Shocker: Huffington Post carries climate realist essay

Congratulations to Harold Ambler, who frequents here in comments, for breaking the climate “glass ceiling” at HuffPo. This essay is something I thought I’d never see there. Next stop: Daily Kos? – Anthony


By Harold Ambler on The Huffington Post

Posted January 3, 2009 | 11:36 AM (EST

You are probably wondering whether President-elect Obama owes the world an apology for his actions regarding global warming. The answer is, not yet. There is one person, however, who does. You have probably guessed his name: Al Gore.

Mr. Gore has stated, regarding climate change, that “the science is in.” Well, he is absolutely right about that, except for one tiny thing. It is the biggest whopper ever sold to the public in the history of humankind.

What is wrong with the statement? A brief list:

1. First, the expression “climate change” itself is a redundancy, and contains a lie. Climate has always changed, and always will. There has been no stable period of climate during the Holocene, our own climatic era, which began with the end of the last ice age 12,000 years ago. During the Holocene there have been numerous sub-periods with dramatically varied climate, such as the warm Holocene Optimum (7,000 B.C. to 3,000 B.C., during which humanity began to flourish, and advance technologically), the warm Roman Optimum (200 B.C. to 400 A.D., a time of abundant crops that promoted the empire), the cold Dark Ages (400 A.D. to 900 A.D., during which the Nile River froze, major cities were abandoned, the Roman Empire fell apart, and pestilence and famine were widespread), the Medieval Warm Period (900 A.D. to 1300 A.D., during which agriculture flourished, wealth increased, and dozens of lavish examples of Gothic architecture were created), the Little Ice Age (1300 to 1850, during much of which plague, crop failures, witch burnings, food riots — and even revolutions, including the French Revolution — were the rule of thumb), followed by our own time of relative warmth (1850 to present, during which population has increased, technology and medical advances have been astonishing, and agriculture has flourished).

So, no one needs to say the words “climate” and “change” in the same breath — it is assumed, by anyone with any level of knowledge, that climate changes. That is the redundancy to which I alluded. The lie is the suggestion that climate has ever been stable. Mr. Gore has used a famously inaccurate graph, known as the “Mann Hockey Stick,” created by the scientist Michael Mann, showing that the modern rise in temperatures is unprecedented, and that the dramatic changes in climate just described did not take place. They did. One last thought on the expression “climate change”: It is a retreat from the earlier expression used by alarmists, “manmade global warming,” which was more easily debunked. There are people in Mr. Gore’s camp who now use instances of cold temperatures to prove the existence of “climate change,” which is absurd, obscene, even.

2. Mr. Gore has gone so far to discourage debate on climate as to refer to those who question his simplistic view of the atmosphere as “flat-Earthers.” This, too, is right on target, except for one tiny detail. It is exactly the opposite of the truth.

Indeed, it is Mr. Gore and his brethren who are flat-Earthers. Mr. Gore states, ad nauseum, that carbon dioxide rules climate in frightening and unpredictable, and new, ways. When he shows the hockey stick graph of temperature and plots it against reconstructed C02 levels in An Inconvenient Truth, he says that the two clearly have an obvious correlation. “Their relationship is actually very complicated,” he says, “but there is one relationship that is far more powerful than all the others, and it is this: When there is more carbon dioxide, the temperature gets warmer.” The word “complicated” here is among the most significant Mr. Gore has uttered on the subject of climate and is, at best, a deliberate act of obfuscation. Why? Because it turns out that there is an 800-year lag between temperature and carbon dioxide, unlike the sense conveyed by Mr. Gore’s graph. You are probably wondering by now — and if you are not, you should be — which rises first, carbon dioxide or temperature. The answer? Temperature. In every case, the ice-core data shows that temperature rises precede rises in carbon dioxide by, on average, 800 years. In fact, the relationship is not “complicated.” When the ocean-atmosphere system warms, the oceans discharge vast quantities of carbon dioxide in a process known as de-gassing. For this reason, warm and cold years show up on the Mauna Loa C02 measurements even in the short term. For instance, the post-Pinatubo-eruption year of 1993 shows the lowest C02 increase since measurements have been kept. When did the highest C02 increase take place? During the super El Niño year of 1998.

3. What the alarmists now state is that past episodes of warming were not caused by C02 but amplified by it, which is debatable, for many reasons, but, more important, is a far cry from the version of events sold to the public by Mr. Gore.

Meanwhile, the theory that carbon dioxide “drives” climate in any meaningful way is simply wrong and, again, evidence of a “flat-Earth” mentality. Carbon dioxide cannot absorb an unlimited amount of infrared radiation. Why not? Because it only absorbs heat along limited bandwidths, and is already absorbing just about everything it can. That is why plotted on a graph, C02’s ability to capture heat follows a logarithmic curve. We are already very near the maximum absorption level. Further, the IPCC Fourth Assessment, like all the ones before it, is based on computer models that presume a positive feedback of atmospheric warming via increased water vapor.

4. This mechanism has never been shown to exist. Indeed, increased temperature leads to increased evaporation of the oceans, which leads to increased cloud cover (one cooling effect) and increased precipitation (a bigger cooling effect). Within certain bounds, in other words, the ocean-atmosphere system has a very effective self-regulating tendency. By the way, water vapor is far more prevalent, and relevant, in the atmosphere than carbon dioxide — a trace gas. Water vapor’s absorption spectrum also overlays that of carbon dioxide. They cannot both absorb the same energy! The relative might of water vapor and relative weakness of carbon dioxide is exemplified by the extraordinary cooling experienced each night in desert regions, where water in the atmosphere is nearly non-existent.

If not carbon dioxide, what does “drive” climate? I am glad you are wondering about that. In the short term, it is ocean cycles, principally the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, the “super cycle” of which cooling La Niñas and warming El Niños are parts. Having been in its warm phase, in which El Niños predominate, for the 30 years ending in late 2006, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation switched to its cool phase, in which La Niñas predominate.

Since that time, already, a number of interesting things have taken place. One La Niña lowered temperatures around the globe for about half of the year just ended, and another La Niña shows evidence of beginning in the equatorial Pacific waters. During the last twelve months, many interesting cold-weather events happened to occur: record snow in the European Alps, China, New Zealand, Australia, Brazil, the Pacific Northwest, Alaska, the Rockies, the upper Midwest, Las Vegas, Houston, and New Orleans. There was also, for the first time in at least 100 years, snow in Baghdad.

Concurrent with the switchover of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation to its cool phase the Sun has entered a period of deep slumber. The number of sunspots for 2008 was the second lowest of any year since 1901. That matters less because of fluctuations in the amount of heat generated by the massive star in our near proximity (although there are some fluctuations that may have some measurable effect on global temperatures) and more because of a process best described by the Danish physicist Henrik Svensmark in his complex, but elegant, work The Chilling Stars. In the book, the modern Galileo, for he is nothing less, establishes that cosmic rays from deep space seed clouds over Earth’s oceans. Regulating the number of cosmic rays reaching Earth’s atmosphere is the solar wind; when it is strong, we get fewer cosmic rays. When it is weak, we get more. As NASA has corroborated, the number of cosmic rays passing through our atmosphere is at the maximum level since measurements have been taken, and show no signs of diminishing. The result: the seeding of what some have taken to calling “Svensmark clouds,” low dense clouds, principally over the oceans, that reflect sunlight back to space before it can have its warming effect on whatever is below.

Svensmark has proven, in the minds of most who have given his work a full hearing, that it is this very process that produced the episodes of cooling (and, inversely, warming) of our own era and past eras. The clearest instance of the process, by far, is that of the Maunder Minimum, which refers to a period from 1650 to 1700, during which the Sun had not a single spot on its face. Temperatures around the globe plummeted, with quite adverse effects: crop failures (remember the witch burnings in Europe and Massachusetts?), famine, and societal stress.

Many solar physicists anticipate that the slumbering Sun of early 2009 is likely to continue for at least two solar cycles, or about the next 25 years. Whether the Grand Solar Minimum, if it comes to pass, is as serious as the Maunder Minimum is not knowable, at present. Major solar minima (and maxima, such as the one during the second half of the 20th century) have also been shown to correlate with significant volcanic eruptions. These are likely the result of solar magnetic flux affecting geomagnetic flux, which affects the distribution of magma in Earth’s molten iron core and under its thin mantle. So, let us say, just for the sake of argument, that such an eruption takes place over the course of the next two decades. Like all major eruptions, this one will have a temporary cooling effect on global temperatures, perhaps a large one. The larger the eruption, the greater the effect. History shows that periods of cold are far more stressful to humanity than periods of warm. Would the eruption and consequent cooling be a climate-modifier that exists outside of nature, somehow? Who is the “flat-Earther” now?

What about heat escaping from volcanic vents in the ocean floor? What about the destruction of warming, upper-atmosphere ozone by cosmic rays? I could go on, but space is short. Again, who is the “flat-Earther” here?

The ocean-atmosphere system is not a simple one that can be “ruled” by a trace atmospheric gas. It is a complex, chaotic system, largely modulated by solar effects (both direct and indirect), as shown by the Little Ice Age.

To be told, as I have been, by Mr. Gore, again and again, that carbon dioxide is a grave threat to humankind is not just annoying, by the way, although it is that! To re-tool our economies in an effort to suppress carbon dioxide and its imaginary effect on climate, when other, graver problems exist is, simply put, wrong. Particulate pollution, such as that causing the Asian brown cloud, is a real problem. Two billion people on Earth living without electricity, in darkened huts and hovels polluted by charcoal smoke, is a real problem.

So, let us indeed start a Manhattan Project-like mission to create alternative sources of energy. And, in the meantime, let us neither cripple our own economy by mislabeling carbon dioxide a pollutant nor discourage development in the Third World, where suffering continues unabated, day after day.

Again, Mr. Gore, I accept your apology.

And, Mr. Obama, though I voted for you for a thousand times a thousand reasons, I hope never to need one from you.

P.S. One of the last, desperate canards proposed by climate alarmists is that of the polar ice caps. Look at the “terrible,” “unprecedented” melting in the Arctic in the summer of 2007, they say. Well, the ice in the Arctic basin has always melted and refrozen, and always will. Any researcher who wants to find a single molecule of ice that has been there longer than 30 years is going to have a hard job, because the ice has always been melted from above (by the midnight Sun of summer) and below (by relatively warm ocean currents, possibly amplified by volcanic venting) — and on the sides, again by warm currents. Scientists in the alarmist camp have taken to referring to “old ice,” but, again, this is a misrepresentation of what takes place in the Arctic.

More to the point, 2007 happened also to be the time of maximum historic sea ice in Antarctica. (There are many credible sources of this information, such as the following website maintained by the University of Illinois-Urbana: http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/IMAGES/current.anom.south.jpg). Why, I ask, has Mr. Gore not chosen to mention the record growth of sea ice around Antarctica? If the record melting in the Arctic is significant, then the record sea ice growth around Antarctica is, too, I say. If one is insignificant, then the other one is, too.

For failing to mention the 2007 Antarctic maximum sea ice record a single time, I also accept your apology, Mr. Gore. By the way, your contention that the Arctic basin will be “ice free” in summer within five years (which you said last month in Germany), is one of the most demonstrably false comments you have dared to make. Thank you for that

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202 Comments
Galileo
January 3, 2009 3:24 pm

Leif Svalgaard (14:07:34) : says
Harold Ambler’s piece:
It is a pity that Ambler mars hi otherwise excellent piece by erroneous solar contentions, like:
. . .
“These are likely the result of solar magnetic flux affecting geomagnetic flux, which affects the distribution of magma in Earth’s molten iron core and under its thin [2900 km thick!] mantle.
This is total nonsense, if anything it is the other way around, it is the circulation [change of distribution] that affects and generates the geomagnetic field.”
Ambler does not suggest that the solar magnetic flux is the sole cause of movements in the Earth’s magma. Anyone with a proper knowledge of magnetism understands that when the movement of a medium with magnetic properties (eg the magma) generates a magnetic field, any externally imposed changes to the magnetic field (eg from changes to the solar magnetic flux) will impose a reverse effect on the medium. That is what Ambler is telling us. And that these reverse effects will tend to disrupt (not stop) the flow of the underlying medium, which will cause abnormal pressures on some parts of the mantle, which may manifest as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, etc.
Since Svalgaard seems determined to misunderstand Amber’s points, he will probably likewise misunderstand this. But it needs to be said.

Mark
January 3, 2009 3:27 pm

I never knew that 2007 was a record for maximum Antarctic ice. And weird that I got this information from a leftist source.

Dan Lee
January 3, 2009 3:30 pm

Bryan St. James, the Old Farmer’s Almanac meteorologist is Joe D’Aleo of ICECAP.
http://www.almanac.com/timeline/author.php
http://icecap.us/

Chris V.
January 3, 2009 3:33 pm

Ambler says:
“Indeed, increased temperature leads to increased evaporation of the oceans, which leads to increased cloud cover (one cooling effect) and increased precipitation (a bigger cooling effect). Within certain bounds, in other words, the ocean-atmosphere system has a very effective self-regulating tendency.”
Except, of course, when the temperature increase is caused by something other than CO2. When it’s “caused” by cosmic rays, sunspots, PDO, etc., then the “self-regulating tendency” miraculously stops.
Mostly the same old PRATTs (points refuted a thousand times) in Ambler’s article, but the bit about sunspots influencing volcanic activity was a new one for me!
If there was only some evidence…

philincalifornia
January 3, 2009 3:44 pm

gondwannabe (15:23:22) :
I searched the whole thread for “jury” and I failed to find who you were agreeing with on the jury being out.
Also, are you seriously suggesting that just because they may not choose to discuss them on this blog the so-called sceptics do not think about, even act on other global issues ?? Get real.
What a great essay. Not being a solar expert, I’m hoping he has the opportunity to correct any misspeaks. The bit about voting for Obama 1000 times didn’t come out quite right either !!!

David Corcoran
January 3, 2009 3:48 pm

Gondwannabe: Re: Ocean acidification… since CO2 still provably trails temperature rises even to the present day, and CO2 has been much higher in ages past, what does ocean acidification have to do with anything?
The rest of the topics have zero dot zero to do with AGW per se.
It’s not enough for AGW advocates to have noble intentions; if AGW isn’t happening, AGW initiatives are wasting money and costing lives.

TerryS
January 3, 2009 3:56 pm

gondwannabe (15:23:22) :
Sceptics seem to be pretty silent on their own list of inconvenient topics. Examples: ocean acidification, pollution effects, the social injustice that results from the current distribution of resource consumption, the strategic and economic costs of dependence on hostile oil and gas producers.

What utter rubbish. I don’t worship at the alter of AGW but my lack of worship does not mean I either approve or disapprove of any of the above. Worshiping wouldn’t demonstrate approval or disapproval either.
Your list of “topics” have no relationship whatsoever as to whether climate change is natural, anthropogenic or both.

January 3, 2009 4:02 pm

Al Gore has really stepped in it this time. He could have spent the rest of his global warming career collecting money by spreading fear over events that were a centure or at least half century in the future. Oh, but that wasn’t good enough for Big Al. He’s now told the biggest global warming whopper of his alarmist career:
AL GORE HAS GUARANTEED THAT THE NORTHERN POLAR ICE CAP WILL BE COMPLETELY GONE IN FIVE YEARS!!!
When I heard this I assumed it was a rumor started by skeptics to make Gore look bad. It wasn’t until I viewed the video that I realized what Gore had done. Gore has started a five year credibility countdown timer ticking and it’s up to all of us to make sure that he is held accountable and proven to be a fraud when his dire prediction aimed at drumming up support doesn’t come close to comming true.
The mainstream media isn’t going to let this video see the light of day because they, unlike Al, understand the precarious position in which he has placed himself.
It is therefore up to us to spread the word about Big Al’s prediction. He must be exposed for the fearmongering opportunist that he has become.
To view the video, please visit the following site and click on the picture of Big Al holding up five fingers.
http://www.hootervillegazette.com
While visiting this site, you might want to watch a preview of the film “Not Evil, Just wrong” or watch “The Great Global Warming Swindle” which is found in the video section. Happy Viewing!!!

Jim Arndt
January 3, 2009 4:12 pm

OT but this is great! NASA still does many things very well.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,475577,00.html

Dan Lee
January 3, 2009 4:19 pm

Gondwannabe,
Social injustice in energy resource distribution refers to people who are NOT on the grid of any coal or nuclear power plants, something the skeptics have been complaining about for a long time. Misguided attempts to cut back on these power plants will result in greater social injustice, not less.
I also have to repeat that C02 is not pollution. Everyone here wants a cleaner environment, but to put C02 on the list of pollutants would be (as the article refrains) flat-earth thinking.
Life would be impossible without C02 in the air, and its only a trace gas (385 parts per million = .000385 = 1/3 of 1% of the atmosphere, 0.0385% ).
Regarding ocean acidification or other things on the loooooooooong list of things that are being blamed on man-made global warming: few will argue against the fact that nature changes and that species rise and either adapt or fall, and that natural cycles have a 4 billion year history of wiping out populations that evolved in places and times that…that…
Oh wait, maybe you are arguing against that. A static earth? Please correct me if that’s not what you meant.
The point is that most here are just as concerned with the environment and with social injustice in energy distribution as the greenest of the greens. In fact most of us would argue that we are even more concerned about it than those who want to make such power even less available, such that only the wealthy can afford to stay warm.

January 3, 2009 4:24 pm

The media worm turns…..

MattN
January 3, 2009 4:35 pm

I. Am. STUNNED! That the Huffington Post would publish this.
“Inconceivable…..”

Bruce Cobb
January 3, 2009 4:40 pm

Al Gore apologize? Hah! He’s too busy laughing all the way to the bank.
May this article be a tipping point, with first a trickle, and then an avalanche of such articles, and even news stories exposing the AGW fraud.

Robert Wood
January 3, 2009 4:46 pm

RK @12:45:01 , Hansen is no longer a “scientist”. He is a political hack for Al Gore, the High Priest. Hansen is his bag carrier.

January 3, 2009 4:48 pm

Harold Ambler, thank you very much. You are warmly appreciated, flaws or no. Because you have come from the right space and said words that deserve to be said, you help restore the covenant which has been broken.

January 3, 2009 4:54 pm

Can anyone tell those of us who don’t know the stateside political scene so well, what the significance of the ”Huffington Post’ carrying this article is please? Has it previously been strongly pro AGW? Is it a clarion of the liberal left?

Robert Wood
January 3, 2009 4:58 pm

As I summed up my argument to one Margary, who seemed to think CO2 was pollution: Reality burns, baby!

Robert Wood
January 3, 2009 5:02 pm

Mike B @12:58:57,
All democrats in Congress, or their hirelings, bucket sniffers and hanger-arounders, follow Huffington Post. It is a blog of great consequence and communal hugging for the left, but of little actual utility or serious argument.

davidgmills
January 3, 2009 5:05 pm

HuffPo — Clarion of the liberal left. Maybe not quite. For a European, it would be very middle of the road; but for the US, most would say it is a liberal blog; but not a progressive blog, although every now and then they have a few articles written by progressives. A progressive blog would probably qualify as left in European terms.

January 3, 2009 5:06 pm

gondwannabe:

Sceptics seem to be pretty silent on their own list of inconvenient topics. Examples: ocean acidification, pollution effects, the social injustice that results from the current distribution of resource consumption, the strategic and economic costs of dependence on hostile oil and gas producers.

May I deconstruct? Thank you:
The ocean is not acidifying. It is becoming marginally less alkaline, and the very slight change is not caused by atmospheric carbon dioxide.
Next, on a per-capita basis the U.S. has become the cleanest country in the world. We are the ultimate non-polluters. As a non-signer to the Kyoto Protocol, the U.S. has reduced emissions significantly more than the countries that signed Kyoto. But perhaps the ‘pollution effects’ referred to were meant for China, Russia, India, etc.? Then why didn’t you say so? Alarmists seem to be pretty silent on that score, no?
‘Social injustice’? What’s that? Is that like when a certain well-to-do presidential candidate with mediocre grades and a poor SAT score bypasses thousands of Asian applicants with 4.25 GPA’s and 1500+ SAT scores, and gets into Harvard?
Is that the ‘social injustice’ you meant? Or maybe you really meant economic injustice. We know the cure for that: get a job, and save a bit of money every paycheck, and avoid bad habits like drugs and gambling. Is the ‘injustice’ in having to buy an alarm clock?
Finally, depending on other countries for our oil isn’t smart. We need to start drilling right here, big time. So we do agree on something. It’s a start.

davidgmills
January 3, 2009 5:07 pm

On the issue of cosmic radiation causing clouds, has this article ever been discussed on this blog? Published in 2006. And if so who discussed it and what was said about it?
http://journals.royalsociety.org/content/77543w3q4mq86417/fulltext.pdf

P Folkens
January 3, 2009 5:13 pm

A minor point about a big effect:
The “Dark Ages” kicked in due to the Sunda Caldera pyroclastic event in the early 6th Century more than an inherent climate swing. It did, of course, have a huge impact on climate (and civilizations) around the globe. But one might want to be careful about keeping “normal” climatic swings separate from pyroclastic-induced climate dips. An outstanding book on the Sunda event was accomplished by David Keyes in “Catastrophe, A Quest for the Origins of the Modern World.”

bcourson
January 3, 2009 5:15 pm

The “Flat-Earthers” are in a conundrum. The earth is cooling, without their carbon reduction plans in effect. If action is not taken immediately to enact their draconian mandates then they will not be able to take credit for “saving the earth” from their warming scenario…even though history has shown that cooling, not warming, spells disaster.
Al Gore and his disciples bring new meaning to the term “Political Science.”

January 3, 2009 5:16 pm

Galileo (15:24:43) :
Since Svalgaard seems determined to misunderstand Amber’s points, he will probably likewise misunderstand this. But it needs to be said.
Saying it does not make it more plausible. The solar field near the Earth is a 1/10000 of the Earth’s field. During strong [and rare] magnetic storms that fraction can increase hundredfold for brief moments. The Earth’s field is rotating with respect to the Sun’s field so the relative directions of the two fields change constantly. The Sun’s field [and dynamo action from thermal movements of air] creates currents in the ionosphere and ‘mirror’ currents about two hundred kilometers under the surface that shield the interior. Only very slowly varying currents can penetrate to any depth and none [as far as we know, penetrate to the liquid core]. Earthquakes do not happen below about 700 km because the mantle is not brittle enough at that and greater depths. All in all, the whole scenario is nonsense and detracts from the otherwise reasonable message of the paper.

john stubbles
January 3, 2009 5:17 pm

First Merkel turning on cap and trade, then Vaclav Klaus becoming EU President, and Gore making an ass of himself — a bigger ass that is– over Arctic ice, and now this Huffington blog. Wow ! What a Christmas!! But does does Obama know that Holdren, his new scientific adviser, is a loon too. He advised Erhlich ( “only 22 million Americans would be alive in 2000” ) that 5 metals Holdren selected would not be around in a few years and lost a $1000 bet to Julian Simon. With Boxer and Browner around however, we still face problems. But how much longer can the “media-evil ” warm last?