The CIA documents the global cooling research of the 1970’s

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Seal of the C.I.A. – Central Intelligence Agency of the United States Government (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Despite what NCDC’s Thomas Peterson, Wikiwrangler William Connolley, and John Fleck would like you to believe as a “myth” (The Myth of the 1970s Global Cooling Scientific Consensus), there was in fact serious consideration of the global cooling issue in the 1970’s thanks to this 1974 document from the CIA. – Anthony

The CIA Report and the Warning from Wisconsin

Guest post by David Archibald

In August, 1974, the Office of Research and Development of the Central Intelligence Agency produced a report entitled “A Study of Climatological Research as it Pertains to Intelligence Problems” – available online at: http://www.climatemonitor.it/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/1974.pdf Some interesting bits of the report follow:

“The western world’s leading climatologists have confirmed recent reports of a detrimental global climate change. The stability of most nations is based upon a dependable source of food, but this stability will not be possible under the new climatic era. A forecast by the University of Wisconsin projects that the earth’s climate is returning to that of the neo-boreal era (1600- 1850) – an era of drought, famine and political unrest in the western world.

Climate has not been a prime consideration of intelligence analysis because, until recently, it has not caused any significant perturbations to the status of major nations. This is so because during 50 of the last 60 years the Earth has, on the average, enjoyed the best agricultural climate since the eleventh century. An early twentieth century world food surplus hindered US efforts to maintain and equalise farm production and incomes.”

“The University of Wisconsin was the first accredited academic center to forecast that a major global climatic change was underway. Their analysis of the Icelandic temperature data, which they contend has historically been a bellwether for northern hemisphere climatic conditions, indicated that the world was returning to the type of climate which prevailed during the first part of the last century.” “Their “Food for Thought” chart (Figure 7) conveys some idea of the enormity of the problem and the precarious state in which most of the world’s nations could find themselves if the Wisconsin forecast is correct.”

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CIA Report 1974, Figure 7

The x axis shows annual temperature in centigrade. The y axis is persons per hectare of arable land.

With respect to Figure 7, the CIA report states “As an example, Europe presently, with an annual mean temperature of 12°C (about 53°F), supports three persons per arable hectare. If, however, the temperature declines 1°C only a little over two persons per hectare could be supported and more than 20 percent of the population could be supported and more than 20 percent of the population could not be fed from domestic sources. China now supports over seven persons per arable hectare; a shift of 1°C would mean it could only support four persons per hectare – a drop of over 43 percent.

A unique aspect of the Wisconsin analysis was their estimate of the duration of this climatic change. An analysis by Dr J.E.Kutzbach (Wisconsin) on the rate of climate changes during the preceding 1,600 years indicates an ominous consistency in the rate of (sic) which the change takes place. The maximum temperature drop normally occurred within 40 years of inception. The earliest return occurred within 70 years (Figure 8). The longest period noted was 180 years.”

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CIA Report 1974, Figure 8

The CIA Report warning on the impact of cooling on the stability of nations is supported by a 2007 study by Zhang et al:

“We show that long-term fluctuations of war frequency and population changes followed the cycles of temperature change. Further analyses show that cooling impeded agricultural production, which brought about a series of serious social problems, including price inflation, then successively war outbreak, famine, and population decline successively. The findings suggest that worldwide and synchronistic war–peace, population, and price cycles in recent centuries have been driven mainly by long-term climate change.

We studied a long span of Chinese history and found that the number of war outbreaks and population collapses in China is significantly correlated with Northern Hemisphere (NH) temperature variations and that all of the periods of nationwide unrest, population collapse, and dynastic change occurred in the cold phases of this period.”

The CIA Report of 1974 drew heavily on the work of Professor Kutzbach of the University of Wisconsin, who continues to warn of the danger posed by gobal cooling. Professor Kutzbach is a co-author of a study that modelled the effect of a 3.1°C cooler climate (Phillipon-Berthier et al 2010). The premise of the study is that using a carbon dioxide concentration of 240 ppm based on typical values reached during the latter stage of previous interglacials, the climate would 3.14°K cooler than it currently is. Of that cooling, 0.45°K is attributed to vegetation effects and the balance of 2.69°K is due to the carbon dioxide level being 150 ppm less than it is currently. The 2.69°K figure is an obvious and deliberate overstatement. Based on the logarithmic heating effect of carbon dioxide, the true heating differential between 240 ppm and 390 ppm is 0.32°K, as shown by this figure:

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Figure 3: The logarithmic heating effect of carbon dioxide

In a world in which even papers in solar physics have to genuflect to global warming in order to get published, it is likely that this overstatement was necessary to get this paper published. Viewed in that light, it seems that the authors wanted to warn the world of the effects of a 3.0°C-odd cooling and the only way they could get the paper past the censors was to concoct a story based on carbon dioxide levels in previous interglacials. A 3.0°C cooling is very similar to what Libby and Pandolfi 1979 warned of, and what is predicted from the length of Solar Cycle 25 as determined by Altrock’s green corona emissions diagram, as shown in http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/01/08/solar-cycle-24-length-and-its-consequences/

So what did the study find? Philippon-Berthier and colleagues calculated that as a result of the colder and drier conditions, along with lower levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide (a plant fertilizer), terrestrial photosynthesis would decline by 39% and leaf area would decline by 30%. In the Northern Hemisphere mid-latitudes, forest cover would decline by 60% and grassland area would decline by 17%. In the high latitudes, the area of boreal forests would drop by 69% while the area of polar desert would increase by 286%. And in the Tropics, grass area would decline by 3%, forest area by 15%, and the area of bare ground would increase by 344%.

Adding back the effect of current higher atmospheric carbon dioxide levels on plant growth, the decline in terrestrial photosynthesis would be about 25% rather than the calculated 39%. That is likely to be good estimate of the decline in food production, all things being equal, that humanity has in prospect over the next twenty-five years as solar-driven cooling continues per the Libby and Pandolfi and green corona emissions-derived forecasts.

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Figure 4: Total grass (top) and tree (bottom) differences (percentages) from current climate conditions with a 3.1°K cooling (source: Philippon-Berthier et al., 2010).

References

CIA 1974, A Study of Climatological Research as it Pertains to Intelligence Problems

Libby, L.M. and Pandolfi, L.J. 1979, Tree Thermometers and Commodities: Historic Climate Indicators, Environment International Vol 2, pp 317-333

Philippon-Berthier, G., et al., 2010. Role of plant physiology and dynamic vegetation feedbacks in the climate response to low GHG concentrations typical of the late stages of previous interglacials. Geophysical Research Letters, 37, L08705, doi:10.1029/2010GL042905.

Peterson, T.C., et al. (2008): The Myth of the 1970s Global Cooling Scientific Consensus. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 89, 9, 1325-1337, doi:10.1175/2008BAMS2370.

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Gail Combs
May 25, 2012 10:15 am

Wally says:
May 25, 2012 at 4:59 am
1970′s cooling a “myth”. Yeah right. I was a kid then, and it was the constant worry of kids at school, teachers (especially the teachers), and a few parents. The winters in the early 1970′s seemed to be especially bitterly cold so we all sucked it up, hook line and sinker.
________________________________
That is for sure! Nothing like a case of frost bite and almost dying trying to walk home from the school bus stop to imprint it in little minds. (One of my few clear memories of 1966)
I just did a quick search for the blizzard of 66 and turned up this video of a town a hundred miles away sitting on the great lakes that had much milder weather. My town was always ten degrees F colder and got dumped on with the snow from the “Lake Effect” that normally missed Rochester. (I have lived in both towns) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_bfskNU5OA

H.R.
May 25, 2012 10:35 am

Gail Combs says:
May 25, 2012 at 10:01 am
H.R. says:
May 25, 2012 at 4:48 am
I didn’t see where modern farm yields per area of cultivation are compared to the yields of the past though that may be somewhere in the studies that were referenced.
___________________________
You must not have read any of my comments for the last couple of years. […]”

Au contraire, Gail. :o) I always read and appreciate your posts.
I was wondering if the studies the CIA were referencing way back when considered the differences. But you always come up with additional goodies and for that I thank you very much.
Oh, and Roger Sowell chimed in above (May 25, 2012 at 9:55 am) with the reserves info I rememberd him giving.
OTOH, no one seems to know if penguins “taste like chicken.”

Gail Combs
May 25, 2012 10:41 am

Luther Wu says:
May 25, 2012 at 5:51 am
“We studied a long span of Chinese history and found that the number of war outbreaks and population collapses in China is significantly correlated with Northern Hemisphere (NH) temperature variations and that all of the periods of nationwide unrest, population collapse, and dynastic change occurred in the cold phases of this period.”</i?
That’s the “money quote….
________________________________
Amen!
No wonder there is a rush to grab the world's farmland by the corporations and the wealthy and the shenanigans by their paid politicians to get rid of family farms.
Interesting that the World Trade Agreement on Agriculture, was written in 1994/5 by Dan Amstutz VP of the privately held grain trading company Cargill. That was about when The Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) was defined by fisheries scientist Steven Hare in the mid-1990’s…
However I am sure that few of the top power people in the world ever really believed the CAGW hype in the first place. They just used it, just like they used the well orchestrated food borne disease scare they created by switching to the new 1996 HACCP food regulations.
Politics seems to be lying, deceit and death all the way down and our “elected” leaders could care less how many die as long as there is money and power in it for them.

Gail Combs
May 25, 2012 10:44 am

H.R. says: May 25, 2012 at 10:35 am
…..OTOH, no one seems to know if penguins “taste like chicken.”
________________________________
They taste “fishy” and gamy and you have to dig the buckshot out of your teeth…..
(Based on eating river feed wild duck)
Glad you read my posts BTW

John@EF
May 25, 2012 10:50 am

@DirkH
Based on the peer reviewed lit from ’65 and ’79 there was a consensus and it was concern about warming, even back then. Of the 7 papers that expressed concern about global cooling (vs. 44 projecting warming), 3 or 4 didn’t even consider anthropogenic factors.
@cui bono
Again, the lit of the time doesn’t back your simple extrapolation comment. It’s certainly not applicable today, either.
@Luther Wu
The Connolley paper doesn’t “disappear” anything, rather documents events of the time. Your comment implies your senses were media driven, not science driven.
@DocWat
C’mon Doc, observe the tone of some of the posts. It’s not all in fun. And, yes, I recall the media driven hype of the 70’s quite clearly, myself.
I don’t want to belabor this exchange. Again, I found the CIA document interesting and their analysis appropriate at a high level, yet not comprehensive enough to encompass the evolving scientific finding/conclusions even of that time. I was commented about The Choir bending interpretation toward liturgy.

woodNfish
May 25, 2012 10:54 am

From the article: “…this stability will not be possible under the new climatic era.”
It is obvious the AGW movement learned from the past that policy makers are a bunch of gullible morons, and then proceeded to take advantage of their stupidity at our expense.

DanB
May 25, 2012 10:55 am

John F. Hultquist says:
May 25, 2012 at 8:59 am
Freedom, flexibility, and wealth also major advantages found in Canada and the USA.
There, fixed it for ya’

Gail Combs
May 25, 2012 11:36 am

Roger Sowell says:
May 25, 2012 at 9:55 am
Re world food supply,…. leading to the grim conclusion that, as citizens of the planet, we are in a world of hurt. We can ill afford one bad harvest, let alone multiple ones.
_____________________________
You are correct.
We can thank Dan Amstutz again for this mess along with his international grain trading buddies. After Amstutz wrote the WTO Agreement on Ag in 1995, he wrote the “Freedom to Farm” farm bill in 1996. It was later called the “Freedom to Fail” Act. It did away with the US national grain reserves. By 2008 the USDA announced “The cupboard is bare”
The Grain Traders say this about Amstutz: “Throughout his very successful career Dan Amstutz represented and championed the ideas and goals of NAEGA membership “ (North American Export Grain Association) Dan Amstutz did not represent the interests of farmers or consumers when he wrote the WTO Agreement on Agriculture in 1995 or when he wrote the farm bill in 1996, he represented the interests of the Transnational Grain Cartel. SEE: NAEGA: sets up the Dan Amstutz Award: http://www.naega.org/amstutz/index.shtml
The following quotes show the grain traders greed and the level of concern for other humans.

“In summary, we have record low grain inventories globally as we move into a new crop year. We have demand growing strongly. Which means that going forward even small crop failures are going to drive grain prices to record levels. As an investor, we continue to find these long term trends…very attractive.” Food shortfalls predicted: 2008 http://www.financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/dancy/2008/0104.html

July 22, 2008 letter to President Bush

“Recently there have been increased calls for the development of a U.S. or international grain reserve to provide priority access to food supplies for Humanitarian needs. The National Grain and Feed Association (NGFA) and the North American Export Grain Association (NAEGA) strongly advise against this concept..Stock reserves have a documented depressing effect on prices… and resulted in less aggressive market bidding for the grains.”…..
http://www.naega.org/images/pdf/grain_reserves_for_food_aid.pdf

These are the guys who now control US farming thanks to the “Food Safety Modernization Act” passed during the lame duck session in 2010.

SEC. 404. <> COMPLIANCE WITH INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS.
Nothing in this Act (or an amendment made by this Act) shall be construed in a manner inconsistent with the agreement establishing the World Trade Organization… http://www.fda.gov/Food/FoodSafety/FSMA/ucm247548.htm

Yet the World Trade Organization Treaty was ratified by Congress with the following prevision.

But the language of the URAA is even clearer. The features of the URAA are described as follows:
United States Law to Prevail in Conflict The URAA puts U.S. sovereignty and U.S. law under perfect protection. According to the Act, if there is a conflict between U.S. and any of the Uruguay Round agreements, U.S. law will take precedence regardless when U.S. law is enacted. § 3512 (a) states: “No provision of any of the Uruguay Round Agreements, nor the application of any such provision to any person or circumstance, that is inconsistent with any law of the United States shall have effect.” Specifically, implementing the WTO agreements shall not be construed to “amend or modify any law of the United States, including any law relating to (i) the protection of human, animal, or plant life or health, (ii) the protection of the environment, or (iii) worker safety”, or to “limit any authority conferred under any law of the United States, including section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974.”
http://www.eastlaw.net/research/wto/wto2b.htm

Anyone who does not think we are headed for trouble in the food department is crazy. However as usual the real cause, corporate greed and corrupt politicians, will be buried deep by a compliant MSM and things like “The Population Explosion” or “Catastrophic Man Made Climate Change” will be blamed. Politicians will then use “the Crisis” to grab more taxes, write more liberty restrictive laws and their corporate buddies will reap more tax payer dollars from the resulting boondoggles.

clipe
May 25, 2012 12:39 pm

Ric Werme says:
May 25, 2012 at 5:33 am
Don’t forget Naomi Oreskes’s The Scientific Consensus on Climate Change along with your reference of Peterson and Connolley!
This would be a good topic for someone like Donna LaFramboise to investigate. Unfortunately, I don’t have the time, but remember the cooling articles from the 1970s before Keelings CO2 paper came out.

Donna is busy too.
http://nofrakkingconsensus.com/2012/05/24/the-activist-economist-the-ipcc-part-1/

LazyTeenager
May 25, 2012 1:00 pm

there was in fact serious consideration of the global cooling issue
———-
Serious consideration being given is not the same a scientific consensus.
The CIA is in the business of assessing security threats. So if someone says little green men are going to invade, they will likely look into it and produce an assessment.
You cannot infer, from the existence of that assessment, that people who claim that the little green men is a marginal idea are liars.
Sorry guys. Yet another logic fail.
REPLY: Only in your mind. I lived through it, and saw research being done on it, saw the news articles and even did a half hour TV program on it. The opinion of an anonymous coward (you) means nothing in the context of the reality of that time. – Anthony

AllanJ
May 25, 2012 1:16 pm

Gail Combs is partially correct. In a capitalist society greed for riches and fear of poverty drive production. A communist society tries to replace that with greed for power and fear of police. To paraphrase Churchill … capitalism is the worst economic system except for all the others.
More pertinent to this thread, I have little doubt that the world’s population has strained the existing infrastructure. Large scale famine is possible. I am not ready to wear a tinfoil hat, but I did just help my son buy a farm. To the point of the CIA paper, people do not tend to starve passively.
It is possible that the last fifty years may someday be seen as the golden era of world history. I hope not, but we should be prepared to survive in a world less hospitable than the one we now enjoy. Whether it is global warming, global cooling, war, pestilence, economic collapse, or some other crisis it would be smart to consider large scale failure modes and the preparations appropriate to survive them.

May 25, 2012 2:47 pm

Gail Combs says:
May 25, 2012 at 10:44 am

H.R. says: May 25, 2012 at 10:35 am
…..OTOH, no one seems to know if penguins “taste like chicken.”
________________________________

They taste “fishy” and gamy and you have to dig the buckshot out of your teeth…..
(Based on eating river feed wild duck)
Glad you read my posts BTW

Every word Gail!
Also don’t forget very greasy, penguin meat has thick fat layers. Given the propensity of various nations to harvest wild meat, did you ever hear of anyone harvesting penguins? That should give a relative meat/fat quality reference.
(I did get confidential advice from a friend back in the seventies who spent two years at the south pole that he definitely didn’t recommend eating penguins. Military Korean conflict K rations were better).
Of course, we can always tell the warmistas that penguins do taste just like chicken, but only during the season when penguins are caught flying as they are least fatty then. /sarc – well almost.

Brian H
May 25, 2012 2:56 pm

Brad says:
May 25, 2012 at 5:19 am
It was in the textbooks, I was taught it as a serious issue in my college Ecology class, and the lefties then thought it was just as serious as warming is now.
Turns out, the 70′s folks are more likely to be correct!

Not much hand-wavy attribution there, so nothing for pols to latch onto. Amounts to a simple warning and call for adaptation. The proper use of the Precautionary Principle.

May 25, 2012 3:04 pm

To John@EF… liturgy, indeed
I call myself a skeptic.
Back in the ’90’s I had a gun store for a few years. Every day some militia kook would come in, stomp up and down, and rant about black helicopters and the UN taking over the country. After one particularly irritating session, I stopped one of them and said ” In the 50 year history of the UN, name one country they have taken over. In fact name one country where they have had any effect at all.” The man looked at me for several seconds then replied. “I see your point.”
Keep in mind that I worked with (not on) the group that built the first computer to accurately predict the weather in less time than it took for the weather to happen. (The Texas Instruments Advanced Scientific Computer, circa 1974)
I challenge any of you, Skeptics or Warmistas, to show me a person, a computer, a program, an organization, anything that reliably predicts weather or climate more than three days into the future.
At the bottom of every financial form (Deep in the fine print) reporting the excellent performance of some institution, a statement to the effect “Past performance does not indicate future performance.”
Yep, sign me up as a skeptic.

Brian H
May 25, 2012 3:24 pm

“Social liberal” covers a lot of sins; while it represents resistance to certain absolutist attitudes and constraints on beliefs and behaviors in the area of “social morality”, it also spreads out to demands for subsidized “fairness”. That is the door through which its attacks on and subversion of “fiscal conservatism” sally. The demand to pay for all the social liberal’s priorities readily and inevitably morphs into redistribution by direct subsidy and by suppression of productivity and its evil child, profit.
You, personally, willis, may not take that step, but it is hard to keep socially liberal logic from going that far.
As for regulations, I judge the sincerity of their advocates’ focus on functional basic protections by their willingness to tolerate and support universal “sunsetting”. It is demonstrated that incorrectly formulated and enforced regulation is very damaging, so having a way to terminate it is essential — and repeal demonstrably is vanishingly rare. Any that are working to plan and not costing more than their benefits are worth will be renewed (each 5 yrs or so).

Gail Combs
May 25, 2012 5:09 pm

AllanJ says:
May 25, 2012 at 1:16 pm
Gail Combs is partially correct. In a capitalist society greed for riches and fear of poverty drive production. A communist society tries to replace that with greed for power and fear of police. To paraphrase Churchill … capitalism is the worst economic system except for all the others….
___________________________
Now if only we could get back to a capitalist society where wealth is invested to produce more wealth instead of more fiat currency being printed to confiscate wealth…. Mises on Money
Capitalism is fine, it is Neo-corporatism I hate.

temp
May 25, 2012 5:20 pm

Gail Combs says:
May 25, 2012 at 5:09 pm
“it is Neo-corporatism I hate.”
A better term is just to call it socialism because thats what it is in the end run.

Gail Combs
May 25, 2012 5:22 pm

Brian H says:
May 25, 2012 at 3:24 pm
…..As for regulations, I judge the sincerity of their advocates’ focus on functional basic protections by their willingness to tolerate and support universal “sunsetting”…..
___________________________
Another excellent idea. All laws should have at least one round of a 5 year sunset clause followed by perhaps a ten year clause thereafter.
I would also like to see the “Read the Bill” act passed. We now have plenty of laws and to hear theSenate Majority Leader, Nancy Pelosi state “We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it.” makes me shudder.
If ignorance of the law is no defense. All citizens are charged with knowing the law.” then how can we NOT require our law makers to carefully study the laws and regulations they pass???

Gail Combs
May 25, 2012 5:29 pm

temp says:
May 25, 2012 at 5:20 pm
Gail Combs says:
May 25, 2012 at 5:09 pm
“it is Neo-corporatism I hate.”
A better term is just to call it socialism because thats what it is in the end run.
__________________________________
I try not to use the term “Socialism” because most of the ‘Innocents’ immediately turn their brain off. They never see the guy behind the curtain only the “show” unfortunately.

clipe
May 25, 2012 5:39 pm

AllanJ says:
May 25, 2012 at 1:16 pm
In a capitalist society greed for riches and fear of poverty drive production.
No, no, no! It’s self interest!
http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/s/smith/adam/s64w/complete.html

clipe
May 25, 2012 6:10 pm

“it is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own self-interest.”

TheGoodLocust
May 25, 2012 7:42 pm

Yes, I pointed this out to William years ago. I forget what his response was.

temp
May 25, 2012 7:48 pm

Gail Combs says:
May 25, 2012 at 5:29 pm
yeah its true sadly the goal of propaganda is to take words twist them in circles and make mean everything but what they mean. The “useful idiots” react to the “buzz words” and shut down.

May 25, 2012 9:09 pm

DocWat says:
May 25, 2012 at 3:04 pm
“I challenge any of you, Skeptics or Warmistas, to show me a person, a computer, a program, an organization, anything that reliably predicts weather or climate more than three days into the future.”
Reply—————–
This is my latest attempt, these maps were generated from data that has been tabled and waited since December of 2007 to be made into these maps, same as the older maps on the original site, just higher resolution and a forth cycle (cia 1938 start time) recently added to the existing data base. The today’s map was generated three weeks ago from the same data set.
http://staging.aerology.com/Home/

Tim B
May 25, 2012 10:08 pm

Watch Cosmos “Heaven and Hell’ from 1979. Carl Sagan, arguably one of the first climatologists that did research on ‘Nuclear winter’ discusses what increased albedo of clear cutting forests, increased albedo of runaway polar caps and all that positive feedback might lead to a very rapid ice age.