Reposted from The Air Vent
Disproving The Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) Problem
Leonard Weinstein, ScD
April 25, 2009
A theory has been proposed that human activity over about the last 150 years has caused a significant rise in Earth’s average temperature. The mechanism claimed is based on an increased greenhouse effect caused by anthropogenic increases in CO2 from burning of fossil fuels, deforestation, cement manufacture, and also from increases in CH4 from farm animals and other causes. The present versions of the theory also include a positive feedback effect due to the increased temperature causing an increase in water vapor, which amplifies the effect. The combined result are used to claim that unless the anthropogenic increases of CO2 are slowed down or even made to decrease, there will be a continuing rapid increase in global temperature, massive melting of ice caps, flooding, pestilence, etc.
In order to support a theory, specific predictions need to be made that are based on the claims of the theory, and the predictions then need to happen. While the occurrence of the predicted events is not proof positive of a theory, they increase the believability of the claims. However, if the predictions are not observed, this tends to indicate the theory is flawed or even wrong. Some predictions are absolute in nature. Einstein’s prediction of the bending of light by the Sun is such a case. It either would or would not bend, and this was considered a critical test of the validity of his theory of general relativity. It did bend the predicted amount, and supported his theory.
Many predictions however are less easily supported. For example weather forecasting often does a good job in the very short term but over increasing time does a poor job. This is due to the complexity of the numerous nonlinear components. This complexity has been described in chaos theory by what is called the butterfly effect. Any effect that depends on numerous factors, some of which are nonlinear in effect, is nearly impossible to use to make long-range predictions. However, for some reason, the present predictions of “Climate Change” are considered by the AGW supporters to be more reliable than even short-term weather forecasting. While some overall trends can be reasonably made based on looking at past historical trends, and some computational models can suggest some suggested trends due to specific forcing factors, nevertheless, the long term predicted result has not been shown to be valid. Like any respectable theory, specific predictions need to be made, and then shown to happen, before the AGW models can have any claim to reasonable validity.
The AGW computational models do make several specific predictions. Since the time scale for checking the result of the predictions is small, and since local weather can vary enough on the short time scale to confuse the longer time scale prediction, allowances for these shorter lasting events have to be made when examining predictions. Nevertheless, if the actual data results do not significantly support the theory, it must be reconsidered or even rejected as it stands.
The main predictions from the AGW models are:
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The average Earth’s temperature will increase at a rate of 0.20C to 0.60C per decade at least to 2100, and will continue to climb after that if the CO2 continues to be produced by human activity at current predicted rates.
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The increasing temperature will cause increased water evaporation, which is the cause for the positive feedback needed to reach the high temperatures.
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The temperature at lower latitudes (especially tropical regions) will increase more in the lower Troposphere at moderate altitudes than near the surface.
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The greatest near surface temperature increases will occur at the higher latitudes.
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The increasing temperature at higher latitudes will cause significant Antarctic and Greenland ice melt. These combined with ocean expansion due to warming will cause significant ocean rise and flooding.
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A temperature drop in the lower Stratosphere will accompany the temperature increase near the surface. The shape of the trend down in the Stratosphere should be close to a mirror reflection of the near surface trend up.
The present CO2 level is high and increasing (http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/trends/). It should be fairly easy to show the consequences of AGW predictions if they are valid.
Figure 1. Global average temperature from 1850 through 2008. Annual series smoothed with a 21-point binomial filter by the Met Office. (http://hadobs.metoffice.com/hadcrut3/diagnostics/global/nh+sh/)
It should be noted that the largest part of the last 150 year increase in CO2, which is blamed on human activity, did not occur until after 1940, so the largest temperature rise effects should have occurred in that time. The proponents of AGW have generally used the time period from 1970 to 2000 as the base line for an indicator of the rapid warming. In that base line period, the average temperature rose about 0.50C, which averages to 0.160C per decade. The claim was then made that this would accelerate due to continuing increases in CO2 level. However if we look at the temperature change from 1940 through 2008, the net increase is only 0.30C. This is due to a drop from 1940 to 1970 and a slight drop from 2000 through 2008. Now the average rise for that period is only 0.040C per decade. If the time period from 1850 through 2008 is used as a base, the net increase is just under 0.70C and the average rise is also 0.040C per decade! It is clear that choosing a short selected period of rising temperature gives a misleading result. It is also true that the present trend is down and expected to continue downward for several more years before reversing again. This certainly makes claim 1 questionable.
The drop in temperature from 1940 to 1970 was claimed to have been caused by “global dimming” caused by aerosols made by human activity. This was stated as dominating the AGW effects at that time. This was supposed to have been overcome by activity initiated by the clean air act. In fact, the “global dimming” continued into the mid 1990’s and then only reduced slightly before increasing more (probably due to China and other countries increased activity). If the global dimming was not significantly reduced, why did the temperature increase from 1970 to just past 2000?
A consequence of global dimming is reduced pan-evaporation level. This also implies that ocean evaporation is decreased, since the main cause of ocean evaporation is Solar insolation, not air temperature. The decreased evaporation contradicts claim 2.
Claim 3 has been contradicted by a combination of satellite and air born sensor measurements. While the average lower Troposphere average temperature has risen along with near ground air temperature, and in some cases is slightly warmer, nevertheless the models predicted that the lower Troposphere would be significantly warmer than near ground at the lower latitudes, especially in the tropics. This has not occurred! The following is a statement from:
Synthesis and Assessment Product 1.1
Report by the U.S. Climate Change Science Program
and the Subcommittee on Global Change Research
April 2006
“While these data are consistent with the results from climate models at the global scale, discrepancies in the tropics remain to be resolved”.
Claim 4 implies that the higher latitudes should heat up more than lower latitudes. This is supposed to be especially important for melting of glaciers and permafrost. In fact, the higher latitudes have warmed, but at a rate close to the rest of the world. In fact, Antarctica has overall cooled in the last 50 years except for the small tail that sticks out. See:
http://ff.org/centers/csspp/library/co2weekly/20061013/20061013_02.html
Greenland and the arctic region are presently no warmer than they were in the late 1930’s, and are presently cooling! See:
The overall effect of Antarctic and Greenland are now resulting in net gain (or at least near zero change) of ice, not loss. While some small areas have recently lost and are some are still losing some ice, this is mostly sea ice and thus do not contribute to sea level rise. Glaciers in other locations such as Alaska have lost a significant amount of ice in the last 150 years, but much of the loss is from glaciers that formed or increased during the little ice age, or from local variations, not global. Most of this little ice age ice is gone and some glaciers are actually starting to increase as the temperature is presently dropping. For more discussions on the sea level issue look at the following two sites:
http://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=dnc49xz_19cm8×67fj&hl=en
This indicates that claim 5 is clearly wrong. While sea level will rise a small amount, and has so since the start of the Holocene period, the rise is now only 10 to 15 cm per century, and is not significantly related to the recent recovery from the little ice age, including the present period of warming.
The claims in 6 are particularly interesting. Figure 2 below shows the Global Brightness Temperature Anomaly (0C) in the lower Troposphere and lower Stratosphere made from space.
a) Channel TLT is the lower Troposphere from ground to about 5 km
b) Channel TLS is the lower Stratosphere from about 12 to 25 km
Figure 2. Global satellite data from RSS/MSU and AMSU data. Monthly time series of brightness temperature anomaly for channels TLT, and TLS. Data from: http://www.ssmi.com/msu/msu_data_description.html
The anomaly time series is dominated by ENSO events and slow troposphere warming for Channel TLT (Lower Troposphere). The three primary El Niños during the past 20 years are clearly evident as peaks in the time series occurring during 1982-83, 1987-88, and 1997-98, with the 1997-98 being the largest. It also appears there is an aditional one at 2007. Channel TLS (Lower Stratosphere) is dominated by stratospheric cooling, punctuated by dramatic warming events caused by the eruptions of El Chichon (1982) and Mt Pinatubo (1991). In these, and other volcanic eruption cases, the increased absorption and reflectivity of the dust and aerosols at high altitudes lowered the surface Solar insolation, but since they absorbed more energy, they increased the high altitude temperature. After the large spikes dropped back down, the new levels were lower and nearly flat between large volcanic eruptions. It is also likely that the reflection or absorption due to particulates also dropped, so the surface Solar insolation went back up. It appears that a secondary effect of the volcanic eruptions is present that is unknown in nature (but not CO2)! One possible explanation is a modest but long-term drop in Ozone. It is also clear that the linear fit to the data shown is meaningless. In fact the level drop events seem additive if they overlap soon enough for at least the two cases shown. That is, after El Chicon dropped the level, then Pinatubo occurred and dropped the level even more. Two months after Pinatubo, another strong volcano, Cerro Hudson, also erupted, possibly amplifying the effect. It appears that the recovery time from whatever causes the very slow changing level shift has a recovery time constant of at least several decades.
The computational models that show that the increasing CO2 and CH4 cause most of the present global warming all require that the temperature of the Stratosphere drops while the lower atmosphere and ground heat up. It appears from the above figures that the volcanic activity clearly caused the temperature to spike up in the Stratosphere, and that these spikes were immediately followed by a drop to a new nearly constant level in the temperature. It is clear from the Mauna Loa CO2 data (http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/trends/) that the input of CO2 (or CH4) from the volcanoes, did not significantly increase the background level of this gas, and thus, this cannot be the cause of the drop in the Stratosphere temperature. The ramp up of atmospheric CO2 also cannot explain the step down then level changes in high altitude temperature. Since the surface temperature rise is supposed to be related to the Stratosphere temperature drop, and since a significant surface rise above the 1940 temperature level did not occur until the early 1980’s, it may be that the combination of the two (or more) volcanoes, along with Solar variability and variations in ocean currents (i.e., PDO) may explain the major causes of recent surface temperature rises to about 2002. In fact, the average Earth temperature stopped rising after 2002, and has been dropping for the last few years!
The final question that arises is what prediction has the AGW made that has been demonstrated, and that strongly supports the theory. It appears that there is NO real supporting evidence and much disagreeing evidence for the AGW theory as proposed. That is not to say there is no effect from Human activity. Clearly human pollution (not greenhouse gases) is a problem. There is also almost surely some contribution to the present temperature from the increase in CO2 and CH4, but it seems to be small and not a driver of future climate. Any reasonable scientific analysis must conclude the basic theory wrong!!
Pierre Gosselin (03:26:16) :
Ron de Haan, Juan and others.
Thanks for the very helpful advice.
Isn’t it sad that it has come to this point? It’s now a risk to challenge Green Dogma? Teachers have license to bully kids into believing rubbish.
Good on you. I wish your daughter all the best. Let us all know how she gets on.
Pierre Gosselin – Wow I didn’t realize that was THE Stephen Schneider when I watched it. Typical 70’s scruffy hair.
I just loved the disclaimer right at the start- This series presents information based in part on theory and conjecture. The producers purpose is to suggest some possible explanations but not necessarily the only ones to the mysteries we will examine. You could say that about anything ever written about climate.
OT but…
I was at University from 85 to 89. The oil price crashed in 85/86. The end of the gravy train.
Global warming was born in about 87/88…
Flanagan, your argument using comparative photography demonstrates a lack of understanding about Arctic currents, jet stream, surface wind, and temperature induced fresh water and sea ice melt factors. These variables make it statistically impossible to identify which year the photos were taken in. Why? Because like your fingerprints, no two years are exactly alike in the ice melt pattern being demonstrated. Your argument is cherry picking at its worst and lacks both validity and reliability, the two defining characteristics of good, or in this case, bad, scientific thought.
vivekchandran (22:55:16) :
‘CO2 emissions in cities are still unhealthy…………..’
Please explain why you feel CO2 emission in cities is unhealthly.
Or are you referring to all emissions as CO2?
Max (15:58:07) :
Max. An excellent comment!
(AGW proponents: Please note the exclamation mark.)
Flanagan, on the Arctic sea ice issue, please peruse the information at this link:
http://iabp.apl.washington.edu/research_seaiceageextent.html
Flanagan (04:54:04) : “ . . . high frequency of very unlikely positive anomalies…”
Seems to me the only thing you are saying here is that the comparisons being made are not valid. If one person were to win several large sums of money at a casino in a short time there would be a lot of inquisitive people looking into it. Because new continental highs are not being set and because almost all places have been warmer than now in the past and because the Arctic Ocean has in the past had much less ice than today and because neither the ice on Greenland nor Antarctica is melting and because sea level is not rising faster than it has in the past and because the lower troposphere is not warming and – I was going to make a point here but I have to go feed my methane producing horses.
“Flanagan (11:13:43) :
Right, there is no global warming. This is why April 2009 has reached an “unlikely anomaly” (once in 50 years) in 2005, 2007 and 2009 in my home country.”
April 2009 was warm in Belgium, average 12,5°C (normal: 9°C).
But January 2009 was cold, average 0,7°C (normal 2,6°C).
No climate-change there, just WX.
Slightly OT but I have had a reply from Prof. Dr. Andrzej Zelazniewicz,
President, The Committee of Geological Sciences of the Polish Academy of Sciences.
I contacted the Academy to try to discover the original document referred to by the Washington Examiner in late April. The professor has sent me a link to an English translation of their original statement regarding their attitude to Global warming:
http://www.kngeol.pan.pl/images/stories/pliki/pdf/Com._Geol._Sci._PAS_Climate_change.pdf
He makes the following additional points: “In general, it would be good to reach as many political decision makers as possible. Please note however that there are more than 90 scientific committees in PAS, which means that not necessarily everybody in PAS shares our position.”
Francis (17:38:41) :
This is true in the Arctic, which is warming faster than anywhere else.
I’ve been looking for those arctic weather stations with no luck. Any help would be appreciated.
Dave Middleton (07:08:04) :
As far as the Stratosphere goes…”Greenhouse” warming of the Troposphere would by definition result in simultaneous Stratospheric cooling. This is something that has never been clearly demonstrated in the satellite observations.
Cooling of the upper stratosphere and mesosphere as expected from the increase in GHGs has been observed, check out the following for a start:
http://www.agu.org/journals/rg/rg0304/2002RG000121/index.html
I discovered an interesting bit of 19th century history:
The quote, “Unexampled frost prevails throughout the northern United States the night of June 4, 1859.” comes from “Harper’s Encyclopaedia of United States History” by Woodrow Wilson (and others). A more particular quote: “hopes … were blasted by the June frost of 1859. In the early morning of June 5, the mercury went down to 32 : the frost killed the wheat, corn, potatoes, vegetables, and fruit of a considerable portion of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indina, and Illinois.” from “History of the US from the Compromise of 1850” by James Ford Rhodes.
In our concern about the global warming trend are we turning a blind eye to a possibility of a June frost in the corn belt? My question for the climatologists is: statistically, what kind of frost was the frost of 1859? Was it a two hundred year frost; a five hundred year frost; maybe just a hundred year frost? My question for the agronomists and agricultural economists is: what would be the repercussions of such a frost be in 2009? Where I live in the north half of the corn belt things in 1859 were pretty primitive: railroads had only just come in, most people lived on farms, people had their grain ground at grist mills, your tractor was a team of horses or oxen, fertilizer had nothing to do with nitrate but was a word coined to politely refer to manure, and the world population was about a fifth of what it is now. Today things are different and not only our cities but the world counts on our grain production. Those who wring their hands about how hoggish we SUV driving Americans are, please also remember we American also have in our care one of the world’s few “breadbaskets.” Since we export more than half of the world’s total exported rough grains, I think it’s fair to say that the world counts on America’s breadbasket being full at all times. It would be irresponsible to concern ourselves with a slightly warming world if rare June frosts are as much a part of our climate as greenhouse warming.
@ur momisugly Philip B.
OK. Just relax about the “CO2 being pollution” in my previous comment. Yes its wrong. What I meant was that the air quality in the City is degraded. Everybody knows there are plenty of other pollutants being emitted along with CO2.
My point was that whatever is causing all that CO2 is also causing a ton of other gasses that in return pollute our air. So eventually, Global Warming or not, the steps taken would almost be the same. Getting cleaner energy, minus fossil fuels.
Unless of course, you’d like to venture into global climate control methods, like dumping Iron in the sea or block the sun. Which honestly, none of us are too keen to see happen.
Dave Middleton (06:22:46):
When I was in the process of getting my BS in Earth Science (Geology concentration) toward the end of the last Cold Chicken Little (1976-1980), I took courses in Marine Science, Astronomy, Meteorology, Physical Geography, Zoology, Chemistry, Physics as well as lots of Geology classes. I go to work every day in a “paleoclimatology lab” – I explore for oil and gas in the Gulf of Mexico…Most of the Cenezoic sedimentary rocks of the Gulf were laid down in glacial-interglacial sequences (high stand/low stand).
I know, I know, Dave… So I did it, I mean, I also took courses in meteorology, geology, edafology, mineralogy, climatology, paleobiology, physics, etc., because biology cannot be disconected from these disciplines and these are very important for my work.
Sedimentary geologists are paleoclimatologists and paleogeographers. The members of the world’s largest organization of sedimentary geologists (the AAPG) have a fairly good understanding of paleoclimatology…And the vast majority of those of us with an intellectual interest in the climate change debate know for a fact that the Earth’s climate has not been doing anything unusual over the last 150 years.
I absolutely agree. The projected natural fluctuations of temperature for the current geological period are into a range of -3 °C to 3 °C (total of 6 °C), so a change of 0.55 °C is into the natural expected fluctuations.
Pete (18:07:25) – re: large wind farm effects. Thanks – sort of thing I was after.
RBateman – “it’ll move if you build it” 🙂
And good luck to Pierre’s daughter – suggest you brief her on how to side step ad homs!
slowtofollow (12:08:49):
Pete (18:07:25) – re: large wind farm effects. Thanks – sort of thing I was after.
RBateman – “it’ll move if you build it” 🙂
And good luck to Pierre’s daughter – suggest you brief her on how to side step ad homs!
Uh! Oh! Would you be so kind as to brief me also on how to avoid ad hominem attacks and not getting anger before ad homs? 🙂
From: vivekchandran (22:55:16) :
This was an interesting article, so was the comments that followed.
To an extent, Global Warming debunked or not, it brings to light the incoherence in the so called facts. And this debate will go on until someone can get these climate scientists, accurate facts, and until the scientists find the perfect model of this worlds climate. Seems a long time away from what I read here.
Nevertheless, proof of Global Warming or not, we still need to get into a sustainable and green lifestyle.
CO2 emissions in cities are still unhealthy we need a cleaner alternative to fossil fuel. A sustainable model has its perks with or without global warming and we need to head in that direction.
Global warming, has however, even if it is a hoax, warmed the people of the globe to lead a greener life. So lets just do our part in what we can for NOW. Till the cleaver ones figure things out for sure.
I just hope our governments are not coerced into some drastic climate control methods, due to ill advice. They are very capable of it, Iraq war an example.
—
Political bias rears it head again I see: Note that the AGW extremism – or as you point out, the “drastic climate control methods” ARE here NOW, as we speak, in the disastrous Obama fuel demands – that will kill some 3800 ADDITIONAL people per year due to accidents.
Further, his “clever people” who are demanding the energy cap-and-tax plans will cause millions of job losses – for nothing, will cause artificial price increases in every product to artificial energy price increases in transporation, food, fuel, and material in everything we consume.
Again – for nothing. For no good produced.
They will reduce – or eliminate/destroy – economic growth worldwide which (is intended to!) destroy more of the (free world’s) world’s economic power -> more deaths, more power in the hands of those in China and India who do NOT follow Obama’s policies.
The “clever ones” have decided – deliberately – to destroy America’s economy through their propagandic programs of a “greener life.” For their political power. Their hypocrisy. Their religious “guilt” about America’s success.
Thank you for the link to the AGU abstract…One of these days I’m going to have to break down and join the AGU.
From the abstract of “REVIEW OF MESOSPHERIC TEMPERATURE TRENDS”…
I wrote that no stratospheric cooling relative to the tropospheric warming had been documented…Greenhouse warming would remove exactly the same amount of heat from the upper atmosphere as it added to the lower atmosphere. There are lots of models, studies and some real data that demonstrate some cooling of the Stratosphere during various time periods over the instrumental data record. But no one has clearly demonstrated that stratospheric “mirror image” of the Troposphere. I do understand that it’s not going to literally be a “mirror image;” but it ought to be clearly and easily demonstrable in actual, real (not modeled) data.
The only facet of anthropogenic global warming that can’t be falsified to some degree is the fact that CO2 is a greenhouse gas. Einstein supposedly once said, “No amount of experimentation can ever prove me right; a single experiment can prove me wrong.” AGW proponents have reversed Einstein’s burden of proof equation.
Rw
Two tips, don’t try and reply to someone (Flanagan) at 11pm on a Sunday and thereby not read across the columns properly, and secondly do not rush outside to check the temperature and consequently forget to include the most important part of the response 🙂
I had not posted the May 2000’s figures as we had not reached the end of the time period-the figure was of the 1990’s to 2000 which was 11.73, so below two of the decades quoted.
So your figures for the Aprils of the 2000’s will be around 0.2C warmer than the 1910’s and a simlar amount to the 1800’s . So a rise in temperature from the LIA of .01 c per decade.
As regards May, the 2000’s will be some .35C cooler than the 1940’s and some .33 warmer than the 1730’s. This represents a rise of .01 per decade from the depths of the LIA, but a fall in the values of 60 years ago.
Which brings us to the main point I had intended to make last night if I hadn’t of interrupted myself by looking at the outside thermometer. (Our weather station is resting, having devoured too many batteries)
The main point I wanted to make was that many of the months have changed their traditional character, something that seems to have been going on ever since man first became farmers and started complaining that the weather was never like it used to be. On a more scientific basis winters have become distinctly milder-not surprising as much of CET covers the LIA. although our three warmest winters are all prior to 1the 900’s
There is very little difference on an annual or decadil basis of the summers-plenty of warm summers back to 1660, plenty now. The mean average is depressed by the exceptionally cold winters but the mean average is still within a narrow band of mostly between 9 and 10c.
It is very difficult to se any evidence of catastrophic and rapid warming, indeed the very weak recovery from the depths of the LIA is rather concerning and lays open the question-are we to all intents and purposes still in the LIA?
All the best
TonyB
vivekchandran (12:05:40) :
You would agree that fossil fuels are not destroying the earth?
vivekchandran (12:05:40) :
You would also agree that mankind as always been active in reducing pollution? And that there is no reason to think he will stop being active?
@Nasif Nahle (12:07:57) :
Nasif…I have been debated climate change in 4-5 Internet forums for the last 5 years or so. Most of those forums allow the members to include personal profiles…In every instance, I clearly put the fact that I an an oil industry geophysicist in my profile.
It never fails that at some point in every one of those climate change debates, someone will type something like this, “I see by your profile that you are an oil industry scientist. So nothing you have to say on this subject can be believed.”
The funny thing is that almost all of the “science” that I rely on in these debates comes from my college education at a very obscure state university in New England back in the 1970’s. Back then I knew that the “imminent ice age scare” was baloney just as well as I know that the current global warming scare is baloney.
The only difference between now and the late ’70’s ice age scare is the political reaction to the Chicken Littling.
Steve Hempell (13:21:44) :
I would like to see a list of the assumptions that the AGW hypothesis (es) depends on.
Unproven assumptions:
Carbon dioxide is increasing at an unprecedented rate.
Global temperature is increasing at an unprecedented rate.
Buffer zone between the atmosphere and the oceans producing 50-200 year cycle time for CO2.
I don’t want to hog the show. I’ll let others add more.
The exclamation marks may not be usual but don’t really matter. It’s a very good summation in any case.
“vivekchandran (12:05:40) : Getting cleaner energy, minus fossil fuels. ”
This is always the argument. And it sounds so nice.
But this argument is cruel to the elderly and poor because until you can find a cheaper source of energy the poor and those on fixed incomes—and those feeling the pinch of recession for that matter—can’t afford the alternates.
If you really do care about people then you yourself should be pushing for more drilling in Alaska and anywhere else the we can find oil to make life better for everyone.
Does that argument sound good?