[note, footnote links will only work if you go to original article ~ ctm]
The following is Patrick Frank’s controversial article challenging data and climate models on global warming. Patrick Frank is a Ph.D. chemist with more than 50 peer-reviewed articles. He has previously published in Skeptic on the noble savage myth, as well as in Theology and Science on the designer universe myth and in Free Inquiry, with Thomas H. Ray, on the science is philosophy myth.A Climate of Belief
The claim that anthropogenic CO2 is responsible for the current warming of Earth climate is scientifically insupportable because climate models are unreliable
by Patrick Frank
“He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.”
— John McCarthy1
“The latest scientific data confirm that the earth’s climate is rapidly changing. … The cause? A thickening layer of carbon dioxide pollution, mostly from power plants and automobiles, that traps heat in the atmosphere. … [A]verage U.S. temperatures could rise another 3 to 9 degrees by the end of the century … Sea levels will rise, [and h]eat waves will be more frequent and more intense. Droughts and wildfires will occur more often. Disease-carrying mosquitoes will expand their range. And species will be pushed to extinction.”
So says the National Resources Defense Council,2 with agreement by the Sierra Club,3 Greenpeace,4 National Geographic,5 the US National Academy of Sciences,6 and the US Congressional House leadership.7 Concurrent views are widespread,8 as a visit to the internet or any good bookstore will verify.
Since at least the 1995 Second Assessment Report, the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has been making increasingly assured statements that human-produced carbon dioxide (CO2) is influencing the climate, and is the chief cause of the global warming trend in evidence since about 1900. The current level of atmospheric CO2 is about 390 parts per million by volume (ppmv), or 0.039% by volume of the atmosphere, and in 1900 was about 295 ppmv. If the 20th century trend continues unabated, by about 2050 atmospheric CO2 will have doubled to about 600 ppmv. This is the basis for the usual “doubled CO2” scenario.
Doubled CO2 is a bench-mark for climate scientists in evaluating greenhouse warming. Earth receives about 342 watts per square meter (W/m2) of incoming solar energy, and all of this energy eventually finds its way back out into space. However, CO2 and other greenhouse gasses, most notably water vapor, absorb some of the outgoing energy and warm the atmosphere. This is the greenhouse effect. Without it Earth’s average surface temperature would be a frigid -19°C (-2.2 F). With it, the surface warms to about +14°C (57 F) overall, making Earth habitable.9
With more CO2, more outgoing radiant energy is absorbed, changing the thermal dynamics of the atmosphere. All the extra greenhouse gasses that have entered the atmosphere since 1900, including CO2, equate to an extra 2.7 W/m2 of energy absorption by the atmosphere.10 This is the worrisome greenhouse effect.
On February 2, 2007, the IPCC released the Working Group I (WGI) “Summary for Policymakers” (SPM) report on Earth climate,11 which is an executive summary of the science supporting the predictions quoted above. The full “Fourth Assessment Report” (4AR) came out in sections during 2007.

Figure 1 shows a black-and-white version of the “Special Report on Emission Scenarios” (SRES) Figure SPM-5 of the IPCC WGI, which projects the future of global average temperatures. These projections12 were made using General Circulation Models (GCMs). GCMs are computer programs that calculate the physical manifestations of climate, including how Earth systems such as the world oceans, the polar ice caps, and the atmosphere dynamically respond to various forcings. Forcings and feedbacks are the elements that inject or mediate energy flux in the climate system, and include sunlight, ocean currents, storms and clouds, the albedo (the reflectivity of Earth), and the greenhouse gasses water vapor, CO2, methane, nitrous oxide, and chlorofluorocarbons.
In Figure 1, the B1 scenario assumes that atmospheric CO2 will level off at 600 ppmv, A1B assumes growth to 850 ppmv, and A2 reaches its maximum at a pessimistic 1250 ppmv. The “Year 2000” scenario optimistically reflects CO2stabilized at 390 ppmv.
The original caption to Figure SPM-5 said, in part: “Solid lines are multi-model global averages of surface warming (relative to 1980–99) for the scenarios A2, A1B and B1, shown as continuations of the 20th century simulations. Shading denotes the plus/minus one standard deviation range of individual model annual averages.”
Well and good. We look at the projections and see that the error bars don’t make much difference. No matter what, global temperatures are predicted to increase significantly during the 21st century. A little cloud of despair impinges with the realization that there is no way at all that atmospheric CO2 will be stabilized at its present level. The Year 2000 scenario is there only for contrast. The science is in order here, and we can look forward to a 21st century of human-made climate warming, with all its attendant dangers. Are you feeling guilty yet?
But maybe things aren’t so cut-and-dried. In 2001, a paper published in the journal Climate Research13 candidly discussed uncertainties in the physics that informs the GCMs. This paper was very controversial and incited a debate.14But for all that was controverted, the basic physical uncertainties were not disputed. It turns out that uncertainties in the energetic responses of Earth climate systems are more than 10 times larger than the entire energetic effect of increased CO2.15 If the uncertainty is larger than the effect, the effect itself becomes moot. If the effect itself is debatable, then what is the IPCC talking about? And from where comes the certainty of a large CO2 impact on climate?
With that in mind, look again at the IPCC Legend for Figure SPM-5. It reports that the “[s]hading denotes the plus/minus one standard deviation range of individual model annual averages.” The lines on the Figure represent averages of the annual GCM projected temperatures. The Legend is saying that 68% of the time (one standard deviation), the projections of the models will fall within the shaded regions. It’s not saying that the shaded regions display the physical reliability of the projections. The shaded regions aren’t telling us anything about the physical uncertainty of temperature predictions. They’re telling us about the numerical instability of climate models. The message of the Legend is that climate models won’t produce exactly the same trend twice. They’re just guaranteed to get within the shadings 68% of the time.16
This point is so important that it bears a simple illustration to make it very clear. Suppose I had a computer model of common arithmetic that said 2+2=5±0.1. Every time I ran the model, there was a 68% chance that the result of 2+2 would be within 0.1 unit of 5. My shaded region would be ±0.1 unit wide. If 40 research groups had 40 slightly different computer models of arithmetic that gave similar results, we could all congratulate ourselves on a consensus. Suppose that after much work, we improved our models so that they gave 2+2=5±0.01. We could then claim our models were 10 times better than before. But they’d all be exactly as wrong as before, too, because exact arithmetic proves that 2+2=4. This example illustrates the critical difference between precision and accuracy.
In Figure 1, the shaded regions are about the calculational imprecision of the computer models. They are not about the physical accuracy of the projections. They don’t tell us anything about physical accuracy. But physical accuracy — reliability — is always what we’re looking for in a prediction about future real-world events. It’s on this point — the physical accuracy of General Circulation Models — that the rest of this article will dwell.
h/t dbstealey
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http://www.skepticalscience.com/argument.php?a=13
Other results successfully predicted and reconstructed by models
•Cooling of the stratosphere
•Warming of the lower, mid, and upper troposphere
•Warming of ocean surface waters (Cane 1997)
•Trends in ocean heat content (Hansen 2005)
•An energy imbalance between incoming sunlight and outgoing infrared radiation (Hansen 2005)
•Amplification of warming trends in the Arctic region (NASA observations)
—————————————————————————————
There is no mention of where the models are successful. Here is a list of where the models have been successful. The premise that the models just can’t do anything right just isn’t true. They are very powerful tools for understanding the climate.
http://www.grist.org/article/climate-models-are-unproven/
models predict that surface warming should be accompanied by cooling of the stratosphere, and this has indeed been observed;
models have long predicted warming of the lower, mid, and upper troposphere, even while satellite readings seemed to disagree — but it turns out the satellite analysis was
full of errors and on correction, this warming has been observed;
models predict warming of ocean surface waters, as is now observed;
models predict an energy imbalance between incoming sunlight and outgoing infrared radiation, which has been detected;
models predict sharp and short-lived cooling of a few tenths of a degree in the event of large volcanic eruptions, and Mount Pinatubo confirmed this;
models predict an amplification of warming trends in the Arctic region, and this is indeed happening;
and finally, to get back to where we started, models predict continuing and accelerating warming of the surface, and so far they are correct.
Roald says:
June 23, 2010 at 6:50 am
“…The models are the best things we have and we can’t wait 100 years to see if they’re accurate or not….”
Oh yes we can, especially in lieu of multi-trillion dollar “fixes” and so forth. I don’t see any decade-long “flat spots” in those model traces, do you? Flat spots like the last dozen years? Flat spots (or even declining temperatures) that have Kevin Trenberth screaming: “Where has the global warming gone?” Evidently, your great models have a glitch. They predict a lock-step CO2/Temp relation. Which, apparently, isn’t happening.
Now, I hypothesize there are two reasons for that last observation. First, CO2 has minimal effect on Global Temperature. Second, all the “important” thermometers have finally migrated to airports and therefore the “temperature database” is saturated. These readings are so hot that the globe will have to glow in order to further affect the data.
The only other approach left to your side to show increasing temperature is to release HadCrut 4.0 or GISS 3.3 or whatever; computers and undisclosed “adjustments” can calculate things where no data exist – like the brutal warming trend in Darwin or in New Zealand (wait! that just seems to have been pulled out of some now-disgraced “scientist”‘s bottom. Well, he’s no longer around, so the AGW crowd will have to scramble around a bit).
“”” “The latest scientific data confirm that the earth’s climate is rapidly changing. … The cause? A thickening layer of carbon dioxide pollution, mostly from power plants and automobiles, that traps heat in the atmosphere. … “””
Now there’s an accurate scientific image for you:- “a thickening layer of carbon dioxide pollution…”
Well that thickening layer of carbon dioxide pollution doesn’t look like your average layer of pollution. If you happen to be standing talking to one of those CO2 pollutant molecules, and you want to get a second opinion; well you will have to search about 13.7 layers of surrounding pristine Gaia approved ordinary air, to even find anothe one to converse with. It’s like walking down Broadway at 12 noon and trying to find a guy wearing the same brand of underwear you have on. Just too many ordinary folks blocking the view for you to be able to find another like yourself.
A “Thickening layer of carbon dioxide pollution”; my foot ! People who exaggerate like that are to be pitied; they are unable to accurately describe anything they may have actually witnessed; too busy searching for adjectival superlatives to disguise their lack of communicative skills.
Dave Springer says:
June 23, 2010 at 10:43 am
“…The problem is that the measured (if you can trust the accuracy of the global temperature record which is a matter of great doubt in its magnitude) global average temperture increase is much greater than 280ppm to 380ppm can account for….
I think you have hit it on the head. The “adjusted temperatures” of HadCRUT and GISS that say we’ve been warming so much are simply implausible. I have numerous issues with their approaches, which I think are improper. But I also think they – particularly GISS – are cheating. I have no faith in their “good faith”.
“…Not being a person to argue with reality it’s global cooling that has me worried. There’s a tipping point alright. A tipping point that plunges the planet into ice ages and the current interglacial period is historically long in tooth….”
Again, I agree. Whatever causes the glacial eras has been pretty regular over a few million years. If GEOCARB and other sources are to be believed, we haven’t much more CO2 in the atmosphere than we had in the last number of glaciations. The continents have moved only a few miles. Nothing much is different – except maybe the amount of blacktop and concrete exposed to the sun. The Sun doesn’t seem to be behaving out of sorts. So why shouldn’t we consider the advent of a new glacial epoch?
Smokey
Perhaps Bob Dylan was thinking about the LIA when he wrote “I been down so long it looks like up to me”
Jeff Green,
Although models have improved somewhat, they are still NFG. No GCMs were able to predict the past eleven years of cooling, not one of them.
Selecting only those parameters that the models got right by chance simply amounts to the Texas Sharpshooter fallacy: shoot holes in a barn door, then draw a bullseye around them. The important parameter — global warming — is still beyond the grasp of GCMs, despite the $Billions spent on them.
Defenders of James Hansen use the same Texas Sharpshooter fallacy when trying to defend his Scenario A [most likely], Scenario B, and Scenario C predictions.
Those prognostications covered such a wide temperature range that it would be very surprising if he missed them all. But in the event, he did miss them all. Every one of them.
You don’t need a GCM to calculate that increasing atmospheric CO2 will warm the earth’s surface. There are plenty of examples on the web. Here’s one.
No GCM can predict short-term fluctuations, but a good number include 11+ years of cooling at some stage of the output, inlcuding for the current period. Some even have two decades worth of cooling at some point towards 2100 – and these finish with significantly higher temps at the end of the century.
Short-term cooling is not unanticipated in a long-term warming world.
Barry,
So in other words, GCMs are still NFG.
Document one climate model that can predict today’s climate, even by inputting all prior available data.
If they could do that, the operators could make a killing in the ag futures market.
Ah…GCMs…time to check to see if GISS has even started any thing that approaches a comprehensive documentation of Model E…
http://www.giss.nasa.gov/tools/modelE/
Wish they could write down what differential equations they’re solving…how about the numerical discretizations? Stability analyses? Validation and verification cases?
Nope. Same old hindcasted garbage. Yet they STILL receive millions in stimulus and other funds to do their “research”.
Folks, it’s all about the climate ca$h….
All the models are unable to predict recent warming without taking rising CO2 levels into account.
Yes, it is rather pitiful, isn’t it? Especially when it also turns out that none of these same models’ fig.1 21st century projections have been correct?
Roald says:
“And even without GCMs we know we have a problem with global warming.”
I’ll bite. What is the problem?
Best,
Frank
There’s no profit in burning straw men.
You said GCMs didn’t predict the current cooling. It’s matched by some, but that’s a fluke. GCMs cannot predict short-term fluctuations, and to expect them to do so is to fundamentally misunderstand their purpose and capability. The point is, short-term cooling events are a normal product of GCMs. Cooling for 11+ years is not abnormal.
(Perhaps you’re not aware that the global temp trend shows warming since 1998. You have to cherry-pick 2002 as your start date to get a cooling trend. But then, if you start at 2006, warming begins again. There’s so many wrong assumptions in your argument, it’s not really worthwhile responding, but here it is anyway…)
barry says:
June 23, 2010 at 7:22 pm
“…There’s no profit in burning straw men….”
OK, Barry, we won’t burn you. Now run along!
I’m really honored to have my article featured on WUWT. My real thanks to Charles-the-moderator for choosing to post it, and bringing ACoB to the attention of the millions of readers attracted by WUWT.
For those interested, the Supporting Information document can be found here (892 kb pdf download). All the analysis supporting the article can be found there.
I’d also like to acknowledge the publisher of Skeptic, Michael Shermer, in this forum. Mr. Shermer had already published his “Flipping Point” piece in SciAm, and so was on public record in support of AGW. Nevertheless, he published a skeptical article anyway, which testifies a true commitment to the principle of honest critical debate. His is a professional integrity that is sorely absent from Michael Mann and Phil Jones as apparently revealed in the CRU emails, not to mention the sorry lack of integrity represented by the obstructions to publication experienced by Steve McIntyre and Ross McKitrick.
I was asked several times why I didn’t publish in the peer-reviewed scientific literature. There were several reasons. First, I didn’t think a proper science journal would be interested in a manuscript dedicated purely to an uncertainty analysis. More importantly, though, I’d encountered many AGW-critical papers that got lost in the scientific literature. They seemed to be ignored by the majority of climate scientists, in that the results never appeared to impact later studies. They were also ignored by the media. I wanted to avoid that fate by publishing in a more public-oriented magazine.
I also wanted to write an article with more widely ranging discussion than the usual more focused scientific paper allows. Finally, Skeptic Magazine, specifically, has a particularly intelligent readership that includes scientists and non-scientists. A widely distributed and perceptive audience like that would help ensure that the article would not be “disappeared,” like so many other AGW-critical articles have been.
So that’s the story. The manuscript was reviewed prior to submission by all the scientists named in the Acknowledgments. I express here my continued gratitude to them. Mr. Shermer also recruited two climate scientists who reviewed the manuscript for him after submission but before publication. I was required to respond to their reviews. And, of course, the article was extensively and critically reviewed on the web after publication. It’s still standing. 🙂
The high number and low quality of warmist posts in this thread show that they are desperately afraid of the Frank article. The use of shoddy stochastic run variation ranges in lieu of actual error bars clearly shows that the GCM publishers have abandoned Science. It’s…it’s…it’s a travesty.
(with apologies to the esteemed Kevin Trenberth.)
BillD says: “Most large scale models have stochastic elements that simulate natural variability. This has nothing to do with “numerical instability” but rather is a way of taking into account natural variation. The model is then run many times to get a measure of the expected level of natural variation plus the overall trend. The standard variation is a measure of natural variability.”
No, the standard deviation here is a measure of the accumulated simulated natural variability. Nevertheless, the resulting grey range shown is deceptive and is orders of magnitude less than the true physical error of the models. Cloud variability is only one source of error; there are others. Note, too, that estimating “global temperature” is next to irrelevant, given that (1) the oceans are 1200 times as great a heat sink as the atmosphere, (2) global heat balance is of greater importance than temperature, and (3) our temperature measurement network is extremely shoddy and has been compromised by destruction and manipulation of data.
well where will we get our next grant from ,when will we wake up to all this crap
Andrew30 says:June 23, 2010 at 3:53 pm
Roald says: June 23, 2010 at 3:04 pm
“You are also putting words in my mouth.”
No just reading and quoting exactly what you wrote.
…
“is warmer than January”. You must have accidentally used the absolute term, is; when you meant something else.
….
I should have assumed that you really did not have a complete and expressive vocabulary and cut you some slack. If this is a recurring problem, I would suggest you proofread or get someone you trust to proofread your comments prior to posting.
In future when reading your comments I will assume that they are a private coded conversation between your mind and your eyes and that the comments are not really meant to be interpreted as they have been written.”
I see that you don’t like to respond to my arguments and prefer to resort to sophistry and ad hominems. At least I know now where I stand with you.
Has Obama really the intentions as explained in this article? See http://icecap.us/images/uploads/The_Obamacane.pdf
As far as I can determine increased CO2 and increasing global average temperature, especially when the greatest warming is taking place in the coldest regions, is a blessing not a curse.
So what’s the problem you think we all know about?
@ur momisugly Pat Frank
I’m not going to join a Shermer ass-kissing party. This is simply a case of an exception which proves the rule. The rule being that Shermer is a card carrying member of the politically correct bandwagon science brigade. Snide and comtemptible. Wouldn’t know real science if it bit him on the butt.
Negative feedbacks don’t necessarily work both ways. In the case of clouds that would be true but they don’t seem to reverse enough to stop ice ages from happening. In the past these ice ages have been catastrophic and are termed “Snowball Earth”. Accumulating Ice and snow have a positive feedback that evidently is greater than a cloudless sky can counteract. Doubtless the lower humidity is also a positive feedback. Ironically CO2 is believed to be what came to the rescue in snowball earth episodes. Lacking an unfrozen ocean surface or abundant plant life to absorb atmospheric CO2 volcanic eruptions over the course of millions of years gradually built up enough of it in the atmosphere to thaw the planet through greenhouse effect. Buildup of black carbon (soot, which floats on snow surface melt and thus gets darker and darker with each passing year) belched out by volcanos was also likely a main contributing factor to an eventual recovery from snowball earth episodes.
I’m not advocating a global cooling scare such as what happened in the 1970’s. In today’s information overloaded world that scare would have been much much bigger likely just as big as today’s warming hysteria. What I’m advocating is a sane reaction based on facts and an acknowledgement of historic climate behavior. There has never been a runaway greenhouse in the earth’s past despite atmospheric CO2 during most of the earth’s history being at least several times present levels and at time over 10 times present levels. On the other hand there have been catastrophic glaciations which turned the earth into one big snowball for millions of years at a stretch and in the most recent geologic epoch a cyclic series of lesser glaciations lasting for roughly 100,000 years punctuated by interglacial period of roughly 10,000 years. We are right around 10,000 years into an interglacial period right now.
See here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ice_Age_Temperature.png
If there is anything to worry about it’s global cooling not global warming. Although I don’t believe we have any immediate concerns about an approaching ice age as the cooling side of the interglacial ramp is a lot less steep than the warming side of it.
RR Kampen says at 9:57 am [ … ]
If it weren’t for your strawman, you’d have nothing.