The speculative press release below is from the University of Gothenburg. After having a paper published earlier this year in Science that argues climate sensitivity might be lower than the IPCC stated in AR4, we have a new press release (and not even a paper as far as I can tell) that says it is greater. Honestly I don’t think anyone knows what the true sensitivity is. Even CRU’s/NCAR’s Dr. Tom Wigley knows this as illustrated in a ClimateGate2.0 email:
Quantifying climate sensitivity from real world data cannot even be done using present-day data, including satellite data. If you think that one could do better with paleo data, then you’re fooling yourself. This is fine, but there is no need to try to fool others by making extravagant claims.
That’s from this WUWT story on email 0303.txt.

Climate sensitivity greater than previously believed
Many of the particles in the atmosphere are produced by the natural world, and it is possible that plants have in recent decades reduced the effects of the greenhouse gases to which human activity has given rise. One consequence of this is that the climate may be more sensitive to emissions caused by human activity than we have previously believed. Scientists at the University of Gothenburg (Sweden) have collected new data that may lead to better climate models.
“Emissions by plants to the atmosphere are influenced by climate change – higher temperatures can increase the rate of the biological processes that control the emissions. If natural emissions increase as the temperature rises, this in turn increases the amount of particles that are formed”, says Kent Salo of the Department of Chemistry at the University of Gothenburg.
The interactions between particles and the climate constitute a very complex web of processes. The particles in the atmosphere consist to a large part of organic substances, which may arise from incomplete combustion in engines or boilers. Such substances may also arise from plant growth. Emissions from plants occur as gases, and are greater than emissions from other sources, in a global perspective.
Once released into the atmosphere, the gases from plants are converted by many chemical processes, such that they can eventually condense and form particles. The particles that are formed in chemical reactions in the atmosphere are known as “secondary organic aerosols” (abbreviated to “SOA”), and consist of a complex mixture of organic substances. The particles age and change with time, and this process influences the effects that the particles have on human health and on the climate.
“Particles in the atmosphere basically have a cooling effect on the Earth, and they affect cloud formation. The greater the number of particles in the air, the greater will be the number of cloud droplets. This affects the lifetime of the clouds and the amounts of precipitation, and consequently, the climate. Today, we do not have a fundamental understanding of how SOA particles are formed and the properties they have, despite them being an important component of, for example, climate models.”
Kent Salo has studied organic substances that are known to be components of particles in the atmosphere and how their physical properties can be used in models to understand the complicated systems that the SOAs constitute, and the effect they have on the climate.
In order to study these processes, Kent Salo has developed a special instrument that measures the degree to which the particles evaporate when they are heated. He has carried out experiments at several major research facilities in Europe using this instrument.
I think the real solution to all this Hoy polloy re warming could be solved by a long enema for the warmists. This would hopefully get all their [snip . . cut it out . .] out in the open. We could all then flush it,and get on with life!
Wiiiiillllliiiisss
Please explain again as loudly as you can that there can be no ‘forcings’ in the presence of a governor, which is provided by equatorial cu-nims.
Any chance you could get a paper published on it??
I think I get it. If global warming gets bad, then plants would die off and wouldn’t emit so many particles, which would reduce convection, which would make it even worse, even though we didn’t know they were contributing to controlling the problem in the first place.
The full Doctoral Thesis:
http://gupea.ub.gu.se/bitstream/2077/27778/1/gupea_2077_27778_1.pdf
Another miss-match between paper and press?
Press release titled: “Climate sensitivity greater than previously believed”
http://www.science.gu.se/english/News/News_detail/climate-sensitivity-greater-than-previously-believed-.cid1055248
From the Thesis:
1.3.4 Climate
Aerosols have significant direct and indirect climate effects. The direct effects are scattering and
reflection of radiation. Examples are reduced visibility and “global dimming” influencing the
radiation budget of the Earth with a net cooling effect. Some particles can also provide a net
heating effect by absorption of radiation, i.e. the case for soot or black carbon aerosols. In
addition, the deposition of soot particles on ice and snow covered surfaces can lower the albedo
and thereby contribute to additional warming. In the troposphere the climate direct effects of
particles are very heterogeneously distributed due to the short days to week lifetime of particles.
However, in the stratosphere the effect will be more globally distributed. For example volcano
ash particles emitted to the stratosphere can be transported long distances and cause failure of
crops globally due to their cooling effect. There are even serious suggestions to use the long
stratospheric lifetime of particles too, by dispersion of ammonium sulphate aerosol in the lower
stratosphere, counteract the global warming (Rasch et al. 2008).
The indirect effect is the aerosols influence on the presence and size distribution of cloud
droplets, e.g. if more aerosol particles are available a larger number of smaller cloud droplets will
be formed. Clouds that are composed of smaller droplets have other optical properties and will
also have longer lifetimes. The indirect effects can cause possible altering of precipitation
systems, possessing large and often unknown feedback mechanisms to the climate change
(Solomon et al. 2007).
Since many of the SOA precursors are emitted from different biological processes i.e. BVOC,
a global increase in for examples temperature will have an effect on the emission of SOA
precursors, hence have a large effect on the amount of SOA produced. Since the composition of
the precursors will control the composition of the biogenic SOA formed not only the mass but
also the chemical and physical properties will be altered in a changing climate (Arneth et al. 2010;
Peñuelas et al. 2010).
http://gupea.ub.gu.se/bitstream/2077/27778/1/gupea_2077_27778_1.pdf
Perhaps my reading skills are slipping in my old age, but I don’t see anything there that comes close to suggesting an increase in climate sensitivity. A search for the word “sensitivity” doesn’t even get any hits in the thesis. WUWT?!
Climate forcings and sensitivities are junk science.
I did a privately funded paper on evolution of volatile nitrogenous compounds from soybean leaves in response to temperature, which I’n not at liberty to discuss at this time.
Nothing to see here. Evolution increases only slighty until the stomates CLOSE.
Connect the dots………..
Please always remember that THE EARTH HAS NO LID.
Then, the question arises: Where is heat saved?
Alternatives:
1) Atmosphere: Air: Volumetric heat capacity: 0.00192 joules /cu-cm.
2) Oceans: Water: Volumetric heat capacity:4.186 joules/cu-cm, i.e., 3227 times than that of Air.
3) Soil: Ground: volumetric heat capacity: About 2.0 joules /cu-cm.
Green House Effect = Confined Heat Effect
No confinement = No effect.
Remember: How soon atmosphere cools down during an eclipse.
Why is it so? Entiende lo que digo?
The press release seems to have introduced a confusion. The climate may be more sensitive to human related emissions, etc., than previously assumed. However that is being mixed up with the issue of “climate sensitivity”. In other words, if the climate is more sensitive to particulates of a certain type then previously thought, which effectively constitutes a negative feedback, then overall, “climate sensitivity” is actually reduced. In other words, the opposite of the press release heading.
More Soylent Green! on December 21, 2011 at 10:14 am said:
Anything to prove they are not wrong. Unless of course, IT’S WORSE THAN WE THOUGHT!
~More Soylent Green!
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Well I have not read the thesis but the press release is referring to a climate sensitivity which is not the same as the climate sensitivity you are all familiar with. It looks like a mistranslation to me.
In fact the press release is referring to increased aerosol production at higher temperatures. This, if accompanied by increased cloud formation, would REDUCE climate sensitivity perhaps, if this acted to increase albedo.
Note the large number of ifs in that sentence.
So maybe you guys need to read this more carefully.
LazyTeenager said @ur momisugly December 21, 2011 at 3:17 pm
“This, if accompanied by increased cloud formation, would REDUCE climate sensitivity perhaps, if this acted to increase albedo.
Note the large number of ifs in that sentence.”
Sounds a bit iffy to me 😉
LazyTeenager says:
“It looks like a mistranslation to me.”
So, you’re saying the press release just happens to use the same wording as that used by the IPCC as the basis for mitigation of CO2 necessity in a different meaning completely by accident even though the word “sensitivity” doesn’t even show up in the thesis?
LazyTeenager says:
December 21, 2011 at 3:17 pm
“It looks like a mistranslation to me.”
====================
If perhaps maybe it could be possible that there is a chance that if in some circumstance under the right conditions some scientists believe there may be conceivably a possibility suggesting that it appears that it was anticipated with a high degree of probabiliy that most likely without a doubt be a mistranslation to me.
Got it.
Jeff: “Food for thought.”
Not really. 0.8C of change over 150 years with 40% of a CO2 doubling already in the bag. And the UHI hasn’t ever been properly removed from that 0.8C. Nor has account been taken of the fact that some warming would be expected after a little ice age. All of that says lower estimates are likely reasonable and higher estimates are likely BS.
The thesis actually sounds interesting. In terms of the press release, I can sort of understand the reasoning now that I’ve had more time to think about it. I suspect that what they were trying to get at is that increased plant-based aerosols would counterbalance warming to some extent up to a point, but might have a saturation point, in which case it would stop counterbalancing at saturation. Yes, I know there are a lot of assumptions in there, and yes, I know the thesis doesn’t appear to support any of it. But I can sort of see where they are coming from on the press release.
Exactly what are we talking about here? According to RSS, nothing happened temperature wise for almost 15 years. This is despite the fact that CO2 went up by a certain amount during this time. So is the claim being made that the CO2 alone could have made the temperature go up by say 0.5 degrees but the negative feedbacks reduced it by the same 0.5 degrees. Or are they saying the CO2 had a larger effect by making the temperature go up by 0.8 degrees (higher sensitivity) but the negative feedbacks lowered things by the same 0.8 degrees?
Werner Brozek says:
“Exactly what are we talking about here? ”
Oh, we’re just eating popcorn and watching the CAGW proponents wriggling around “hoping” for the warming to return and becoming less and less secure in the knowledge that they are so much smarter than us with every passing year.
First major surge of hoomon CO2 emissions, 1940s. Result: 30 yrs of cooling. Highest levels of emissions, 21st C. , to date. Result: temperature plateau, beginning of cooling.
Those two “exceptions” disprove the rule/speculation.
JJ says:
December 21, 2011 at 10:30 am
For crying out loud!</b.
These #$%^tards describe a new negative feedback mechanism and use it to claim that sensitivity is higher than previously thought?
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They might have an argument if the world was warming as per the projections made by the various IPCC climate models. But since it is not warming as per those projections, and since the warming appears to have stalled for approximately the past 15 years, their conclusion is illogical in the extreme.
I guess it is just another example of climate science at its rational best.
“Kent Salo has developed a special instrument that measures the degree to which the particles evaporate when they are heated …” – that’ll be a frying pan?
I’m not sure the abstract says what the headline says. Dr (I bet it’s good to see that written down, all new and fresh) Salo’s abstract just covers some research into aerosol pollution.
If you read this, Dr Salo, check [Garrett 1978] which says that an oily oceanic boundary layer generates oily water droplets which are more prone to join together and fall back. Which means fewer clouds, and, in turn, means that a _heating_ mechanism not incorporated into the models may be acting. Or, put briefly, climate sensitivity even lower than previously thought.
JF