This is an essay professor Richard Lindzen of MIT sent to the Free Lance-Star in Fredericksburg, Va for their Opinion Page in March, and was recently republished in the Janesville, WI Gazette Extra where it got notice from many WUWT readers. It is well worth the read. – Anthony

To a significant extent, the issue of climate change revolves around the elevation of the commonplace to the ancient level of ominous omen. In a world where climate change has always been the norm, climate change is now taken as punishment for sinful levels of consumption. In a world where we experience temperature changes of tens of degrees in a single day, we treat changes of a few tenths of a degree in some statistical residue, known as the global mean temperature anomaly (GATA), as portents of disaster.
Earth has had ice ages and warmer periods when alligators were found in Spitzbergen. Ice ages have occurred in a 100,000-year cycle for the last 700,000 years, and there have been previous interglacials that appear to have been warmer than the present despite lower carbon-dioxide levels. More recently, we have had the medieval warm period and the little ice age. During the latter, alpine glaciers advanced to the chagrin of overrun villages. Since the beginning of the 19th century, these glaciers have been retreating. Frankly, we don’t fully understand either the advance or the retreat, and, indeed, some alpine glaciers are advancing again.
For small changes in GATA, there is no need for any external cause. Earth is never exactly in equilibrium. The motions of the massive oceans where heat is moved between deep layers and the surface provides variability on time scales from years to centuries. Examples include El Nino, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, the Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillation, etc. Recent work suggests that this variability is enough to account for all change in the globally averaged temperature anomaly since the 19th century. To be sure, man’s emissions of carbon dioxide must have some impact. The question of importance, however, is how much.
A generally accepted answer is that a doubling of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (it turns out that one gets the same value for a doubling regardless of what value one starts from) would perturb the energy balance of Earth about 2 percent, and this would produce about 2 degrees Fahrenheit warming in the absence of feedbacks. The observed warming over the past century, even if it were all due to increases in carbon dioxide, would not imply any greater warming.
However, current climate models do predict that a doubling of carbon dioxide might produce more warming: from 3.6 degrees F to 9 degrees F or more. They do so because within these models the far more important radiative substances, water vapor and clouds, act to greatly amplify whatever an increase in carbon dioxide might do. This is known as positive feedback. Thus, if adding carbon dioxide reduces the ability of the earth system to cool by emitting thermal radiation to space, the positive feedbacks will further reduce this ability.
It is again acknowledged that such processes are poorly handled in current models, and there is substantial evidence that the feedbacks may actually be negative rather than positive. Citing but one example, 2.5 billion years ago the sun’s brightness was 20 percent to 30 percent less than it is today (compared to the 2 percent change in energy balance associated with a doubling of carbon-dioxide levels) yet the oceans were unfrozen and the temperatures appear to have been similar to today’s.
This was referred to by Carl Sagan as the Early Faint Sun Paradox. For 30 years, there has been an unsuccessful search for a greenhouse gas resolution of the paradox, but it turns out that a modest negative feedback from clouds is entirely adequate. With the positive feedback in current models, the resolution would be essentially impossible. [Note: readers, see this recent story on WUWT from Stanford that shows Greenhouse theory isn’t needed in the faint young sun paradox at all – Anthony]
Interestingly, according to the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the greenhouse forcing from manmade gases is already about 86 percent of what one expects from a doubling of carbon dioxide (with about half coming from methane, nitrous oxide, freons, and ozone). Thus, these models should show much more warming than has been observed. The reason they don’t is that they have arbitrarily removed the difference and attributed this to essentially unknown aerosols.
The IPCC claim that most of the recent warming (since the 1950s) is due to man assumed that current models adequately accounted for natural internal variability. The failure of these models to anticipate the fact that there has been no statistically significant warming for the past 14 years or so contradicts this assumption. This has been acknowledged by major modeling groups in England and Germany.
However, the modelers chose not to stress this. Rather they suggested that the models could be further corrected, and that warming would resume by 2009, 2013, or even 2030.
Global warming enthusiasts have responded to the absence of warming in recent years by arguing that the past decade has been the warmest on record. We are still speaking of tenths of a degree, and the records themselves have come into question. Since we are, according to these records, in a relatively warm period, it is not surprising that the past decade was the warmest on record. This in no way contradicts the absence of increasing temperatures for over a decade.
Given that the evidence (and I have noted only a few of many pieces of evidence) suggests that anthropogenic warming has been greatly exaggerated, so too is the basis for alarm. However, the case for alarm would still be weak even if anthropogenic global warming were significant. Polar bears, arctic summer sea ice, regional droughts and floods, coral bleaching, hurricanes, alpine glaciers, malaria, etc., all depend not on GATA but on a huge number of regional variables including temperature, humidity, cloud cover, precipitation, and direction and magnitude of wind and the state of the ocean.
The fact that some models suggest changes in alarming phenomena will accompany global warming does not logically imply that changes in these phenomena imply global warming. This is not to say that disasters will not occur; they always have occurred, and this will not change in the future. Fighting global warming with symbolic gestures will certainly not change this. However, history tells us that greater wealth and development can profoundly increase our resilience.
One may ask why there has been the astounding upsurge in alarmism in the past four years. When an issue like global warming is around for more than 20 years, numerous agendas are developed to exploit the issue. The interests of the environmental movement in acquiring more power, influence and donations are reasonably clear. So, too, are the interests of bureaucrats for whom control of carbon dioxide is a dream come true. After all, carbon dioxide is a product of breathing itself.
Politicians can see the possibility of taxation that will be cheerfully accepted to save Earth. Nations see how to exploit this issue in order to gain competitive advantages. So do private firms. The case of Enron (a now bankrupt Texas energy firm) is illustrative. Before disintegrating in a pyrotechnic display of unscrupulous manipulation, Enron was one of the most intense lobbyists for Kyoto. It had hoped to become a trading firm dealing in carbon-emission rights. This was no small hope. These rights are likely to amount to trillions of dollars, and the commissions will run into many billions.
It is probably no accident that Al Gore himself is associated with such activities. The sale of indulgences is already in full swing with organizations selling offsets to one’s carbon footprint while sometimes acknowledging that the offsets are irrelevant. The possibilities for corruption are immense.
Finally, there are the well-meaning individuals who believe that in accepting the alarmist view of climate change, they are displaying intelligence and virtue. For them, psychic welfare is at stake.
Clearly, the possibility that warming may have ceased could provoke a sense of urgency. For those committed to the more venal agendas, the need to act soon, before the public appreciates the situation, is real indeed. However, the need to courageously resist hysteria is equally clear. Wasting resources on symbolically fighting ever-present climate change is no substitute for prudence.
Richard S. Lindzen is the Alfred P. Sloan professor of atmospheric science at MIT. Readers may send him e-mail at rlindzenmit.edu. He wrote this for The Free Lance-Star in Fredericksburg, Va.
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TLM (10:20:36) :
Francisco (09:12:57):
Go ahead and explain how additional heat in the atmosphere moves from the atmosphere to the ocean surface, and from there to the deep oceans, **without first producing any warming in the atmosphere or on the ocean surface water**
Just because you don’t know how it can happen, does not mean that it is not happening, just that you don’t understand how.
I am not qualified to answer that question – and clearly neither are you!
=================
The question is rather basic and obvious. Your shrugging it off and believing the received nonsense, means you believe whatever you are told, whether or not it makes any sense to you — as long as it comes from the mouth of the usual charlatans. I am qualified enough to perceive that magical transfers of heat in that manner are impossible.
Your continued circles about ocean sea rise are boring. The sea level reconstructions on the graphs I quoted in my previous post clearly show that the rate of sea level rise is completely normal on any time scale you care to examine. Therefore, it is frivolous and unwarranted to invoke a brand new cause (extra warming from CO2 emissions) for something very old and very ordinary, on which human CO2 emissions could never have had any effect.
TLM (11:54:06) :
Of course I mean in that last post (11:36:03) that there are other people here that seem to think that natural warming does not need a cause – in case anybody here thought that I subscribed to that view!
===============
I’ve never met a person with such views. You’ve made those people up.
There is a common delusion that we understand the climate system well enough to pinpoint the exact causes of these minor fluctuations. In fact, we understand little, and we can quantify even less. Nobody believes temperature fluctuations, or sea level fluctuations, occur without cause. What some of us believe is that there is no reason to invoke a new cause for what is not new. Or, as Lindzen puts it, elevate the commonplace to the level of the ominous omen.
TLM (11:46:03) :
The more I read the last few posts the more astonished I am by how apparently intelligent people can also be rather dumb.
I don’t think the discussion is meant to go anywhere, it’s just repetition
of either self-evident or irrelevant themes loaded with verbiage. In fact I
understand the fascination of sceptics with short term variation rather than
trends in graphs, there thinking is equally structured. No offense, I have
tried to understand what this is all about.
TLM (11:46:03) :
C’mon!! Who said natural variation has no cause? We do say that we understand so little of natural causes that we cannot say definitively what the cause is. That’s something else again.
DaveE.
David Alan Evans (14:39:04) :
Good grief man, of course we know what the cause is!
It is the sun!
There is ultimately only one source of energy on this earth and we rotate round it once a year.
Whether or not you think that there is or isn’t extra forcing from CO2 is not what I am arguing, I am trying to get Smokey and Francisco to concede that the sun warms the oceans and that is why they are rising – whether that warming is “naturally” or “unnaturally” forced.
They keep banging on about how “downwelling IR” (heat to you and me) cannot be getting into the ocean. Well seeing as a very large fraction of the energy from the sun is in the infra-red spectrum of light why is “downwelling” IR any different from direct radiation from the sun? Or are they saying that IR is somehow incapable of absorption in the sea? Are they saying there is no downwelling going on? We can MEASURE it. It is happening, it is a natural effect of the water vapour in the atmosphere.
They keep saying that the warming is “natural” as if that explains anything at all. If you understand how the Earth warms “naturally” you will be 99% of the way to understanding why some people consider that adding extra CO2 is a problem.
EXACTLY the same mechanisms drive natural warming and anthropogenic warming. The same source of heat and the same forcings and feedbacks. The only difference worth arguing about is how much forcing can be attributed to the addition of extra CO2. Now that is disputable and worth discussing.
Arguing about where the natural warming is coming from is pointless as there is only one source of heat.
Smokey (12:31:05) :
Reading that last post and the links therein, and after much effort on my part and referring back to my post at 06:12:39 on the 14th I have to concede you fall into the camp that thinks:-
3. Every single bit of research into global warming is riddled with mistakes and done by idiots who clearly have no idea what they are talking about.
It really must be nice to think you are so much cleverer than all those dumb professors. After all you have Warwick Hughes, that notable climate scientist and all-round polymath as a guru. After all everything he says, and every number he cites, is obviously the gospel truth!
Some people are so deluded they will believe any old crap – if a study comes from a learned journal, well referenced and peer reviewed by a notable expert in the field then it clearly cannot contain a grain of truth. Whereas a rambling blog diatribe by a mad Australian with no visible qualifications whatsoever is clearly incontrovertible evidence.
Deary me…
TLM (17:00:39) :
Only one problem with downwelling IR. It just doesn’t permeate beyond a few millimetres. Any warming of the oceans from that source is almost immediately dissipated through evaporation & resulting convection and loss to space.
The specific heat of CO2 and its concentration also ensures its effects are minimal in comparison to, say, H2O.
DaveE.
David Alan Evans (17:48:23) :
[Regarding downwelling IR} … any warming of the oceans from that source is almost immediately dissipated through evaporation & resulting convection and loss to space.
Do you have a citation to some scientific research / information on this? A respected source please [snip]
Thanks.
TLM (17:00:39) :
Good grief man, of course we know what the cause is!
It is the sun!
—————
From the fact that the sun is the ultimate source of energy, it does not follow AT ALL that variations in the sun’s output are directly and linearly linked to sea level variations or temperature fluctuations on the earth’s surface. That incoming energy gets into a biosphere system whose chaotic mechanisms are far from being understood. And there are other factors like cosmic rays independent of this measure.
Expecting any such direct link to explain normal fluctuations is silly.
The most clear example of the utter inadequacy of such perspectives is the faint young sun. I suggest you write a paper explaining how a sun that was up to 30% fainter than at present, managed to keep earth’s temperatures not very different from today’s, certainly much, much warmer than what you would expect from such a huge drop in incoming radiation. If your paper is conclusive and well received, you may win a Noble Prize as the solver of a long-standing riddle. If you believe the IPCCs calculations that the 2% radative imbalance supposedly caused by a doubling of CO2 is supposed to produce 2 to 7 degrees of warming, well go ahead and extrapolate what would happen with a 30% reduced input. Yet it did not happen at all. They have tried to determine if various combinations of potent greenhouse gases would be able to accomplished it – with no success. (It is important to keep in mind that these exercises are only meant to show if something would be *possible*, which of course by itself does not prove it is true. But if something is shown to be impossible, it can be ruled out. So far, all modeling calculations with greenhouse gases have failed to show this would be possible.)
Now, it appears that a relatively modest reduction in cloud cover could reduce the earth’s albedo suffiently to accomplish the needed compensation for the reduced sun’s output. It does not prove that’s what happened, but at least it shows it is not impossible.
However you look at this, your notion that all fluctiations in sea level or temperatures must have a direct link with the sun’s output, is childishly simplistic and demonstrably wrong, notwithstanding the fact that the sun is indeed the ultimate source of energy.
And once again, there is nothing unusual in either current sea levels (they have been higher, not that long ago), or sea level rise rates (they are perfectly normal at any time scale) or current temperatures, or current temperature fluctuation rates.
Therefore, whatever caused similar and much bigger variations before (and nobody knows what did) can perfectly well cause them now. All this hoopla is based on a 20 year temperature trend, from the late 70s to the late 90s, which was no different from the trend in the first part of the century, or from pervious trends in the 19th century. And yes, we are still coming out of a glaciation that began to subside some 8-10 thousand years ago. And of a “little ice age” that ended a couple of centuries ago. And assuming that whatever drives those cycles drives what is going on, is not outlandish, unless you think we managed to jump out of normal cycles. We haven’t.