Lindzen: "Earth is never in equilibrium"

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


http://alumweb.mit.edu/clubs/sw-florida/images/richardlindzen.jpg
Richard Lindzen

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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Anu
April 9, 2010 9:15 pm

Dave F (19:18:53) :
Are you serious? Did you even continue reading past the heading, or were you counting on no one else doing so?
Professor Lindzen is a dynamical meteorologist with interests in the broad topics of climate, planetary waves, monsoon meteorology, planetary atmospheres, and hydrodynamic instability. His research involves studies of the role of the tropics in mid-latitude weather and global heat transport, the moisture budget and its role in global change, the origins of ice ages, seasonal effects in atmospheric transport, stratospheric waves, and the observational determination of climate sensitivity.
Doh! Turns out we can read. Strike one.

Yes, I expect everyone here can read.
Read this:
http://eapsweb.mit.edu/people/person.asp?position=Faculty&who=lindzen
Again, Prof. Lindzen is the Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology.
If the article above had not changed that to Richard S. Lindzen is the Alfred P. Sloan professor of atmospheric science at MIT for some reason, I wouldn’t have commented.
By the way, Professors are allowed to have wide ranging interests – I once knew a cosmologist who was interested in analyzing junk DNA, and collaborated with a geneticist to publish on it – turns out some of his mathematical techniques for analyzing galaxy distribution were helpful.
This, of course, did not make him an expert on genetics, but collaboration is often fruitful, and fun.
Ball one.

“The petroleum geologist response is not too surprising, but the meteorologists’ is very interesting,” he said.
Is it only petroleum geologists? No, it is not. See: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/04/07/faint-sun-paradox-explained-by-stanford-greenhouse-effect-not-involved/
Strike two.

Did you even read the study results ?
http://tigger.uic.edu/~pdoran/012009_Doran_final.pdf
You realize it’s about the current climate change being caused by human actions, right ? It had nothing to do with paleoclimate or some mistaken belief of yours that CO2 is the only factor in determining climate, in all situations.
Ball two.

Climatology: the study of climates and investigations of its phenomena and causes
Climates? What is the definition of climate? See: http://www.thefreedictionary.com/climate
cli·mate (klmt)
n.
1. The meteorological conditions, including temperature, precipitation, and wind, that characteristically prevail in a particular region.
Strike three. Better luck next time, back to the bench.

Your definition forgot the “over long periods of time” part.
So, your understanding of the concept of “climate” is limited to a one line “free dictionary” entry ? That would explain a lot.
Here’s two sentences to get you started:
Climate encompasses the statistics of temperature, humidity, atmospheric pressure, wind, rainfall, atmospheric particle count and numerous other meteorological elements in a given region over long periods of time. Climate can be contrasted to weather, which is the present condition of these same elements over periods up to two weeks.”
It’s the time element that is the crucial difference with meteorology, and makes it a separate field with its own concepts, techniques and expertise.
Here, feast on some “free” non-dictionary knowledge:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climatology
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meteorology
Try to get a sense of why climatology is a separate field of study.
Ball three and four.
Hit the showers, rookie.

April 9, 2010 9:32 pm

Anu (21:15:11),
You presume to be smarter than Prof Richard Lindzen, who holds the Alfred P. Sloan Atmospheric Sciences chair at MIT. You fail.
Professor Lindzen has forgotten more climate knowledge than either you, or the entire CAGW contingent will ever learn.
Neither Gavin Schmidt, Michael Mann, Phil Jones, nor most of the other corrupt reprobates exposed in the Climategate emails are climatologists like Dr Lindzen.
Now, who’s the rookie?
Strike three, you’re out.

DCC
April 9, 2010 9:45 pm

Smokey (20:51:05) :”DCC (19:58:24) :
“My research say those combined costs in 2005 dollars were 22+132= $154 billion dollars. How much are you assuming has been spent on climate research?”
Answer: way too much.
Here’s a chart that shows the relative cost of Cap & Trade: click”
The question was how much already has been spent on research, not how much cap and trade might cost in the future.

HaroldW
April 9, 2010 9:48 pm

Al Gored (15:35:12) : “Change is the only constant, as some old Greek (Herodutus?) once said.”
Oh, I know it’s nitpicking, but somehow I’m bothered by this.
Heraclitus said that (or something close to it). Herodotus was a historian.
More on topic, many thanks to Dr. Lindzen for his well-reasoned article. And to Anthony for posting this, along with the recent articles here by Eschenbach and Meier. Together, they present an excellent and lucid outline of the major issues involved, free of exaggerations, vitriol and ad hominem sniping.

Dave F
April 9, 2010 9:49 pm

Anu (21:15:11) :
Are you Joe West? The strike zone is very small and changes frequently.
http://www.meteo.psu.edu/~mann/Mann/cv/cv.html
What is Mann’s current job? Is it… drumroll please… Professor of Meteorology? What is the big deal about that? Well, Lindzen may in fact teach the ‘Dynamics of the Atmosphere’ course at MIT, which would make him a professor of atmospheric science. MIT’s class schedules don’t have professors listed, so I can’t say for sure, but do you think Michael Mann teaches meteorology?
So, yeah, no cookies for you.

April 9, 2010 10:00 pm

DCC (21:45:07),
Don’t you understand the meaning of “relative”?
Being an apologist for the enormous waste of taxpayer dollars being thrown away on “global warming” is a major factor in our country’s slide into bankruptcy.

Doug S
April 9, 2010 10:20 pm

Thank you professor Lindzen for summarizing the situation so well. I hope you wont mind if I use some of the points you made in your oped when I submit an opinion to my local paper. This alarmist charade has gone on quite long enough. It’s time we all speak up and strongly rebuke the financial criminals who continue to perpetrate this scam on the hard working, honest people of the world.

April 9, 2010 10:32 pm

It strikes me that the most important number in Lindzen’s essay is getting the least attention:
” the greenhouse forcing from manmade gases is already about 86 percent of what one expects from a doubling of carbon dioxide”
Here is the fatal flaw in the warmist argument. Though CO2 has increased only 38% from the pre-industrial age (from 280 ppm to 380 ppm) the physics upon which AGW rely require that the effect is logarithmic while the increase in cooling due to any increase in temperature rises exponentially. As a consequence, 86% of the effect of doubling CO2 from 280 ppm to 560 ppm IS ALREADY HAPPENING. Further, even if current rates of fossil fule consumption continue, and NO off setting increases from increased plant growth or ocean absorption appear, it will take OVER 100 years to get from the theoretical current 3.2 w/m2 to 3.7 w/m2 at 560 ppm. Given ANOTHER 100 years of the same production gets us to PERHAPS 3.8 w/m2 and the amount of temperature increase per watt DIMINISHING every step of the way.
So what we are arguing about is the validity of a theory (CO2 doubling causes an extra 3.7 w/m2 of climate forcing) that ITSELF shows that 86% of what ever bad is going to happen IS ALREADY HAPPENING and that that the next TWO CENTURIES of production at current rates in a worst case scenario only increase the effect from 86% (of 3.7 w/m2) to 101%.
I accept the theory of CO2 forcing in full, because the theory itself shows that any damage done is already done, and any additional CO2 is INSIGNIFICANT in that context for CENTURIES.
That we continue to pour money into researching a theory which defeats its own premise is bizarre. That the predicted results of CO2 increase fail to appear in concert with the theoretical forcing effects, which are theoretically diminishing ought to end that avenue of investigation on those merits alone.

Dave F
April 9, 2010 10:46 pm

http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~wsoon/ArmstrongGreenSoon08-Anatomy-d/EssexMcKitrickAndresen07-globalT_JNET2007.pdf
“Moreover, it hardly needs stating that
the Earth does not have just one temperature. It is not in global thermodynamic
equilibrium – neither within itself nor with its surroundings.”
“Statistics cannot stand in
as a replacement for the missing physics because data alone are context-free.”
“The problem can be (and has been) happily
ignored in the name of the empirical study of climate. But nature is not
obliged to respect our statistical conventions and conceptual shortcuts.”

Dave F
April 9, 2010 10:53 pm

davidmhoffer (22:32:34) :
Not really, that could just mean the effect was underestimated, which is not really a fatal flaw at all.

DCC
April 9, 2010 11:02 pm

Mike (19:53:31) :”Lindzen’s column appeared in the student newspaper where I teach. Two letters to the Editor where published in response. The first is mine.”
But Mike, those comments add absolutely zero to the discussion. Yours simply appeals to authority, asserts that science is determined by consensus, and proceeds with foolish ad hominem claims. As a math professor, have you even bothered to verify McIntyre’s work? If so, does it give you any pause? You end by telling students to read realclimate.org. May I translate? “Close your mind to new ideas and take the word of the anointed.”
Professor Gray’s letter simply shows a complete failure to understand the debate. In fact, he doesn’t seem to understand what Lindzen said. He should probably review his notes on speech communication. He first accuses Lindzen of falsely accusing AGW scientists of venal motives, then accuses Lindzen of being a shill for the oil inustry! After one final ad hominem, he makes a really ludicrous statement: “And I call upon the DE and the SIUC community to make our Voices page a place for OUR voices — not reprints of shills for the fossil fuel industry.” May I translate? “There is no room for dissenting opinions on this campus. Just read and regurgitate what you are being taught”
If your arguments were not so ludicrous, I might feel sorry for you both. Please do not tell us what school or university you people inhabit. It would be very bad publicity for the campus.

mbabbitt
April 9, 2010 11:03 pm

Steve Jones (15:34:24) :
“We HAVE become quite obsessive about such statistical pinhead angels. Would I prefer that the world’s temperature plunge and billions die? No, never.”
I know what you mean about watching too closely the rise and fall of temperatures and ice extents and hoping that it gets cooler just so that any warming can’t be used in the CAGW propaganda. It’s crazy. A slightly warmer planet would be better and be evidence that we are not reverting to a new ice age. Now that would truly be a disaster to most life on our world. We have let the CAGW crowd define our defense: cooler needs to be happening or else we will be deemed wrong. And it’s all nonsense fostered by people with overactive imaginations and pockets in love with funding; truly, a common sense killing combination.

DCC
April 9, 2010 11:14 pm

Smokey (22:00:40) : to “DCC (21:45:07),
Smokey said “Don’t you understand the meaning of “relative”?
Being an apologist for the enormous waste of taxpayer dollars being thrown away on “global warming” is a major factor in our country’s slide into bankruptcy.”
Smokey, do you understand the concept of discussion? I asserted nothing about the value of research. Nor did I in any way act as an apologist for anything or anybody. I simply asked Dave Wendt what figure he was using for the amount of money spent so far on climate research. You jumped in with an off-topic answer about cap and trade and I pointed that out. Where did you come up with this new ridiculous question?
My original question remains unanswered. You may now return you to your home planet.

April 9, 2010 11:21 pm

Dave F (22:53:23) :
davidmhoffer (22:32:34) :
Not really, that could just mean the effect was underestimated, which is not really a fatal flaw at all.>>
OK, if the effect (3.7 w/m2 for CO2 doubling) was understimated then:
1) 86% of the effects are still in play
2) the experienced results are negligible
3) any additional CO2 at similar rates in isnignificant
Or, if the effects was OVER estimated
1) 86% off the effects are still in play
2) the experienced results are negligible
3) and additional CO2 at similar rates is insignificant
Which insifgnificant version of a wrong estimate would you like to work with? The only way CO2 becomes significant is be challenging the logarithmic nature of CO2 forcing, and/or the exponential rise in cooling response due to temperature increase. Good like challenging either of those.

Dave F
April 9, 2010 11:35 pm

davidmhoffer (23:21:51) :
I am sorry, but, huh?
I think I understand what you are trying to say, but I don’t want to put words in your mouth. You are saying that because we have hit 86% of the predicted warming for a doubling in CO2, the Keeling curve is exhausted, and we should expect no more warming from added CO2?
I was saying it is possible that the feedbacks are worse than anticipated, which I also doubt, but the fact that we have experienced 86% of calculated effects proves nothing one way or another.

anna v
April 9, 2010 11:58 pm

Re: Al Gored (Apr 9 15:35),
Heraclitus, a pre-Socratic philosopher of the Ionian coast.
“Ta panta rei” meaning “everything flows”
and the classic example of ” one can never cross the same river” ( it is not the same water).

April 9, 2010 11:58 pm

The 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….
Yes, and SOI has just shot through the neutral line for the first time in 6 months.
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/

Roger Carr
April 10, 2010 12:03 am

bubbagyro (16:24:45) : Maybe I or someone should write a book called “Broken Models”.

Start small, bubbagyro. Begin with Broken Spring

Rhys Jaggar
April 10, 2010 12:15 am

On this day, Prof. Lindzen, the Cardinals of Truth, Honour and Integrity, PWC, McKinsey and Imperial College printed a report on how Europe might look with a totally renewable energy portfolio. Report to be found by Geoffrey Lean in the Daily Telegraph.
Note:
1. The implication of an integrated European ‘supergrid’. Which is a justification for the newly created and totally unelected EU state.
2. The positioning of the former oilman’s front gunner, McKinsey’s in the renewable energy space.
3. The focus on energy supply, not climate change.
Once McKinsey and PWC are writing this, you know that the behind-the-scenes guys no longer think plugging ‘global warming’ is necessary to promote green energy. They realise that at some stage oil will either run out or get so scarce that other energy sources will be needed.
Don’t see South America, Africa, China or India abandoning coal just yet…….

Al Gored
April 10, 2010 12:32 am

HaroldW (21:48:55) wrote: “Al Gored (15:35:12) : “Change is the only constant, as some old Greek (Herodutus?) once said.”
Oh, I know it’s nitpicking, but somehow I’m bothered by this.
Heraclitus said that (or something close to it). Herodotus was a historian.”
—-
Thanks HaroldW. I’m a nitpicker too but just couldn’t recall when I was writing that.
But wouldn’t a historian like Herodotus also recognize that universal truth?

Richard S Courtney
April 10, 2010 12:34 am

Anu (16:51:16) :
You say:
“It’s no secret that meteorologists and geologists are the scientists that least agree with climate scientists about global warming:”
Yes, and the reason is that “meteorologists and geologists” know much, much more about the mechanisms of the atmosphere and its variations over time than the collection of substandard computer modellers and incompetent statisticians who call themselves ‘climatologists’.
Your suggestion that Lindzen is not a credible expert on climate is risible. [snip]
Richard

Dodgy Geezer
April 10, 2010 12:37 am

@Al Gored
“…Change is the only constant, as some old Greek (Herodutus?) once said.”
Heraclitus. Herodutus was the historian.
Mind you, I still stand amazed at the sheer power of thought which enabled the Greeks to develop Atomic Theory from simple logical deduction. If they had embraced the experimental method as well, what couldn’t they have done?
Perhaps they had some political equivalent of Gore and Hansen, raising the fear that all this Pythogorean mucking about with numbers was going to cause the end of the world – probably through earthquakes and volcanos. Look at what happened to the Minoans – we must all pay more taxes…

Dave Wendt
April 10, 2010 12:57 am

DCC (23:14:27) :
I simply asked Dave Wendt what figure he was using for the amount of money spent so far on climate research. ..My original question remains unanswered.
Sorry for the delay, I was on Pokerstars playing a tournament. When I first did the calculation over a year ago, I came up with a slightly smaller number than you did, about 130 billion as I recall. I was working from an article that suggested the US alone had spent $80-100 billion on climate related research. Admittedly a good portion of that was alternative energy money ratholed on mostly useless windmills and such, but given the apparently small number of actual climatologists involved, the remainder still left enough for a great deal of cash to provide lucrative incentives to support the prevailing catastrophe meme. I don’t know what share of these people are actually working in good faith versus those that are in it for personal, professional, or financial aggrandizement, but the way this topic has been argued and propagandized leads me to suspect that the latter outnumber the former.

April 10, 2010 12:59 am

Mike (19:53:31) :

Lindzen’s column appeared in the student newspaper where I teach. Two letters to the Editor where published in response. The first is mine.
http://dailyegyptian.com/2010/04/06/letter-climate-info-should-come-from-legitimate-sources/

And from your letter:

Probably the best source for legitimate information on climate change is http://www.realclimate.org, a Web site run by a group of leading climatologists.

Just goes to prove how little you see beyond a blinkered world view, or how prejudiced (as that site is) you really are (I am not sure which).

Pete H
April 10, 2010 1:38 am

anon (19:35:50) :
:Isn’t Dr Michael Mann a Professor of Meteorology at Penn State in the Earth and Mineral Science Administrative Area of the Meteorology Department? Can we now safely ignore his blathering since he’s merely a meteorologist?
Maybe S.M. thinks Mann ain’t to good in the Statistics field either!