climate variability: the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.

2. A Simple Model of Natural Global Warming

As Joe D’Aleo and others have pointed out for years, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) has experienced phase shifts that coincided with the major periods of warming and cooling in the 20th Century. As can be seen in the following figure, the pre-1940 warming coincided with the positive phase of the PDO; then, a slight cooling until the late 1970s coincided with a negative phase of the PDO; and finally, the warming since the 1970s has once again coincided with the positive phase of the PDO.

Fig. 2. Variations in (a) global-average surface temperature, and (b) the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) index during 1900-2000. (click for larger image)

Others have noted that the warming in the 1920s and 1930s led to media reports of decreasing sea ice cover, Arctic and Greenland temperatures just as warm as today, and the opening up of the Northwest Passage in 1939 and 1940.

Since this timing between the phase of the PDO and periods of warming and associated climate change seems like more than mere coincidence, I asked the rather obvious question: What if this known mode of natural climate variability (the PDO) caused a small fluctuation in global-average cloud cover?

Such a cloud change would cause the climate system to go through natural fluctuations in average temperature for extended periods of time. The IPCC simply assumes that this kind of natural cloud variability does not exist, and that the Earth stays in a perpetual state of radiative balance that has only been recently disrupted by mankind’s greenhouse gas emissions. (This is an assumption that many of us meteorologists find simplistic and dubious, at best.)

I used a very simple energy balance climate model, previously suggested to us by Isaac Held and Piers Forster, to investigate this possibility. In this model I ran many thousands of combinations of assumed: (1) ocean depth (through which heat is mixed on multi-decadal to centennial time scales), (2) climate sensitivity, and (3) cloud cover variations directly proportional to the PDO index values.

In effect, I asked the model to show me what combinations of those model parameters yielded a temperature history approximately like that seen during 1900-2000. And here’s an average of all of the simulations that came close to the observed temperature record:

Fig. 3. A simple energy balance model driven by cloud changes associated with the PDO can explain most of the major features of global-average temperature fluctuations during the 20th Century. The best model fits had assumed ocean mixing depths around 800 meters, and feedback parameters of around 3 Watts per square meter per degree C. (click for larger image)

The “PDO-only” (dashed) curve indeed mimics the main features of the behavior of global mean temperatures during the 20th Century — including two-thirds of the warming trend. If I include transient CO2 forcing with the PDO-forced cloud changes (solid line labeled PDO+CO2), then the fit to observed temperatures is even closer.

It is important to point out that, in this exercise, the PDO itself is not an index of temperature; it is an index of radiative forcing which drives the time rate of change of temperature.

Now, the average PDO forcing that was required by the model for the two curves in Fig. 3 ranged from 1.7 to 2.0 Watts per square meter per PDO index value. In other words, for each unit of the PDO index, 1.7 to 2.0 Watts per square meter of extra heating was required during the positive phase of the PDO, that much cooling during the negative phase of the PDO.

But what evidence do we have that any such cloud-induced changes in the Earth’s radiative budget are actually associated with the PDO? I address that question in the next section.

3. Satellite Evidence for Radiative Budget Changes Forced by the Pacific Decadal Oscillation

To see whether there is any observational evidence that the PDO has associated changes in global-average cloudiness, I used NASA Terra satellite measurements of reflected solar (shortwave, SW) and emitted infrared (longwave, LW) radiative fluxes over the global oceans from the CERES instrument during 2000-2005, and compared them to recent variations in the PDO index. The results can be seen in the following figure:

Fig. 4. Three-month running averages of (a) the PDO index during 2000-2005, and (b) corresponding CERES-measured anomalies in the global ocean average radiative budget, with and without the feedback component removed (see Fig. 5). The smooth curves are 2nd order polynomial fits to the data. (click for larger image)

But before a comparison to the PDO can be made, one must recognize that the total radiative flux measured by CERES is a combination of forcing AND feedback (e.g. Gregory et al., 2002; Forster and Gregory, 2006). So, we first must estimate and remove the feedback component to extract any potential radiative forcing associated with the PDO.

As Spencer and Braswell (2008b) have shown with a simple model, the radiative feedback signature in globally-averaged radiative flux versus temperature data is always highly correlated, while the time-varying radiative forcing signature of internal climate fluctuations is uncorrelated because the forcing and temperature response are always 90 degrees out of phase.

The following figure shows the “feedback stripes” associated with intraseasonal fluctuations in the climate system, and the corresponding feedback estimate (8.3 Watts per square meter per degree C) that I removed from the data to get the “forcing-only” curve in Fig. 4b.

Fig. 5. Three-month running averages of global oceanic radiative flux changes versus tropospheric temperature changes (from AMSU channel 5, see Christy et al., 2003), used to estimate the feedback component of the radiative fluxes so it could be removed to get the forcing (see Fig. 4b). (click for larger image)

(Note that this feedback estimate is not claimed to represent long-term climate sensitivity; it is instead the feedback occurring on intraseasonal and interannual time scales which is mixed in with an unknown amount of internally-generated radiative forcing, probably due to clouds.)

When the feedback is removed, we see a good match in Fig. 4 between the low-frequency behavior of the PDO and the radiative forcing (which is presumably due to clouds). Second-order polynomials were fit to the time series in Fig. 4 and compared to each other to arrive at the PDO-scaling factor of 1.9 Watts per square meter per PDO index value.

It is significant that the observed scale factor (1.9) that converts the PDO index into units of heating or cooling is just what the model required (1.7 to 2.0) to best explain the temperature behavior during the 20th Century. Thus, these recent satellite measurements – even though they span less than 6 years — support the Pacific Decadal Oscillation as a potential major player in global warming and climate change.

4. Discussion

The evidence continues to mount that the IPCC models are too sensitive, and therefore produce too much global warming. If climate sensitivity is indeed considerably less than the IPCC claims it to be, then increasing CO2 alone can not explain recent global warming. The evidence presented here suggests that most of that warming might well have been caused by cloud changes associated with a natural mode of climate variability: the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.

The IPCC has simply assumed that mechanisms of climate change like that addressed here do not exist. But that assumption is quite arbitrary and, as shown here, very likely wrong. My use of only PDO-forced variations in the Earth’s radiative energy budget to explain two-thirds of the global warming trend is no less biased than the IPCC’s use of carbon dioxide to explain global warming without accounting for natural climate variability. If any IPCC scientists would like to dispute that claim, please e-mail me at roy.spencer (at) nsstc.uah.edu.

If the PDO has recently entered into a new, negative phase, then we can expect that global average temperatures, which haven’t risen for at least seven years now, could actually start to fall in the coming years. The recovery of Arctic sea ice now underway might be an early sign that this is indeed happening.

I am posting this information in advance of publication because of its potential importance to pending EPA regulations or congressional legislation which assume that carbon dioxide is a major driver of climate change. Since the mainstream news media now refuse to report on peer-reviewed scientific articles which contradict the views of the IPCC, Al Gore, and James Hansen, I am forced to bypass them entirely.

We need to consider the very real possibility that carbon dioxide – which is necessary for life on Earth and of which there is precious little in the atmosphere – might well be like the innocent bystander who has been unjustly accused of a crime based upon little more than circumstantial evidence.

REFERENCES

Christy, J. R., R. W. Spencer, W. B. Norris, W. D. Braswell, and D. E. Parker (2003),

Error estimates of version 5.0 of MSU/AMSU bulk atmospheric temperatures, J.

Atmos. Oceanic Technol., 20, 613- 629.

Douglass, D.H., and R. S. Knox, 2005. Climate forcing by volcanic eruption of Mount

Pinatubo. Geophys. Res. Lett., 32, doi:10.1029/2004GL022119.

Forster, P. M., and J. M. Gregory (2006), The climate sensitivity and its components

diagnosed from Earth Radiation Budget data, J. Climate, 19, 39-52.

Gregory, J.M., R.J. Stouffer, S.C.B. Raper, P.A. Stott, and N.A. Rayner (2002), An

observationally based estimate of the climate sensitivity, J. Climate, 15, 3117-3121.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2007), Climate Change 2007: The Physical

Science Basis, report, 996 pp., Cambridge University Press, New York City.

Schwartz, S. E. (2007), Heat capacity, time constant, and sensitivity of the Earth’s

climate system. J. Geophys. Res., 112, doi:10.1029/2007JD008746.

Spencer, R.W., W. D. Braswell, J. R. Christy, and J. Hnilo (2007), Cloud and radiation

budget changes associated with tropical intraseasonal oscillations, Geophys. Res.

Lett., 34, L15707, doi:10.1029/2007GL029698.

Spencer, R.W., and W.D. Braswell (2008a), Satellite measurements reveal a climate

system less sensitive than in models, Geophys. Res. Lett., submitted.

Spencer, R.W., and W.D. Braswell (2008b), Potential biases in cloud feedback diagnosis:

A simple model demonstration, J. Climate, November 1.

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Graeme Rodaughan
October 19, 2008 2:39 pm

I look forward to seeing this paper in the GRL. I wonder how long it will take the MSM to catch up with the published science.
Warming sensitivity to CO2 has always been a grey area that has been crying out for physical observations and empiracle evidence to determine the actual sensitivity rather than the best guess estimates of the climate models.

October 19, 2008 2:57 pm

Dr. Spencer: Assuming you’re monitoring this post, have you used NINO3.4 SST anomaly data in place of PDO data in any of your runs? The curves are very similar. (See note)
http://i25.tinypic.com/14dj904.jpg
And if the PDO is an aftereffect of ENSO, as discussed in the following paper (Newman et al 2003), NINO3.4 would be the ultimate driver. Refer to their conclusions: “The PDO is dependent upon ENSO on all timescales.”
http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/gilbert.p.compo/Newmanetal2003.pdf
Note: The PDO data used in the above comparison with NINO3.4 SST anomaly data is the ERSST.v3 version, not the regularly used JISAO version. However, there is very little difference between the JISAO version and the two ERSST versions of the PDO.
http://i26.tinypic.com/25kn8ef.jpg
Regards.

Robert Wood
October 19, 2008 3:03 pm

Look, this man is in the pay of Big Tobacco. How could you possibly give him any credence.
…OK I’m making a poignant joke…

Ellie In Belfast
October 19, 2008 3:12 pm

Wow! I’ve only had a quick read and I’m really looking forward to reading this properly.
As a result of the 02 Oct post (“Ireland has 30 year cold event, plus coldest September in 14 years”) I thought I’d find out a bit more about what was happening in my own back yard. I looked at the publications coming out of Armagh (Butler et al. etc.) and note that they link rainfall to the NAO (http://climate.arm.ac.uk/publications/precipitation.pdf), and also note “A 7.8 year periodicity is identified in winter and spring mean temperatures at Armagh, which is probably a consequence of the North Atlantic oscillation.” (see http://www.arm.ac.uk/preprints/445.pdf).
With a maritime climate and few extremes I thought Ireland might be a good place to show up solar cycle effects. Yup! Several papers going as far back as 1994 and even a 2006 one from NASA (http://solarscience.msfc.nasa.gov/papers/wilsorm/WilsonHathaway2006c.pdf). BUT this ends:
“In conclusion, this study has shown that solar/geomagnetic cycle forcing is embedded in the annual mean temperatures at Armagh Observatory, Northern Ireland. Removal of this effect, however, does not fully explain, especially, the rapid rise in temperatures now being experienced, this possibly being a strong indication that humankind is contributing to climatic change.”
So my question now is can PDO/NAO effects, combined with solar cycles, explain the recent rises?
I know this is only one site, but it has already been held up as a good proxy for the NH and globe.

kim
October 19, 2008 3:23 pm

I think I’ve never heard so loud
The quiet message in a cloud.
====================

October 19, 2008 3:24 pm

I have the following questions concerning Dr. Spencer’s very interesting paper:
1) He argues:’..we are finding satellite evidence that the climate system could be much less sensitive to greenhouse gas emissions than….IPCC climate models suggest.’
As I understand, these models include the ‘bare’ anthropogenic CO2 greenhouse effect’, as calculated, e.g., along the lines of the Kiehl/Trenberth paper. Dr. R.S. Lindzen argues since long that the bare Greenhouse effect has to be ‘renormalized’ due to enhanced latent heat transport by additional water vapor into the upper tropsphere. According to Lindzen, this negative feedback effect outweighs any positive feedback due to additional water vapor greenhouse effect, as water vapor has very similar absorption and emission properties as has CO2 (on both sides of the maximum black body radiation, leaving room for the so-called atmospheric window). Thus, water vapor, due to its much higher concentration than CO2, will definitely be in the logarithmic limit. To my knowledge, positive water vapor feedback is assumed in many (if not all?) climate models.
With Lindzen’s argument, the CO2 warming effect may be reduced to someting of order 1/3 of the bare effect.
My question, would Dr. Spencer see the reason for the small sensitivity of greenhouse gase emissions in arguments like those given by Dr. Lindzen?
2) Dr. Spencer proposes a model of cloud changes driven by the pacific decadal oscillation. I assume, it means more clouds during the ‘cold’ phase and less clouds during the ‘warm’ phase. However, as I understand ‘oscillation’, this means a variation around a certain average. Yet, there is also a linear increase in temperature in his PDO only model. How does this linear increase come about?
3) The PDO oscillations fit very well to the global temperature oscillations of the 20. century, even better than ENSO. Why not just assume that the sea surface temperatures drive the troposspheric temperatures? What is the necessity to invoke cloud changes?

Roy Spencer
October 19, 2008 3:33 pm

Bob:
I’ve only tried the PDO for forcing, because its behavior looked like a forcing mechanism for temperature change, not an index of temperature — which is what clouds do.
-Roy

H
October 19, 2008 3:37 pm

Repent and say after me:
There is only one cause of climate change and no other cause of climate change but man-made CO2.
There is only one cause of climate change and no other cause of climate change but man-made CO2.
There is only one cause of climate change and no other cause of climate change but man-made CO2.

MattN
October 19, 2008 4:23 pm

Roy, good luck on the publication. I cite your work often concerning the alleged positive feedback of water vapor that your analysis of AQUA data seems to debunk.
Keep up the excellent work.
Matt

October 19, 2008 4:29 pm

Roy Spencer (15:33:51) :
PDO – temperature change, not an index of temperature — which is what clouds do.
So, if I understand correctly, the PDO is a measure of dT/dt, so as long is PDO is positive, the temperature T will keep going up, when PDO is negative T will drop. The long-term upwards trend in T is thus caused by PDO being positive more often than negative.

Dishman
October 19, 2008 4:50 pm

It’s worth noting that the upper bound on resonance of stochastic oscillators is not set by limits of gain, but rather by SNR.
I offer that the PDO, ENSO and others generally match the characteristics of stochastic oscillators.
Something else to contemplate is the response to a linear (over time) change to the forcing function. They will typically exhibit one or more sharp spike responses before returning to near the original baseline.
This all may be irrelevant. Salt to taste.

TerryBixler
October 19, 2008 5:22 pm

Dr. Spencer
Thank you for your posting. It seems to match the actual climate. The great harm that has been done to science that has been led by NASA and the IPCC will take many years of recovery. I hope that your posting and preview is widely read and considered. Maybe this AGW madness will come to an end. As a side note I was shocked by your treatment by congress.

BarryW
October 19, 2008 5:34 pm

Dr. Spencer, is the thermometer data in figure 3 land-ocean and what is the source? HadCRUT3? Given possible UHI and siting problems with the Land data, it would appear that your model would fit better against just the ocean temperature data. Would it be a reasonable argument to just use the ocean data?

Graeme Rodaughan
October 19, 2008 5:35 pm

@Roy,
Given that you are reading this site.
Thanks for your work.
One of my principle concerns is the apparent politicisation of science and the loss of reference of science back to “objectively gathered and independently tested” data.
I’m also concerned with the apparent absence of clearly stated falsification criteria in the current AGW hypothesis.
Could you please direct me to any statements in the AGW literature that would count as falsification criteria?
Thanks

Leon Brozyna
October 19, 2008 5:44 pm

Having a rather skeptical bias, I admit that the following line, early in Roy Spencer’s post, really caught my eye:
The IPCC simply assumes that this kind of natural cloud variability does not exist, and that the Earth stays in a perpetual state of radiative balance that has only been recently disrupted by mankind’s greenhouse gas emissions.
This confirms, in my mind, something I’ve thought all along, that the AGW position is that the climate is essentially in stasis and it’s only due to mankind’s introduction of CO2 that this stasis has been disrupted. There are far more powerful disruptors at play here than a minor trace gas, starting with that little yellow orb that appears in the sky every day. And just look at the massive amounts of heat radiation that are absorbed by the oceans and how the periodic release/absorption of that energy by the oceans serve to magnify or dampen short term solar effects.
It is good to see such a well written article appear here, probing the weak underpinnings of AGW dogma. Let us just hope that mankind doesn’t commit economic suicide on the basis of such flimsy fantasy as has been presented by AGW proponents.

Joel Shore
October 19, 2008 6:21 pm

Dr. Spencer,
In Fig. 1, the estimate you show from Schwartz appears to be based on his original 2007 paper. However, in his reply to the comments he received on that paper, he has a new estimate for the climate sensitivity is 1.9 K, as opposed to 1.1 K (see here: http://www.ecd.bnl.gov/pubs/BNL-80226-2008-JA.pdf )

October 19, 2008 8:18 pm

[…] as a Natural Response to Cloud Changes Associated with the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) Watts Up With That? ___________________________________________________________ 18 October, 2008 Let Them Eat… […]

Jim Powell
October 19, 2008 8:29 pm

Why did you leave out the AMO?

anna v
October 19, 2008 10:38 pm

Figure 1 could be an effective PR point, to counter the hockey stick, if the colors and scales change.
Red draws the eye and blue represses. I would suggest a neutral color for the IPCC and a strong color for the rest, maybe a band also, so ti catches politicians’ attention.
A carefully phrased caption could draw attention to how, even with the large uncertainties of the IPCC, the predictions are off. ( I keep reminding that the IPCC band is not a confidence interval in the true statistical sense but what the modelers believe is a confidence interval, but that is fine print for politicians)
I am saying this because the objectives of Dr. Spencer are stated as:
“I am posting this information in advance of publication because of its potential importance to pending EPA regulations or congressional legislation which assume that carbon dioxide is a major driver of climate change. Since the news media now refuses to report on peer-reviewed scientific articles which contradict the views of the IPCC, Al Gore, and James Hansen, I am forced to bypass them entirely.”
Figure 3 is also good for catching the eye, except the color should be bright, and the explanation next to the curve should say:
next to CO2, “without IPCC water feedback”
and on the right of the figure a highlight of how little extra something is needed to fit the temperature curve, instead of the IPCC chunk of .4 anthropogenic with water feedback.
The hockey stick should have taught us that we have to make plots sexy, more so even when they state the truth, for politicians.
The rest of the figures are for the cognoscenti.

evanjones
Editor
October 19, 2008 11:32 pm

Why did you leave out the AMO?
I assume that would be because he is using NAO instead.
Dr. Spencer, you honor us with your presence. Thank you for your contributions.
I have been looking at he “Big Six” (PDO, IPO, NOA, AMO, AO, AAO) plus the Indian Ocean temperature records (which go back quite some time) and considering the combined effects. (I need to write up my observations, but I’ve been delayed.)
I also figured that there was a 20th-century TSI rise of c. 0.2% and a temperature rise of c. 0.4%. Toss in McKitrick & Michaels (Dec. 2007). That figures that surface station site violations (as documented by the Rev) cause a twofold exaggeration of temperature.
Take it together and it’s a near-perfect match.
I’ve never been a sun worshiper (more of a sea witch, actually), but it seems quite possible that the sun provides the underlay and the oceanic-atmospheric multidecadal cycles provide the oscillation. At least it seems to fit the events of the 20th century.

RobJM
October 19, 2008 11:33 pm

Water vapor positive feedback is physically impossible. You cannot trigger a reaction that is already occurring. Negative feedback must occur when a system is at equilibrium (Le Chateliers principle).
Keep up the good work Roy
Are you sure you trust the CO2 forcing Values? I don’t!

Flanagan
October 20, 2008 12:15 am

Well, what is this? “You cannot trigger a reaction that is already occuring”?
I would sugest you to read some basic nonlinear literature, including treshold effects in dynamical systems.
But going back to the paper: most of the studies about natural variability indicate that the CO2-based warming kind of surpassed the other “natural” causes of warming since the 70s. The simulation results hereby plotted just corroborate this (see Fig. 3). The PDO-only results seem to go allright till the 70s.
In the 75-now period, the PDO-only model gives DT = 0.28 (at most) and measurements something like 0.58. This is something like 30 percent. In the 1990-now period PDO-only gives DT=0.05-0.07, while mesaurements give something like 0.3, roughly 20 to 25%. Actually, it could be done more systematically, but these results in fact prove once again that other-than-CO2 based models are ok for the beginning of the century, but their failure goes up as time goes by. Note that it is the same for sun-temps correlations.

October 20, 2008 1:11 am

evanjones (23:32:30) :
I also figured that there was a 20th-century TSI rise of c. 0.2%
Over the past decade, there has been a re-assessment of TSI. The current view is that there has been no or little long-term change, so the 0.2% rise is very likely spurious:
http://www.leif.org/research/TSI-LEAN2008.png
http://www.leif.org/research/TSI-recon3.png
http://www.astro.phys.ethz.ch/papers/haberreiter/Schoell_subm2007.pdf [see Figure 4]

Rob R
October 20, 2008 1:53 am

Flanagan.
I think you need to re-read the most recent paper by McKitrick and Michaels. This basically eliminates about 50% of the warming from the second half of the 20th century. Much of the supposed warming is an artifact of poorly sited climate stations (see the surface stations project and extensive coverage here and at Climate Audit), urban heat islands etc.
This basically kills your argument that CO2 is the primary recent culprit, and means that natural causes can indeed explain the residual that is the genuine global temperature change.
Rob R

Dodgy Geezer
October 20, 2008 2:24 am

“Repent and say after me:
There is only one cause of climate change and no other cause of climate change but man-made CO2.
There is only one cause of climate change and no other cause of climate change but man-made CO2.
H
Time for another recitation of the Creed, I believe:
I believe in Global Warming,
which will destroy heaven and earth unless we change our ways.
I believe in Al Gore,
Who conceived of the Internet
and the hockey-stick graph, born of Professor Mann.
It suffered under McIntyre and McKitrick,
was crucified, disproven, and was buried.
It was cast on the reject pile.
On the third day It rose again.
It was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science,
and is displayed in a prominent position in all IPCC literature.
It will apply again as soon as global temperatures start rising.
I believe in the CO2 tipping point,
the IPCC Assessment Reports,
a CO2 sensitivity figure of over 4 C/W,
the accuracy of GCMS,
an anthropic cause for all climate variation after 1970,
and grants everlasting. AMEN.

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