Peer Reviewed Study: CO2 warming effect cut by 65%, climate sensitivity impossible to accurately determine

Atmosphere composition diagram - click to enlarge

Estimated CO2 Warming Cut By 65%

Submitted by Doug L. Hoffman, Resilient Earth via ICECAP

Any competent researcher involved with the science behind climate change will admit that CO2 is far from the only influence on global climate. It has long been known that short-lived greenhouse gases and black-carbon aerosols have contributed to past climate warming. Though the IPCC and their fellow travelers have tried to place the blame for global warming on human CO2 emissions, decades of lies and erroneous predictions have discredited that notion. For anyone still clinging to the CO2 hypothesis, a short perspective article on the uncertainty surrounding climate change in Nature Geoscience has put paid to that notion. It states that not only did other factors account for 65% of the radiative forcing usually attributed to carbon dioxide, but that it is impossible to accurately determine climate sensitivity given the state of climate science.

In “Short-lived uncertainty?” Joyce E. Penner et al. note that several short-lived atmospheric pollutants – such as methane, tropospheric ozone precursors and black-carbon aerosols – contribute to atmospheric warming while others, particularly scattering aerosols, cool the climate. Figuring out exactly how great the impacts of these other forcings are can radically change the way historical climate change is interpreted. So great is the uncertainty that the IPCC’s future climate predictions, which are all based on biased assumptions about climate sensitivity, are most certainly untrustworthy. As stated in the article:

It is at present impossible to accurately determine climate sensitivity (defined as the equilibrium warming in response to a doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations) from past records, partly because carbon dioxide and short-lived species have increased together over the industrial era. Warming over the past 100 years is consistent with high climate sensitivity to atmospheric carbon dioxide combined with a large cooling effect from short-lived aerosol pollutants, but it could equally be attributed to a low climate sensitivity coupled with a small effect from aerosols. These two possibilities lead to very different projections for future climate change.

All truthful climate researchers know these facts, yet publicly the party line is that catastrophic changes are in the offing and CO2 emissions are to blame. The perspective authors argue that only by significantly changing the amounts of these other pollutants and carefully measuring the impact on global climate over a period of several decades will science be able to figure out what is going on. “Following this strategy, we will then be able to disentangle the warming and cooling contributions from carbon dioxide and short-lived pollutants, hence placing much tighter constraints on climate sensitivity, and therefore on future climate projections,” they state. See chart below, enlarged here.

image

And they said it was all carbon dioxide’s fault.

Most of the factors under discussion have relatively short lifetimes in the atmosphere, several less than two months. We do not know how the relative influences of these various substances (referred to by climate scientists as “species”) may change in a warming climate. It is also not clear how to reduce short-lived species under present conditions but the uncertainties in atmospheric chemistry and physics must be resolved if Earth’s environmental system is to be understood. Again quoting from the paper:

Of the short-lived species, methane, tropospheric ozone and black carbon are key contributors to global warming, augmenting the radiative forcing of carbon dioxide by 65%. Others – such as sulphate, nitrate and organic aerosols – cause a negative radiative forcing, offsetting a fraction of the warming owing to carbon dioxide. Yet other short-lived species, such as nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide and volatile organic compounds, can modify the abundance of both the climate-warming and climate-cooling compounds, and thereby affect climate change.

Quantifying the combined impact of short-lived species on Earth’s radiative forcing is complex. Short-lived pollutants – particularly those with an atmospheric lifetime of less than two months – tend to be poorly mixed, and concentrate close to their sources. This uneven distribution, combined with physical and chemical heterogeneities in the atmosphere, means that the impact of short-lived species on radiative forcing can vary by more than a factor of ten with location or time of emission. The situation is further complicated by nonlinear chemical reactions between short-lived species in polluted areas, as well as by the interactions of clouds with aerosols and ozone. These processes add further uncertainty to the estimates of radiative forcing.

Unfortunately, climate models neither accurately deal with local effects of these pollutants nor are the complex interactions among these substances understood. That not withstanding, the report is clear – CO2 does not account for even a majority of the warming seen over the past century. If other species accounted for 65% of historical warming that leaves only 35% for carbon dioxide. This, strangely enough, is in line with calculations based strictly on known atmospheric physics, calculations not biased by the IPCC’s hypothetical and bastardized “feedbacks.”

Of course, the real reason for the feedbacks was to allow almost all global warming to be attributed to CO2. This, in turn, would open the door for radical social and economic policies, allowing them to be enacted in the name of saving the world from global warming. The plain truth is that even climate scientists know that the IPCC case was a political witch’s brew concocted by UN bureaucrats, NGOs, grant money hungry scientists and fringe activists.

Now, after three decades of sturm und drang over climate policy, the truth has emerged – scientists have no idea of how Earth’s climate will change in the future because they don’t know why it changed in the past. Furthermore, it will take decades of additional study to gain a useful understand climate change. To do this, climate scientists will need further funding. Too bad the climate science community squandered any public trust it may have had by trying to frighten people with a lie.

Be safe, enjoy the interglacial and stay skeptical. Read full post here.

Icecap Note: Whatsmore, this totally ignores the other external and internal global factors like solar, ocean multidecadal cycles related to variations in the thermohaline circulation or ocean gyres.

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Here is the paper at Nature Geosciences:

Short-lived uncertainty?

Joyce E. Penner1, Michael J. Prather2, Ivar S. A. Isaksen3,4, Jan S. Fuglestvedt4, Zbigniew Klimont5 & David S. Stevenson6

  1. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-2143, USA
  2. University of California, Irvine, California 92697, USA
  3. University of Oslo, PO Box 1022, Blindern, 0315 Oslo, Norway
  4. Center for International Climate and Environmental Research (CICERO) Oslo, PO Box 1129 Blindern, 0318 Oslo, Norway
  5. International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), Schlossplatz 1, 2361 Laxenburg, Austria
  6. School of Geosciences, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JN, UK.

Correspondence to: Joyce E. Penner1 e-mail: penner@umich.edu


Abstract

Short-lived greenhouse gases and black-carbon aerosols have contributed to past climate warming. Curbing their emissions and quantifying the forcing by all short-lived components could both mitigate climate change in the short term and help to refine projections of global warming.


Earth’s climate can only be stabilized by bringing carbon dioxide emissions under control in the twenty-first century. But rolling back anthropogenic emissions of several short-lived atmospheric pollutants that lead to warming — such as methane, tropospheric ozone precursors and black-carbon aerosols — could significantly reduce the rate of climate warming over the next few decades1, 2, 3.

 

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markinaustin
October 12, 2010 11:41 am

ok…so the abstract works very hard to keep this within the current AGW orthodoxy. how can we get some quotes from the actual paper?

Jim Barker
October 12, 2010 11:41 am

It isn’t worse than we thought? 😉

JK
October 12, 2010 11:44 am

[Please provide a legitimate email address. ~dbs, mod.]

j.pickens
October 12, 2010 11:46 am

“Earth’s climate can only be stabilized by bringing carbon dioxide emissions under control in the twenty-first century.”
Gotta put that in there, even though the entire article appears to show how the CO2 menace has been vastly overstated.

Joe Crawford
October 12, 2010 11:47 am

It’s about time those yahoos admitted their ignorance. Please note that there is nothing wrong with ignorance, only incompetence, which by my definition is not admitting your own ignorance.

Theo Goodwin
October 12, 2010 11:47 am

I salute the authors of the paper for their genuine humility as scientists. I haven’t read the paper and do not know the details at this time, but the authors’ frank admission of what is not known is exactly what has been needed in debates on climate change. These authors are moving the discussion of climate change onto a scientific basis and away from the hysteria that has fed into IPCC reports and other efforts to influence policy decisions.

wsbriggs
October 12, 2010 11:48 am

It must just be coincidence that the other “species” are mostly of human origin. /sarc
I’m betting that this is just the start of a massive campaign of “It’s worse than we thought.” If it wasn’t, the real climate unknowns would have figured more prominently in the paper. This one came out of the chute spinning… <= rodeo term for those curious few

Ken Hall
October 12, 2010 11:48 am

About time that some real science was applied to climate research. I knew that with the massive influx of money going into climate research, that eventually some real scientists would apply their disciplined craft to climate and show clearly that CO2 is not the sole driver of climate change.

October 12, 2010 11:53 am

Very good article. The money quote:

Of course, the real reason for the feedbacks was to allow almost all global warming to be attributed to CO2. This, in turn, would open the door for radical social and economic policies, allowing them to be enacted in the name of saving the world from global warming. The plain truth is that even climate scientists know that the IPCC case was a political witch’s brew concocted by UN bureaucrats, NGOs, grant money hungry scientists and fringe activists.

CO2 is a minor player. It is too small to have a measurable effect on temperature. But taxing “carbon” is the easiest and most convenient way to transfer enormous wealth from individuals to governments, so they are forced to demonize a harmless trace gas essential to all life on Earth.

October 12, 2010 11:56 am

The reason the climate’s sensitivity to CO2 proves so elusive to find is simple: the climate has NO sensitivity to CO2.
As I was going up the stair
I met a man who wasn’t there.
He wasn’t there again today.
I wish to heck, he’d go away!

Colin from Mission B.C.
October 12, 2010 11:59 am

It’s worse than we th…..
Oh wait.

Djozar
October 12, 2010 12:06 pm

Well said Smokey,
One of the first factors that led me to my skepticism was the emphasis on CO2 to the exclusion of all other factors. Great article as well; too bad we won’t see it on the MSM.

rbateman
October 12, 2010 12:11 pm

Earth’s climate can only be stabilized by bringing carbon dioxide emissions under control in the twenty-first century. But rolling back anthropogenic emissions of several short-lived atmospheric pollutants that lead to warming — such as methane, tropospheric ozone precursors and black-carbon aerosols — could significantly reduce the rate of climate warming over the next few decades
Guesswork. Don’t know how it will play out in the future due to unknown why it changed in the past means a crap shoot.
Do I feel lucky about an attempt to cut back on the energy that sustains the world population?
No, I do not feel lucky about the chances of getting it right at the expense of world stability over a climate that appears to be beyond man’s ability to control.
The risk is unacceptably high and the gain tenuous at best.
Even if intially correct and it works, the climate can change once again, destroying both the temporary gain and collecting our technological infrastructure as payment.

Douglas DC
October 12, 2010 12:14 pm

As I have said before:”they have no idea…”

Steve Milesworthy
October 12, 2010 12:17 pm

If you check out the IPCC report you will see that the radiative forcing from species such as methane, NOx, halocarbons and black carbon do indeed add up to about 65% of the radiative forcing of CO2. This is not new.
Focussing on gases other than CO2 is also not new. Obviously methane, tropospheric ozone and NOx cannot be reduced to zero, but it may be possible to reduce them more easily than reducing CO2.

crosspatch
October 12, 2010 12:19 pm

I would say The Resilient Earth blog is one of my top 5 favorites (of which this one is as well).

bob
October 12, 2010 12:22 pm

So where are all the AGW folks with their emotional spin and never-say-die Hockey Stick horse hockey? The Mashey Mistake can’t be the only fun this week on the blogosphere.

Latimer Alder
October 12, 2010 12:24 pm

If this paper survives the firestorm of hatred that is no doubt being plotted deep in the bowels of Real Climate et al at this very moment, then it will prove to be as much of a game changer as Climategate.
For it attacks the very basis of climate alarmism and CO2 based ‘interventions’.
Previously ‘bad’ fuel sources become less so if alternative causes like soot and methane are shown or even suspected to make a big difference to climate. Western governments have bet the farm on C02 as the unequivocal bad guy …and will have to backtrack. The IPCC will fall yet further into disrepute. There are so many implications to be worked out.
Do we know if these guys reputations (and personalities) are robust enough to stand up to their imminent roasting by Mann et al? I very much hope so, as they may be the new leaders of sensible climate research…the generation to replace the discredited charlatans now in place.

JK
October 12, 2010 12:26 pm

[Please provide a legitimate email address. ~dbs, mod.]

Kate
October 12, 2010 12:31 pm

Someone believes in all this Globaloney:
Google invests in $5 billion wind farm project
Google is investing in an extensive network of deep-water transmission lines for future wind farms off the east coast of the USA.
The transmission lines, which could cost up to $5 billion over the next 10 years, would run as far as 20 miles offshore from Virginia to New Jersey. The initial phase of the project would be capable of delivering 2,000 megawatts of wind energy – enough to power about 500,000 homes.
Google, which will own more than a third of the project, has teamed up with other technology companies and investment firms. “This will have a dramatic impact on accessing offshore wind, and we think it’s one of the things that’s almost required to take advantage of all of that potential,” said Rick Needham, Google’s green business operations director.
Also buying into the project is investment firm Good Energies, Japanese industrial conglomerate Marubeni and Maryland transmission company Trans-Elect. Robert L. Mitchell, Trans-Elect CEO, said the first phase is expected to cost $1.8 billion and run 150 miles in federal waters from New Jersey to Delaware and be complete by early 2016. Google and Good Energies will each own 37.5% of the project. Marubeni will own 15%. A group led by Trans-Elect will own the remaining 10%, Mr Mitchell said.
Google hasn’t disclosed how much money the company has devoted to the project so far.
The US is only beginning to develop projects to tap strong wind currents blowing along the Atlantic Coast.
The network will tie into PJM’s electrical grid, which serves 13 states and Washington D.C. The energy is expected to cost several times more than conventional electricity, but Mr Needham said Google still sees offshore wind as an attractive a long-term investment.
In May, Google made its first direct investment in clean energy, buying a $38.8 million stake in two North Dakota wind farms. Google has also been trying to rely on renewable energy sources for its data centers, whose demands for power are increasing as the company sets up more computers in its bid to index all of the world’s online data.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/google/8059780/Google-invests-in-5-billion-wind-farm-project.html

Jimbo
October 12, 2010 1:00 pm

Further to the above does anyone remember this from December 2009?
Amplification of Global Warming by Carbon-Cycle Feedback Significantly Less Than Thought, Study Suggests
See also Nature

October 12, 2010 1:03 pm

I cannot believe that no mention is made about the increase in humidity that may have an effect and which seems to be happening on a worldwide scale (although I have no figures for this – can anyone help me out here?)
It is to be expected that water vapor would increase, as all of humanity’s energy- warming- and cooling processes produce water vapor. But most of all it is the increase in the building of shallow water reservoirs for irrigation and water consumption.
I noticed an evaporation rate of 2500 liters per week in my 50m2 swimming pool (clear blue skies, max temp. 31-34 C, water temp. 25-26 C)
1 mole water vapor (18g) releases 40.7 kJ when it condenses to water.(=rain)
I am thinking that perhaps 50% of that heat is lost to space, but the rest is directed to mother earth. So there is your most probable reason for global warming. If it continues and if it becomes a problem.
Note that when all that water vapor

Paul Deacon, Christchurch, New Zealand
October 12, 2010 1:06 pm

The paper appears to confirm what the blogosphere has known for years, which is that one of the weakest point of the AGW movement is its assumption of scientific certainty (never mind right/wrong).
There seems to be a thrust in the paper, however, towards government control of “pollutants” other than CO2 (methane, for example). And the argument seems to be so that we can play experiment with the planet:
“The perspective authors argue that only by significantly changing the amounts of these other pollutants and carefully measuring the impact on global climate over a period of several decades will science be able to figure out what is going on.”
Perhaps not a winning line with Joe Public.
All the best.

October 12, 2010 1:08 pm

For God’s sake, how many go’s do they need at this.
We had a paper co-authored by Gavin Schmidt saying that CO2 makes up 45% of the warming effect of GHGs. Now it’s 35%. By the time the cold phase of the ocean cycles fully kick in, they’ll be telling us um no, actually it cools the planet. When I think of the amount of times I’ve been called a liar, a moron, a d****r, etc, etc, it makes my blood boil.
If we go back to 1850, we find we’ve had 3 warm phases and 2 cold, with every indication that bang on cue, we’re going to have another cold phase. At the end of that, sometime in 2030, we’ll have a better idea of how much the planet has actually warmed, assuming again that there isn’t some other cycle, like the deVries, in play.
The likelihood is that it will have warmed by 0.5C since 1850 in 2030, if the past is any guide to the future and CO2 will be at 420ppm for a 50% increase or half a doubling.
0.5C * 0.35 = 0.175C attributable to half a doubling of CO2 or 0.3C per doubling, remembering that the effect is logarithmic.
At the same time, we find that the extra CO2 causes a big increase in vegetation. Did I say already it makes my blood boil :).

wsbriggs
October 12, 2010 1:16 pm

rbateman says:
October 12, 2010 at 12:11 pm
Rbateman, you hit the quote which prompted my first response. This has everything to do with a continuing attempt to control the economies of the world.
People with a need to control others don’t quit easily, and there are lots of others out there, some not as benevolent. Think Philip of Macedonia, Caesar(s), Tamerlane, Ghenis Khan, Musselini, Hitler, Lenin, Stalin, Putin, the list goes on and on.
We should never think that centrists will give up. They want power, they’ve proven time and again, they’ll go over bodies to get it. There are those who post to this forum, who might be considered, umm, slightly paranoid. Just because you think they’re after you, doesn’t mean they aren’t.
I for one, will continue to fight deception, fraud, power grabs, by every ethical means available to me. Let’s keep watch.

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