by Roy W. Spencer, Ph. D.
What can we learn from the IPCC climate models based upon their ability to reconstruct the global average surface temperature variations during the 20th Century?
While the title of this article suggests I’ve found evidence of natural climate cycles in the IPCC models, it’s actually the temperature variability the models CANNOT explain that ends up being related to known climate cycles. After an empirical adjustment for that unexplained temperature variability, it is shown that the models are producing too much global warming since 1970, the period of most rapid growth in atmospheric carbon dioxide. This suggests that the models are too sensitive, in which case they are forecasting too much future warming, too.
Climate Models’ 20th Century Runs
We begin with the IPCC’s best estimate of observed global average surface temperature variations over the 20th Century, from the “HadCRUT3″ dataset. (Monthly running 3-year averages are shown throughout.) Of course, there are some serious concerns over the validity of this observed temperature record, especially over the strength of the long-term warming trend, but for the time being let’s assume it is correct (click on image to see a large version).
Also shown in the above graph is the climate model temperature reconstruction for the 20th Century averaged across 17 of the 21 climate models which the IPCC tracks. To provide a reconstruction of 20th Century temperatures included in the PCMDI archive of climate model experiments, each modeling group was asked to use whatever forcings they believed were involved in producing the observed temperature record. Those forcings generally include increasing carbon dioxide, various estimates of aerosol (particulate) pollution, and for some of the models, volcanoes. (Also shown are polynomial fits to the curves, to allow a better visualization of the decadal time scale variations.)
There are a couple of notable features in the above chart. First, the average warming trend across all 17 climate models (+0.64 deg C per century) exactly matches the observed trend…I didn’t plot the trend lines, which lie on top of each other. This agreement might be expected since the models have been adjusted by the various modeling groups to best explain the 20th Century climate.
The more interesting feature, though, is the inability of the models to mimic the rapid warming before 1940, and the lack of warming from the 1940s to the 1970s. These two periods of inconvenient temperature variability are well known: (1) the pre-1940 warming was before atmospheric CO2 had increased very much; and (2) the lack of warming from the 1940s to the 1970s was during a time of rapid growth in CO2. In other words, the stronger warming period should have been after 1940, not before, based upon the CO2 warming effect alone.
Natural Climate Variability as an Explanation for What The Models Can Not Mimic
The next chart shows the difference between the two curves in the previous chart, that is, the 20th Century temperature variability the models have not, in an average sense, been able to explain. Also shown are three known modes of natural variability: the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO, in blue); the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO, in green); and the negative of the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI, in red). The SOI is a measure of El Nino and La Nina activity. All three climate indicies have been scaled so that their net amount of variability (standard deviation) matches that of the “unexplained temperature” curve.
As can be seen, the three climate indices all bear some level of resemblance to the unexplained temperature variability in the 20th Century.
An optimum linear combination of the PDO, AMO, and SOI that best matches the models’ “unexplained temperature variability” is shown as the dashed magenta line in the next graph. There are some time lags included in this combination, with the PDO preceding temperature by 8 months, the SOI preceding temperature by 4 months, and the AMO having no time lag.
This demonstrates that, at least from an empirical standpoint, there are known natural modes of climate variability that might explain at least some portion of the temperature variability seen during the 20th Century. If we exclude the post-1970 data from the above analysis, the best combination of the PDO, AMO, and SOI results in the solid magenta curve. Note that it does a somewhat better job of capturing the warmth around 1940.
Now, let’s add this natural component in with the original model curve we saw in the first graph, first based upon the full 100 years of overlap:
We now find a much better match with the observed temperature record. But we see that the post-1970 warming produced by the combined physical-statistical model tends to be over-stated, by about 40%. If we use the 1900 to 1970 overlap to come up with a natural variability component, the following graph shows that the post-1970 warming is overstated by even more: 74%.
Interpretation
What I believe this demonstrates is that after known, natural modes of climate variability are taken into account, the primary period of supposed CO2-induced warming during the 20th Century – that from about 1970 onward – does not need as strong a CO2-warming effect as is programmed into the average IPCC climate model. This is because the natural variability seen BEFORE 1970 suggests that part of the warming AFTER 1970 is natural! Note that I have deduced this from the IPCC’s inherent admission that they can not explain all of the temperature variability seen during the 20th Century.
The Logical Absurdity of Some Climate Sensitivity Arguments
This demonstrates one of the absurdities (Dick Lindzen’s term, as I recall) in the way current climate change theory works: For a given observed temperature change, the smaller the forcing that caused it, the greater the inferred sensitivity of the climate system. This is why Jim Hansen believes in catastrophic global warming: since he thinks he knows for sure that a relatively tiny forcing caused the Ice Ages, then the greater forcing produced by our CO2 emissions will result in even more dramatic climate change!
But taken to its logical conclusion, this relationship between the strength of the forcing, and the inferred sensitivity of the climate system, leads to the absurd notion that an infinitesimally small forcing causes nearly infinite climate sensitivity(!) As I have mentioned before, this is analogous to an ancient tribe of people thinking their moral shortcomings were responsible for lightning, storms, and other whims of nature.
This absurdity is avoided if we simply admit that we do not know all of the natural forcings involved in climate change. And the greater the number of natural forcings involved, then the less we have to worry about human-caused global warming.
The IPCC, though, never points out this inherent source of bias in its reports. But the IPCC can not admit to scientific uncertainty…that would reduce the chance of getting the energy policy changes they so desire.
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Leif said:
I find it interesting [and possibly significant] that the ‘natural forcings’ only cause the observed climate to oscillate about the model climate, but not progressively deviating from it over long enough time.
As I understand it the current flattening (and possible decline) were not predicted. Natural oscillation or change in regime? Since climate is chaotic we will know in 20 or 50 years.
Paul Vaughan (17:18:08) :
get more serious about investigating links between EOP & climate.</i<
Well, … Many EOP variations are caused by climate….
Paul Vaughan (17:18:08) :
get more serious about investigating links between EOP & climate.
Well, … Many EOP variations are caused by climate….
I bet they can’t even predict the difference between day and night.
While the positive feedback mechanisms may dominate oscillations around equilibrium, the oscillations of the equilibrium itself may be controlled by strong negative feedback mechanisms.
Oscillators oscillate because there are limits to the system energy.
DirkH,
You do know that positive feedback does not imply runaway instability, don’t you? What are you basing your ‘they are hiding the exponential runaway’ comment on?
Paul Vaughan: Paul, do you have a link readily available to the dataset(s) used in the graph you linked.
The sun is invariant. The intrinsic natural oscillations in the climate systems have no need for a variable sun to sustain the (unpredictable) oscillations.
I dunno. Solar guys say there is a 210 year cycle.
The results obtained point to a pronounced influence of solar activity on global climatic processes.
Analysis has shown that climate response to the long-term global solar forcing has a regional character. An appreciable delay in the climate response to the solar signal can occur (up to 150 years). In addition, the sign of the climate response can differ from the solar signal sign. The climate response to long-term solar activity variations (from 10s to 1000s years) manifests itself in different climatic parameters, such as temperature, precipitation and atmospheric and oceanic circulation. The climate response to the de Vries cycle has been found to occur not only during the last millennia but also in earlier epochs, up to hundreds of millions years ago.
Bob Tisdale (17:50:04) “Paul, do you have a link readily available to the dataset(s) used in the graph you linked.”
http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/?horizons
There is a learning curve.
–
Leif Svalgaard (17:31:44) “Well, … Many EOP variations are caused by climate….”
Indeed – chicken-egg thing – like the temperature-cloud thing – a systems approach is the way. Lots of complex, interesting things to investigate – (meanwhile, many people complain of being bored…)
If we knew which output of the Sun had the majority of the forcing on the Climate, and how to weight the 3 oceanic cycles, I’m thinking that would account for the significant portion of the climate changes.
Somebody is going to figure this out.
They had better before the IPCC (and others) gets it’s way and starts massively interfering with the natural variability of the climate.
It’s like watching a hostage situation.
RE:geo (15:55:08) :
“If there is a large natural variability component that is basically a 60 year sin wave, with peaks at 1934 and 1998, then that’s one area of comparison (and not too alarming). . . now we need to see how the predicted troughs in the mid-1970s vs 2028 look. . . .if we don’t see continued drifting down over the next several years from the satellites, it might be time to take AGW a bit more seriously.”
The ~60 year periodicity has been found in ice core, tree ring, and sediment proxies extending back 1500 years and also correlates well with the instrumental record:
http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.com/2010/01/fourier-analysis-of-climate.html
RE:rbateman (19:25:40) :
“If we knew which output of the Sun had the majority of the forcing on the Climate, and how to weight the 3 oceanic cycles, I’m thinking that would account for the significant portion of the climate changes.”
Pretty good correlation (R²=.96) simply combining PDO+AMO+”sunspot integral” v. temperature:
http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.com/2010/01/climate-modeling-ocean-oscillations.html
“We now find a much better match with the observed temperature record. But we see that the post-1970 warming produced by the combined physical-statistical model tends to be over-stated, by about 40%. If we use the 1900 to 1970 overlap to come up with a natural variability component, the following graph shows that the post-1970 warming is overstated by even more: 74%.”
It appears all the charts end in 1998. What would happen if these charts were updated??? The model run appears to be steepening, but the obsevations flat line for the past 10 years.
If these charts are not smoothed, and the 1998 endpoint is at the peak, then the last ten years is a considerable decline.
IPCC and other purposefully biased “models” are nothing more than propaganda exercises: Cooling factors cancel, spurious warming components reinforce without regard for objective or even rational analysis. As was said in the early 1990s when Hansen’s foolishness became the mantra of choice for death-eating Luddite sociopaths, “Freeze or fry, the problem is always free-market entrepreneurial capitalism, the remedy is always collectivist State socialism.”
Now that ocean acidification bids fair to become the next Climategate du jour, we await re-introduction of McIntyre’s “Mr. Hockey Stick” on grounds of equal or greater “moral urgency.” Climate Gultists’ Green Gang of Briffa, Hansen, Jones, Mann, Trenberth et al. have neither integrity nor shame.
Quote: Invariant (15:17:27) :
“The sun is invariant.
Best Regards,
Invariant”
Really? The Sun is the center of mass of the entire universe? It doesn’t wiggle? It doesn’t change? There are no solar cycles?
Did one of IPCC’s Nobel Prize winning scientists give you this information?
With kind regards,
Oliver K. Manuel
Oliver K. Manuel (20:37:09) :
It doesn’t wiggle?
The Sun is in free fall, so doesn’t feel any wiggling
There are no solar cycles?
They are caused by processes internal to the Sun
Solar changes are minuscule [1/1000].
Leif Svalgaard (14:04:27) :
Oliver K. Manuel (13:59:06) :
it now appears that astrology may have had a better scientific foundation than the Standard Solar Model of a Hydrogen-filled Sun!
Leif Svalgaard (14:04:27) :
It is statements like that that make some people not take WUWT seriously. Let us at least try to preserve a modicum of science.
OK Leif, now I can see your point, but why recognize statements like that? IMO, they’re harmless, thoughts expressed in an open forum about a theory that has no weight.
IMO, it’s not anti-science and nowhere near as dangerous to real science as what’s being practiced by the IPCC, Hockey Team, Hadley Centre, GISS, etc.
Mark Sawusch (20:06:34) “Pretty good correlation (R²=.96) simply combining PDO+AMO+”sunspot integral” v. temperature: http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.com/2010/01/climate-modeling-ocean-oscillations.html “
Bear in mind that 2 of those variables (PDO & AMO) are derived from temperature (so no surprise that there is a good correlation with temperature).
–
M. Simon (17:36:00) “Oscillators oscillate because there are limits to the system energy.”
We need to map out the boundaries (envelopes) that contain the natural oscillations, including oscillating limits on redistribution systems.
It may be disconcerting & paradoxical to some (I’m thinking particularly of those who are expecting that some miracle holy grail is “due” to arrive any day now) to consider that it may be possible to estimate where the floor & ceiling are, even though (during the pioneering stages, at least) one might not always or necessarily be able to say with genuine certainty whether the ball will go up or down.
Eric Barnes (21:02:30) :
OK Leif, now I can see your point, but why recognize statements like that? IMO, they’re harmless, thoughts expressed in an open forum about a theory that has no weight.
A quality of a forum is determined by the quality of the opinions expressed. Harmless nonsense dilutes that quality.
RE: Paul Vaughan (21:12:44) : “Bear in mind that 2 of those variables (PDO & AMO) are derived from temperature (so no surprise that there is a good correlation with temperature)”
yes but PDO+AMO v. Temp: R²=.83
PDO+AMO+”sunspot integral” v. Temp: R²=.96
Leif Svalgaard (21:15:10) :
A quality of a forum is determined by the quality of the opinions expressed. Harmless nonsense dilutes that quality.
Better that than the sycophantic group think of real climate.
Lief,
Do you have any papers on what drives the solar cycles internally within the sun, and not from external influences (i.e. mass orbiting around it)? Would like to see the logic behind any number of the known solar cycles…
Sounds rather convenient to discount the magnetic field and it’s relationship between the sun and it’s planets…or counter-intuitive I should say…
Thanks,
Ed
Or perhaps I am falling into your trap…
That “Gruniad”* piece:
Wang said: “I have been exonerated by my university on all the charges. When we started on the paper we had all the station location details in order to identify our network, but we cannot find them any more.
I guess the stations themselves must have disappeared too? Iirc, the Chinese said essentially that there were no stations of that description – long term at same position – that they could verify involving the period from about 1940-1990.
That kind of thing apparently doesn’t bother the AGWers in the comments at the Gruniad.
*Scott Burgess, the “Ablutionist”, said the Guardian once mistakenly called itself the “Gruniad”. What happened to him? I’m thinking something not good. He was super.
I know very little about all this, but this is how I would try to predict the future climate. (1) build a model (2) check the model over the best set of data (3) tune the model, if it can be justified (4) run the tuned model over the full data set
(5) if it predicts the past, use it to estimate what might happen in the future.
Have these climate models got past stage (3)? I can see that the tuned models appear to model the temperature trend from 1840 etc. onwards, but that only means they have a possible tool. If they ran the tuned model from 0AD to 2000 and matched the temperature record (not the hockey stick version!), that would indicate the worth or otherwise of the tuned model.