Guest post by Jens Raunsø Jensen
Preamble
Inspired by a statement by Dr. Kevin Trenberth in the e-mails referred to as Climategate 2.0 (#3946 discussed here), it is hoped that climate scientists will have “an open enough mind to even consider” that the global warming of the 20th century could have occurred mainly as abrupt changes in mean temperature linked with natural events. Observational data supports that claim, at variance with the AGW “consensus view”.
Summary
Abrupt or step changes in temperature regime has been the subject of many discussions on this and other blogs and in the peer reviewed literature. The issue is not only statistical. More importantly, any presence of major step changes in mean temperature regime may contradict the claims of the AGW theory and models, i.e. the claims of increasing and accelerating temperature and of human emissions of GHGs being the major cause for the relatively high temperatures in the second half of the 20th century.
In this post, 232 complete and unadjusted GHCN station records are analysed for step changes in the period 1960-2010, and it is argued that:
- Abrupt changes in temperature linked with natural climate events may be widely responsible for the “global warming” during the second half of the 20th century.
- 50% of sample stations have not experienced increased mean temperature (”warming”) for more than 18 years.
- 70% of Europe stations have not experienced warming for more than 20 years.
- The relative role of natural processes in global warming is very likely underestimated by IPCC.
- The global average temperature curve is ”apples and oranges” and is widely misinterpreted using linear trend and smoothing techniques as indicating a pattern of widespread uniformly increasing temperature.
Objective and methodology.
The post is in continuation to my earlier post on the subject (http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/08/11/global-warming-%e2%80%93-step-changes-driven-by-enso/ ), now including a near-global station level analysis. The post is based on a ppt presentation including additional details given at a researcher’s workshop at University of Copenhagen, 15th November 2011 (http://www.danishwaterforum.dk/activities/Researchers_Day_Climate_Change_Impact_2011.html ).
The objective with this analysis has been (i) to examine the land-based temperature records at station and higher levels for the presence of step changes during the period 1960-2010, and (ii) to assess the implications for our assessment of global warming during that period. Please note that the objective has not been to dismiss a (likely) presence of an anthropogenic warming signal, or to establish a climate model, or to make projections for the future. The issue is step changes in observational data during 1960-2010.
I have used the documented Regime Shift Detection tool of Rodionov (2004, 2006; www.beringclimate.noaa.gov/ ). The results are considered to be statistically robust (ref. the ppt presentation for details on parameter settings and a verification of the assumptions of constant variance and a likely negligible influence of autocorrelation).
The station level data is from GHCN (“after combine”, http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/station_data/ ) and include ALL stations with a complete record in the period 1960-2010 in broadly defined sampling regions (ref. Fig. 1).
A total of 232 stations were identified, with 54% located in Europe and Russia. The sampling criteria result in wide differences between the “regions” in terms of station number, density and distribution. Also, the “regions” are more or less homogeneous climatologically. However, this is not of material importance for the following discussion and conclusions.
Fig. 1. Distribution of sample stations according to sampling criteria.
Results
Significant step changes are widely found in the T-records and representative examples for 3 “regions” are shown in Fig. 2a-c. The temperature increase in the steps is typically of a size which is comparable to the often quoted global warming during the 20th century.
Fig. 2a. Alaska T-anomaly (n=9). Step, 1977; T-change = 1.5 oC; significance 0.000001
Fig. 2b. Fichtelberg, Europe. Step, 1988; T-change = 1.0 oC; significance 0.00009
Fig. 2c. Malacca, South-East Asia. Steps: 1978, 1990 and 1998; T-change = 0.4+0.3+0.4 = 1.1 oC; significance, 0.0004, 0.0007 and 0.003.
Warming during 1960-2010 was clearly a non-linear process at station level, with the step pattern differing among the “regions”. The global average T-anomaly curve, constructed by averaging across station-level T-anomaly curves, is therefore highly deceptive in propagating a message of near-linearly increasing temperatures, contrary to the actual processes at station level. Thus, the global T-anomaly curve is inherently “apples and oranges” and can not be used to identify a meaningful global AGW trend if the step changes are neglected. Then, the apparent AGW trend will in reality mainly capture the aggregated effect of the sudden step changes (as e.g. in Foster and Rahmstorf, 2011).
The steps are concentrated in few short periods. Disregarding 39 steps after 2005 (considered highly uncertain and “in progress”; 2/3 ups and 1/3 downs), it is found that:
- The steps occur predominantly (58%) in three 3-year periods: 1977/79, 1987/89 and 1997/99 (Fig. 3).
- 72% of all stations, and more than 50% of stations in each “region” (except Arctic), have one or more steps during these periods (e.g. 89%, 56% and 93% of Europe, Russia and South-East Asia stations, respectively; Fig. 4).
- 78% of Europe stations have a step change in 1987/89, during which the major part of the entire warming of the 2nd half of the 20th century apparently took place.
- 2 or 3 steps are common in South-East Asia (especially 1987/89 and 1997/99), but one step only is common in records from Alaska (1977/79), Europe (1987/89) and Russia (1987/89).
Fig. 3. Distribution of step changes by year of change.
Fig. 4. Percent of stations with one or more steps in indicated 3 periods.
Similar step changes are identified in national average records (ref. link to presentation above): US contiguous 48 states (GISS): 1986 and 1998; Australia (BOM): 1979 and 2002; and Denmark (DMI): 1988. The steps in the Global T-records are: Crutem3gl: 1977, 1987 and 1998; GISS L/O: 1977, 1987 and 1998; and Hadcrut3: 1977, 1990 and 1997.
The steps are statistically highly significant. But are they supported by a probable physical cause? The answer must be yes for the majority of steps. The steps occur in a temporal and spatial pattern coinciding with well-documented events and regime changes in the ocean-atmosphere system:
- 1976/77: the great pacific shift from a “cold” to a “warm” mode (e.g. Trenberth, 1990; Hartmann and Wendler, 2005).
- 1987/89 and 1997/99: the two clearly most intense El Niños of the period, 1986/88 and 1997/98, with the intensity here defined as event-accumulated nino3.4 anomalies (NOAA’s ONI index); there were two less intense events in 1982 and 1991, the impact of which was probably occluded by the major volcanoes El Chichon and Mt. Pinatubo.
- A regime shift in NH SST in 1988/89 (Yasunaka and Hanawa, 2005).
- A new regime of constant temperature after the 1997/98 El Niño, i.e. the now widely accepted “hiatus” in global warming.
- Documented step changes and regime shifts in marine ecosystems, e.g. the late 1980s in Europe and in the Japan/East Sea.
- The short-term regionally diverse global impact of ENSO events is generally well-known.
The empirical evidence, from this station level analysis and other sources, is unequivocal: the step changes in mean temperature are likely real and associated with natural events. The physical mechanisms remain to be understood, and this is certainly not to claim, that ENSO events are the only elements of the natural cause-effect chain.
It is therefore concluded, that the major part of the temperature change (global warming) in the 2nd half of the 20th century occurred as abrupt changes in mean temperature associated with natural events in the ocean-atmosphere system. Still, a warming/cooling trend – albeit relatively small compared with the step changes – could of course be hidden by the regime change model. But it seems inconceivable, that steadily increasing CO2 levels could be responsible for the major sudden changes observed as e.g. in Alaska in 1977, Europe in 1988 and South-East Asia in 1998. In principle, the natural events and step changes could have been amplified by human caused warming, but this is currently pure speculation.
Implications when accepting the presence of steps
“Increasing temperature and accelerated warming” : this study does not support general statements like that. The bulk of the “global warming” has likely taken place in abrupt steps, and 50% of the stations analysed has not experienced any significant warming for more than 18 years (Fig. 5). In Europe, 70% of the stations have not experienced significant change in mean temperature for more than 20 years.
In South-East Asia, the median value is 13 years as many stations here also experienced a step change in 1997/98 (Fig. 4).
Fig. 5. Years of constant T-mean prior to 2010. Box-Whisker plot, 1st and 3rd quartiles. (note: uncertain up and down step changes during 2006-2010 are disregarded).
Challenging the IPCC consensus view, i.e.: “Most of the observed increase in global average temperature since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse-gas concentrations”. However, the finding above, that abrupt changes linked with natural processes likely account for most of the increase in temperature during 1960-2010, contradicts the IPCC claim regarding the relative importance of natural and human causes. Thus, when IPCC (AR4) can only reproduce the T-curve by including GHG effects, then logically
- either the IPCC GCM models do not adequately model the natural processes of high significance for the temperature variations (there is still low confidence in the projection of changes in the ENSO variability and frequency of El Niños, ref. the recent SREX-SPM IPCC report),
- or/and the IPCC has overestimated the climate sensitivity to CO2 changes by eg. attributing natural temperature increases to CO2-induced feed-back processes.
In either case, the relative importance of natural processes for the T-changes has likely been underestimated by IPCC.
Conclusion
This study has established that step changes in land-based temperature records during 1960-2010 are common and very likely real and linked with natural climate events. The step changes are statistically highly significant and with a systematic yet regionally diverse pattern of occurrence coinciding with major climate events and regime shifts. This finding has far reaching consequences for our analysis of climate records and for our assessment of global warming.
Thus, although many different statistical models can be applied to explore the pattern of T-change, the presence of step changes invalidates the widely used statistical techniques of linear trend and smoothing as means of identifying the pattern of temperature variation during 1960-2010.
Furthermore, the step changes account for the main part of the temperature changes during the 2nd half of the 20th century. The logical consequence is that natural processes have been the major cause for the temperature change during this period, leaving a secondary role to other causes such as the anthropogenic greenhouse effect.
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Why are the steps always up?
Easy! To make the past look colder and the present warmer. Ask any team member or any of their apologists.
I can’t wait for the heavyweights 🙂
This appears to be a rather large cat amongst the pigeons. Thank you Jens.
Leif – we emerge from a “little” ice age. If the steps (any of them) were “down” I would increase my fear of the coming cold period (post 2013)
Alan Statham is a fictional character in the British sitcom Green Wing, played by Mark Heap. Both the actor and the character are studies in mimicry, comic farce and buffoonery. Both are truly brilliant – the creation and the creator.
“Our” Alan Statham, is a risible ideologue – not comic or funny – maybe farcical. Not critical in their beliefs or their thinking. Thread-jacking, religious true believer maybe, but no longer entertaining to me – if they ever were.
You can’t fully know global surface temperatures by measuring air temperatures. There is too much heat in the oceans to do this. Furthermore, heat moves around too much in the oceans to think of it as a constant, unvarying factor in models of heat at the earth’s surface. The weight of the atmosphere is represented by just 33 feet of water. Roughly speaking you can think of the total heat contained in the atmosphere as amounting to the heat in just the top 33 feet of the ocean. The Argo project in which robotic floats monitor ocean temperatures to a depth of 2000 meters is an important step to take before realistic climate models will be created. Stating a global surface temperature trend based on air temperatures alone is premature. Ask the climatologists attached to the Argo project and I’m sure they will agree. In fact, Kevin Trenberth is quoted in a National Public Radio article about heat in the oceans and the Argo project as saying, “But what this does is highlight some of the issues and send people back to the drawing board.” http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=88520025
The truth is that scientists can’t fully account for what’s going on with global heat let alone the global climate. I submit that the contribution of CO2 to a global warming trend is too inconsequential to be significant or worrisome. Pointing at scant evidence such as air temperature records and proxies and sounding an alarm is akin to the barnyard rooster who thinks his crowing makes the sun rise. Climatologists need to attend to the quality of their arguments and refrain from thinking themselves important simply because important matters are at hand.
Les Johnson says:
January 5, 2012 at 8:22 am
“Why are the “steps” always up?”
They aren’t. Fig 2a and 2b shows a negative step change.
They don’t. That last data point does not qualify as a step change.
Stephen Wilde says:
January 5, 2012 at 9:05 am
“Why are the “steps” always up?”
What makes you think they were ‘up’ between MWP and LIA ?
What makes you think there were steps back then?
Leif, it appears to me that the steps have been predominantly up since the 1750s but predominantly down the previous 250 years.
Don’t ask me why?
PRD says:”I’m sick and tired of being sick and tired.”
Amen. Agenda driven science of meteorological cherry picking is the new norm that discredits the occupation. It is viral in scope. Not to politicize the blog, but a lot of this is out of control through our lack of competent leadership; who are …. I won’t go there.
Good luck.
Titan 28 says:
“Re Alan Statham:
Your aspersion regarding Anthony Watts tells us more about you than it does about him. Anyone who has read this blog, even those who now and then disagree with WUWT, realize Anthony Watts is a man of integrity and smarts. If you have an argument to make about this particular entry, then make it. Don’t just snidely squeak from your hole in the ground. Put another way, you think you’re so smart, how about showing us? Make the case.”
Good comment. Repeated for effect.
Leif Svalgaard said @ur momisugly January 5, 2012 at 7:33 am
“Why are the steps always up?”
______
Until a study similar to FR2011 were to show a shift down in the underlying long-term linear rise in temperatures, the steps would always have to be up. Since the forcing from the additional greenhouse gases isn’t going away anytime soon, expect the steps to always be up, though of course we could get periods where the natural variations (solar, ocean, volcanic) are working nearly in unison against the anthropogenic greenhouse forcing, such that the “step up” is more a step sideways for a while, but these natural forcings will not work in the same direction for long…i.e. look for another potential “step up” in the next few years if solar and ocean cycles once more work in the same direction for a period of time along with anthropogenic forcing.
A physicist says:
January 5, 2012 at 8:18 am
{ . . . we are left with reasonable questions like “If El Niños cause abrupt temperature step changes upward, why wouldn’t La Niñas cause equivalent abrupt temperature step changes downward?”}
By quoting the above, you imply you believe it is a reasonable question. It is not. El Niños are a release of and movement eastward of quite warm water that has accumulated in the western Pacific Ocean. La Niñas are the sloshing of that same warm water in the return direction. There is no reason to expect moving warm water westward to cause average global temperature to decrease. If you or the person quoted think the renewed upwelling of cold water off the coast of SA is the major component of a La Niña – to be looked to for a step change down – show some numbers.
Does anyone see a step change here
http://www.drroyspencer.com/wp-content/uploads/UAH_LT_1979_thru_December_2011.png
Frank K. says:
January 5, 2012 at 8:49 am
What I’d also like to know is if these “steps” are seen in the numerical climate model predictions, and, if not, why not?
_____
Only to the extent that “natural variability” can ever be seen in the climate model predictions, which would be very little. Specifically what would have to be seen are times when all the factors of natural variability (ocean, solar, volcanic) align themselves in the same direction as the underlying forcing from greenhouse gas increases, such that a step-up would be indicated. Much more logical is to go back after the fact and remove these forcings to see what the underlying linear rise is…as Foster & Rahmstorf did.
A Physicist said:
More broadly, step-change models have an unbounded number of independently adjustable steps. So why should we embrace arbitrarily-complicated step-change models, when non-step models like Foster & Rahmstorf (2011) — which are mathematically simpler and physically well-motivated — describe the overall climate-change data impressively well?…
Conversely, if step-change models cannot make even this one basic prediction, why should we embrace them at all?
Is this work considered a model? Or is it a thesis based on actual observation. In the comments several AGW advocates have knocked this bit of research because it doesn’t offer predictions… Which, BTW, I though was not the purpose of climate models in the first place. Aren’t they supposed to be “projections”?
With many of the ocean current phenomena going negative, the next five years are going to be very interesting indeed!
What concerns many climatologists about the 600-million-year graph that Latitude provided, is that the sun has been growing (linearly) hotter throughout all of it. As the graph shows, the steady increase in our sun’s hotness has been offset by a steady decrease in planetary CO2 levels.
The common-sense possibility that seriously worries many climatologists is that we carbon-burning humans are irretrievably breaking the CO2 offset mechanism that Latitude’s graph shows so vividly. The simplicity of the Foster & Rahmstorf (2011) analysis (as independently verified by many here on WUWT), and the robustness of the heating trend that analysis shows, indicates that this possibility should be regarded seriously.
John F. Hultquist says:
January 5, 2012 at 9:51 am
A physicist says:
January 5, 2012 at 8:18 am
{ . . . we are left with reasonable questions like “If El Niños cause abrupt temperature step changes upward, why wouldn’t La Niñas cause equivalent abrupt temperature step changes downward?”}
By quoting the above, you imply you believe it is a reasonable question. It is not. El Niños are a release of and movement eastward of quite warm water that has accumulated in the western Pacific Ocean. La Niñas are the sloshing of that same warm water in the return direction. There is no reason to expect moving warm water westward to cause average global temperature to decrease. If you or the person quoted think the renewed upwelling of cold water off the coast of SA is the major component of a La Niña – to be looked to for a step change down – show some numbers.
_____
As has been accurately pointed out is the fact that El Nino’s are not the opposite of La Nina’s, however, in one regard they are– and that’s the net energy gain or loss by the oceans. This is not to say they are exactly opposite in magnitude, but they are in direction, such that, globally speaking, El Nino’s show a net energy loss from the oceans, and La Nina’s see a net energy gain. What has happened over the past 30+ years is that there has been less energy loss during El Ninos than gained during La Ninas or ENSO neutral periods. This in itself adds to the “step up” phenomenon. Some would also posit that this net energy gain by the oceans is at least part of extra energy kept in the system from the additional greenhouse gases.
R Gates says:
While skeptics are keen to criticize the Foster and Rahmstorf study, or at least significantly question certain areas of it, in fact, your analysis of the “step wise” increases only reinforces the validity of this study, and the ultimate finding that when factoring out the natural variability such as ocean, ENSO, and volcanic activity, a steady linear (i.e. non accelerating) rise in temperatures can be seen in the record. The “step wise” increases only occur when natural variations (i.e. ocean & solar & volcanic) line up with the underlying forcing coming from greenhouse gases.
If the rise in air temps are cause (more) by the oceans releasing more of its stored heat in steps rather than increases caused by extra GHG emissions , then the F & R assessment is simply incorrect.
Here’s an opinion by Dr. Pielke Sr;
The Earth’s climate system is highly nonlinear: inputs and outputs are not proportional, change is often episodic and abrupt, rather than slow and gradual, and multiple equilibria are the norm.
http://pielkeclimatesci.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/r-260.pdf
This made my day.. no better way to conclude a ridiculous argument, than to make clear .. that your opponent(s) (Alglorites) have jumped, Lemming style, to conclusions founded only in their own ideolgies, not conclusive science. I was amazed .. at the the vitriol of the attack that was issued here. It was pure venomous hatred. But the rebuttal, will likely cost me a keyboard due to spilled tea and a pulled oblique from the outburst of raucous laughter so explosive, I likely increased my carbon footprint thrice over with the needed respiration to set things right that followed. Seriously… whoo need a moment.. This was an amazing piece of Emperical..Science.. Imagine that?
Leif Svalgaard says:
January 5, 2012 at 9:44 am
What makes you think there were steps back then?
=================================
Why would anyone think different?…..same things that go on now, have not changed…
….no one fell off the edge, it’s still roundish…………
R. Gates says: “Until a study similar to FR2011 were to show a shift down in the underlying long-term linear rise in temperatures, the steps would always have to be up. Since the forcing from the additional greenhouse gases isn’t going away anytime soon, expect the steps to always be up, though of course we could get periods where the natural variations (solar, ocean, volcanic) are working nearly in unison against the anthropogenic greenhouse forcing, such that the “step up” is more a step sideways for a while, but these natural forcings will not work in the same direction for long…i.e. look for another potential “step up” in the next few years if solar and ocean cycles once more work in the same direction for a period of time along with anthropogenic forcing.”
You crack me up with your constant position that it is all about anthropogenic forcing. Mankind is doomed. Also, you NEVER explain any other warming period. Anyway, thanks again for reminding me I am at fault for warming the planet every time I exhale. By the way, do you use paper products?
Les Johnson says:
January 5, 2012 at 8:22 am
“Why are the “steps” always up?”
Actually, global temperature changes, since the beginning of time, follow Lennon, McCartney, et al’s theory of Helter Skelter, published back in 1967. Abstract:
“When I get to the bottom I go back to the top of the slide
Where I stop and I turn and I go for a ride
Till I get to the bottom and I see you again…
Helter Skelter baby, Helter Skelter….”
Henry Galt says:
January 5, 2012 at 9:38 am
Leif – we emerge from a “little” ice age.
Right, it is called Global Warming
Urederra says: January 5, 2012 at 8:07 am
I recall reading one article written by Ross McKitrick where he shows a temperature graph with a big step just when the thermometers in the canadian surface stations were changed from mercury/alcohol to thermocouples.
Try this
Les Johnson says:
January 5, 2012 at 8:22 am
“Why are the “steps” always up?”
Actually, global temperatures changes, since the beginning of time, follow Lennon, McCartney, et al’s, significantly recognized and peer-reviewed theory of “Helter Skelter,” written and published, worldwide, in 1968. The following is perhaps the most relevant quote, from the abstract:
“When I get to the bottom I go back to the top of the slide
Where I stop and I turn and I go for a ride
Till I get to the bottom and I see you again….
Helter Skelter, Helter Skelter, baby….”
My suggestion is that the IPCC adopt this work by Jens Raunsø Jensen as the IPCC AR5.
And call it quits.
Henry@Jens Jensen, Hultquist &&&
I am puzzled that all the graphs here at WUWT always only show the anomalies of the average temps.
It gives you really only half the story.
If you were to look also at the maxima and minima, as (also) reported by each (weather) station, you get a lot more information.
http://www.letterdash.com/HenryP/henrys-pool-table-on-global-warming
e.g.
Looking at the differences between the results from the northern hemisphere(NH) and the southern hemisphere (SH), what we see is happening from my dataset is that more (solar) heat went into the SH oceans and is simply taken away by water currents and/or weather systems to the NH. That is why the NH is warming and that is why the SH does not warm.