Brookhaven National Laboratory: Why Hasn't Earth Warmed as Much as Expected?

From the BNL press release, some serious questions about climate sensitivity and aerosols.

Why Hasn’t Earth Warmed as Much as Expected?

New report on climate change explores the reasons

http://www.drroyspencer.com/library/pics/PDO-and-20th-Century-warming-Fig01.jpg
Image: Dr. Roy Spencer

January 19, 2010 UPTON, NY – Planet Earth has warmed much less than expected during the industrial era based on current best estimates of Earth’s “climate sensitivity”—the amount of global temperature increase expected in response to a given rise in atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2). In a study to be published in the Journal of Climate, a publication of the American Meteorological Society (the early online release of the paper is available starting 19 January 2010; the link is given below), Stephen Schwartz, of Brookhaven National Laboratory, and colleagues examine the reasons for this discrepancy.

Stephen Schwartz
Stephen Schwartz

According to current best estimates of climate sensitivity, the amount of CO2 and other heat-trapping gases added to Earth’s atmosphere since humanity began burning fossil fuels on a significant scale during the industrial period would be expected to result in a mean global temperature rise of 3.8°F—well more than the 1.4°F increase that has been observed for this time span. Schwartz’s analysis attributes the reasons for this discrepancy to a possible mix of two major factors: 1) Earth’s climate may be less sensitive to rising greenhouse gases than currently assumed and/or 2) reflection of sunlight by haze particles in the atmosphere may be offsetting some of the expected warming.

“Because of present uncertainties in climate sensitivity and the enhanced reflectivity of haze particles,” said Schwartz, “it is impossible to accurately assign weights to the relative contributions of these two factors. This has major implications for understanding of Earth’s climate and how the world will meet its future energy needs.”

A third possible reason for the lower-than-expected increase of Earth’s temperature over the industrial period is the slow response of temperature to the warming influence of heat-trapping gases. “This is much like the lag time you experience when heating a pot of water on a stove,” said Schwartz. Based on calculations using measurements of the increase in ocean heat content over the past fifty years, however, this present study found the role of so-called thermal lag to be minor.

A key question facing policymakers is how much additional CO2 and other heat-trapping gases can be introduced into the atmosphere, beyond what is already present, without committing the planet to a dangerous level of human interference with the climate system. Many scientists and policymakers consider the threshold for such dangerous interference to be an increase in global temperature of 3.6°F above the preindustrial level, although no single threshold would encompass all effects.

The paper describes three scenarios: If Earth’s climate sensitivity is at the low end of current estimates as given by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, then the total maximum future emissions of heat-trapping gases so as not to exceed the 3.6° threshold would correspond to about 35 years of present annual emissions of CO2 from fossil-fuel combustion. A climate sensitivity at the present best estimate would mean that no more heat-trapping gases can be added to the atmosphere without committing the planet to exceeding the threshold. And if the sensitivity is at the high end of current estimates, present atmospheric concentrations of heat-trapping gases are such that the planet is already committed to warming that substantially exceeds the 3.6° threshold.

The authors emphasize the need to quantify the influences of haze particles to narrow the uncertainty in Earth’s climate sensitivity. This is much more difficult than quantifying the influences of the heat-trapping gases. Coauthor Robert Charlson of the University of Washington likens the focus on the heat trapping gases to “looking for the lost key under the lamppost.”

Schwartz observes that formulating energy policy with the present uncertainty in climate sensitivity is like navigating a large ship in perilous waters without charts. “We know we have to change the course of this ship, and we know the direction of the change, but we don’t know how much we need to change the course or how soon we have to do it.”

Schwartz and Charlson coauthored the paper with Ralph Kahn, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland; John Ogren, NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory in Colorado; and Henning Rodhe, Stockholm University.

The early online release of the paper is available at AMS’s journals online site.

Founded in 1919, the AMS has a membership of more than 14,000 professionals, professors, students, and weather enthusiasts. AMS publishes nine atmospheric and related oceanic and hydrologic journals, sponsors multiple conferences annually, and directs numerous education and outreach programs and services. For more information see www.ametsoc.org.

Research at Brookhaven was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science.

h/t to WUWT commenter “Don S”

Get notified when a new post is published.
Subscribe today!
0 0 votes
Article Rating
157 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
DR
January 19, 2010 5:50 pm

yes but, but, Gavin says 2010 will quash forever any talk of global cooling.

John M
January 19, 2010 5:50 pm

Now hold on thar!
Haven’t you guys learnt yet?
If the the theory’s broke, fix the data.
http://blogs.nature.com/climatefeedback/2010/01/ams2010_data_gaps_and_errors_m.html

New analyses provide preliminary evidence that temperature data from the UK Met office may under-estimate recent warming. That’s the conclusion of a talk given here today by Chris Folland of the Met Office Hadley Centre. Folland says that there is a very good chance that there has been more warming over land and over the ocean in the past decade than suggested by conventional data sets, but he says that the issues with land and ocean data are entirely unrelated.

Richard Hill
January 19, 2010 5:53 pm

Is there any move underway to get the AMS to modify its official position on AGW, in the light of acceptance of this paper in a peer reviewed journal of the AMS?

CodeTech
January 19, 2010 5:58 pm

ShrNfr:
And I guarantee someone will be modifying wikipedia entries, claiming there was NEVER a “consensus” that warming was happening.
Meanwhile, Dr A Burns (16:47:45) nails my feeling on this:

“Schwartz’s analysis attributes the reasons for this discrepancy to a possible mix of two major factors: ”
There’s a third possible factor suggested by ice core data. Rising CO2 levels are a result of rising global temperatures and not a cause.

January 19, 2010 6:02 pm

a jones (17:28:57) :
Still they have made it look good haven’t they?
Especially the one who placed the lower end of the 90% bracket outside of the observations, rather than down a 0, where it belongs. This is on the assumption that the ‘best estimate’ line is correct. You never know with these graphs that are designed to bring across an opinion rather than a fact.

timetochooseagain
January 19, 2010 6:03 pm

Well, now they are admittingthat warming is less than expected at least.
A triumph for Lukewarmism? Not likely. Note the mention of the second possibility. I believe it is VERY likely that this will be the emphasized and backed hypothesis.

ASJ
January 19, 2010 6:03 pm

1)Maybe the mean temperature of the Earth is a dubious measure of global warming.
Instead, an equivalent mean temperature should be computed from the mean of T⁴, in order to reduce the influence of convection.
2)The IPCC models assumes a CO2 forcing of about 3.7 watt/m², at a temperature of T=288⁰ Kelvin, for a doubling of the CO2 content. This is reflected in the GCM models, despite this primitive first order approach to the global warming by IPCC. But the CO2 forcing depends heavily on the temperature and of the content of water vapor and liquid. The forcing decrease with temperature and with increasing content of water vapor and liquid. Even by taking the feedback of water vapor into account the temperature rise for a double or triple amount of CO2 will only give a temperature rise less than .5⁰ C. This fits the estimate of Roy Spencer.
In general, IPCC’s treatment of the scientific issues of the influence of CO2 goes from a primitive zero order model (which most accept) and the advanced GCM models which only a handful of computer experts has a chance to understand. Are the climate scientist not able to elaborate an physical analytic model, taking temperature and water vapor into account, which can be read and discussed by people with a general physical background?.

D. King
January 19, 2010 6:04 pm

mikelorrey (15:54:05) :
“…like navigating a large ship in perilous waters without charts.”
…Here be monsters…””
The AGW NAV chart.
http://www.nerc.ac.uk/images/photos/carta-marina-full.jpg

wws
January 19, 2010 6:09 pm

among all of the dominos about to fall, the very last chance for a US Cap and Trade bill is headed down the drain!!!
so we should all take a brief moment to join in a song for Obama tonight:

Pascvaks
January 19, 2010 6:10 pm

Curious…
Anyone have personal or professional contact with Schwartz, Charlson, Kahn, Ogren, and/or Rodhe? Is this latest paper a “break” in the AGW position or simply a new tactic as suggested (AGW-Lite post Copenhagen)? Are these people digging a hole for themselves trying to crawl out of the Steilag or sticking with the AGW faithful?

James Szabadics
January 19, 2010 6:16 pm

The graphic is not that useful to illustrate the point made in the article because we are only in 2010 – I make out that the top estimate worst case for 2010 is about +0.6 and the red line “best estimate” is +0.3C.
Is that graphic y-axis supposed to show change from 2000 or change from 1961 to 1990 long term average (anomaly) ? It would be better and more impact if the graphic also showed the actual data for 2000 to 2010 as a line.

Myron Mesecke
January 19, 2010 6:16 pm

jorgekafkazar (17:36:22) :
“AGW Lite, anyone?”
Tastes great! Less filling!
Tax great! Less warming!

anon
January 19, 2010 6:17 pm

TRENBERTH: “Well I have my own article on where the heck is global warming?
“The fact is that we can’t account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that we can’t. The CERES data … shows there should be even more warming: but the data are surely wrong. Our observing system is inadequate.” [1255352257.txt]
There, staight from the horses mouth … the models are fine thank you. 😉

Dio Gratia
January 19, 2010 6:22 pm
photon without a Higgs
January 19, 2010 6:33 pm

OT
this should be good news for Cap N Trade
Brown has a huge lead in Massachusetts. He is the projected winner. There is no longer 60 Democrat votes in the Senate.

J.Peden
January 19, 2010 6:36 pm

“The observed increase in global mean surface temperature (GMST) over the industrial era is less than 40% of that expected”
Does anyone trust the GMST? Are even the U.S. surface stations going to be brought up to snuff? Many of them are going to have to be relocated, right? Even then, who knows how the new stations relate long term backwards to the old, so as to get a longer valid record? How many stations do we need, where, and how many temps. per day?
So aren’t we just going to have to rely upon Satellite data? Really, isn’t it totally “back to the drawing board” for Climate Science? Like it should have been 20+ years ago, which might have resulted in real Science.

Roger Knights
January 19, 2010 6:39 pm

OT: ABC News four minutes ago: GOP wins Senate race in Mass., costing Dems. their supermajority in the Senate.
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/republican-scott-brown-defeats-democrat-martha-coakley-massachusetts/story?id=9602776

Graham Dick
January 19, 2010 6:47 pm

IPCC predicted warming, with knobs on, for Australia.
Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) thermometers embedded in Oz cities and airports that are prone to the local effect of “heat-island” or “urban warming”, indeed have registered warming trends. No surprise there. On average, those dodgy thermometers are about 1 deg C warmer than they were over 100 years ago.
However, remote met stations tell an entirely different story. On average, the current decade in those comparatively pristine locations is 0.6 deg C colder than in 1881-1890.
If allegedly cooling trends are homogenised or otherwise massaged, are manifestly spurious warming trends subjected to the same treatment? Do climate models favour warming data to cooling? If so, no wonder predictions are all over the shop.
Averages given above may (and should) be checked by analysing data per favour of BoM at http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/data/index.shtml
City or airport stations:
38003, 61055, 66062, 80015, 86071, 94029
Remote stations:
46043, 55023, 58012, 64008, 69018, 75031, 83025, 84016, 85096, 90015

Pamela Gray
January 19, 2010 6:51 pm

Since it seems kosher these days to dress Science in political garb (aka Hansen, Mann, Jones, etc), I have learned the lesson well. I have just written to all my legislatures to let them know I am now a registered Independent, having bowed out of my life-long Democrat Party affiliation. They turned it into a political movement. So I have done likewise. I will vote accordingly.

Peter of Sydney
January 19, 2010 7:02 pm

There’s no doubt about it. The IPCC models are useless. Does anyone really believe that anyone can predict what the Sun and numerous other natural factors will be doing in the future? No doubt as the discrepancy between modeled and actual temperatures increases, the IPCC models will be discarded in due course.

Roger Knights
January 19, 2010 7:03 pm

kadaka (16:27:49) :
Where is the warming? It will occur after one or more avalanche effects are triggered by the rising CO2 levels, possibly a cascading series of them, leading to ever-increasing catastrophic heating and unbearable temperatures. Why, we may end up as hot as Venus!
Unless of course the world is suddenly plunged into a new ice age, catastrophic cooling, which was recently shown to be possible since high CO2 concentrations existed during previous ice ages.
Because the science is settled, the effects of increasing concentrations are well known, we must accept that CO2 is such a dangerous substance that only a worldwide system of strict enforced carbon controls, with appropriate wealth redistribution, can save us from the catastrophic warming to come. Or catastrophic cooling. Whatever it turns out to be, which we can say with 100% certainty will be catastrophic.

Unless it turns out that nitrous oxide is the culprit, and we go charging off in a new direction. I can see the headline now: “No Laughing Matter”

Not Amused
January 19, 2010 7:04 pm

Futuristic computational predictions based on speculation without the ability to factor in natural variables at various timeslots…
I find it so strange how they can’t get it to work with any degree of near-precision accuracy.
/sarcasm

Dave F
January 19, 2010 7:19 pm

Leif Svalgaard (16:45:55) :
I would have expected the 90% IPCC ‘confidence’ bracket to be symmetric around the ‘Best Estimate’ and thus to include the ‘observation-based estimates’, including zero rise.
I noticed this on first read also. If, however, the graph were set up that way, then you have a result where any warming at all is considered support for the models. If anything, the range around the best estimate should be shrunk, to indicate less uncertainty in the predictions. It is time they put their money where their mouths are, imho.
That said, you are correct.

Dave Wendt
January 19, 2010 7:20 pm

Don’t know what all the fuss is about. The global temp is exactly what I expected it to be. Of course, since I don’t have a clue what the climate is up to, I expected it to be whatever it wanted to be. Now if we could get these clowns to admit that they are in all probability even more clueless than I am, i.e. my cluelessness is not burdened the load of misbegotten preconceptions that is driving theirs further from any possibility of actual knowledge of the climate system, we could get back to trying to understand what is really happening instead of spending billions attempting to prop up a hypothesis that is unlikely to ever be fruitful

Keith Minto
January 19, 2010 7:27 pm

The argument by Roger Sowell (16:41:25) is valid. If CO2 is heating everywhere then every reading should show a similar increase. Moruya Heads is my watery playground and shows no increase in 100yrs http://www.bom.gov.au/cgi-bin/climate/hqsites/site_data.cgi?variable=maxT&area=aus&station=069018&period=annual&dtype=raw&ave_yr=0 . But other ‘high-quality’ sites do.
I understand that errors can creep in in to increase a temp. reading but isn’t a ‘flat’ reading more trustworthy, or am I showing a bias?