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No, this isn’t a joke, it isn’t a fake document, and it isn’t a misinterpretation. It is a paper published by Dr. James Hansen (and the GISS team) in PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences). In the paper (published in 2000, but long since buried) they make these two bold statements (emphasis mine):
..we argue that rapid warming in recent decades has been driven mainly by non-CO2 greenhouse gases (GHGs), such as chlorofluorocarbons, CH4, and N2O, not by the products of fossil fuel burning, CO2 and aerosols..
If sources of CH4 and O3 precursors were reduced in the future, the change in climate forcing by non-CO2 GHGs in the next 50 years could be near zero. Combined with a reduction of black carbon emissions and plausible success in slowing CO2 emissions, this reduction of non-CO2 GHGs could lead to a decline in the rate of global warming, reducing the danger of dramatic climate change.
Basically what Hansen is saying is that we should focus on air pollution, and some CO2 reduction, but not exclusively on CO2 alone. This is of course at odds with his famous 350ppm CO2 “safe level” upon which the activist organization 350.org is formed, along with many other pronouncements made by Hansen. I post the abstract and excerpts from the PNAS paper below. Be sure to note the item in red. – Anthony
Global warming in the twenty-first century: An alternative scenario
James Hansen*†, Makiko Sato*‡, Reto Ruedy*, Andrew Lacis*, and Valdar Oinas*§
+ Author Affiliations *National Aeronautics and Space Administration Goddard Institute for Space Studies, ‡Center for Climate Systems Research, Columbia University Earth Institute, and §Center for Environmental Prediction, Rutgers University, 2880 Broadway, New York, NY 10025 Contributed by James Hansen
Abstract
A common view is that the current global warming rate will continue or accelerate. But we argue that rapid warming in recent decades has been driven mainly by non-CO2 greenhouse gases (GHGs), such as chlorofluorocarbons, CH4, and N2O, not by the products of fossil fuel burning, CO2 and aerosols, the positive and negative climate forcings of which are partially offsetting. The growth rate of non-CO2 GHGs has declined in the past decade. If sources of CH4 and O3 precursors were reduced in the future, the change in climate forcing by non-CO2 GHGs in the next 50 years could be near zero. Combined with a reduction of black carbon emissions and plausible success in slowing CO2 emissions, this reduction of non-CO2 GHGs could lead to a decline in the rate of global warming, reducing the danger of dramatic climate change. Such a focus on air pollution has practical benefits that unite the interests of developed and developing countries. However, assessment of ongoing and future climate change requires composition-specific long-term global monitoring of aerosol properties.
The global surface temperature has increased by about 0.5°C since 1975 (1, 2), a burst of warming that has taken the global temperature to its highest level in the past millennium (3). There is a growing consensus (4) that the warming is at least in part a consequence of increasing anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHGs).
GHGs cause a global climate forcing, i.e., an imposed perturbation of the Earth’s energy balance with space (5). There are many competing natural and anthropogenic climate forcings, but increasing GHGs are estimated to be the largest forcing and to result in a net positive forcing, especially during the past few decades (4, 6). Evidence supporting this interpretation is provided by observed heat storage in the ocean (7), which is positive and of the magnitude of the energy imbalance estimated from climate forcings for recent decades (8).
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (4) has considered a range of scenarios for future GHGs, which is further expanded in its Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (9). Yet global warming simulations have focused on “business as usual” scenarios with rapidly increasing GHGs. These scenarios yield a steep, relentless increase in global temperature throughout the twenty-first century (4, 10) with warming of several degrees Celsius by 2100, if climate sensitivity is 2–4°C for doubled CO2, as climate models suggest (4, 11–13). These figures can give the impression that curtailment of global warming is almost hopeless. The 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which calls for industrialized nations to reduce their CO2 emissions to 95% of 1990 levels by 2012 (14), is itself considered a difficult target to achieve. Yet the climate simulations lead to the conclusion that the Kyoto reductions will have little effect in the twenty-first century (15), and “30 Kyotos” may be needed to reduce warming to an acceptable level (16).
We suggest equal emphasis on an alternative, more optimistic, scenario. This scenario focuses on reducing non-CO2 GHGs and black carbon during the next 50 years. Our estimates of global climate forcings indicate that it is the non-CO2 GHGs that have caused most observed global warming. This interpretation does not alter the desirability of limiting CO2 emissions, because the future balance of forcings is likely to shift toward dominance of CO2 over aerosols. However, we suggest that it is more practical to slow global warming than is sometimes assumed.
…

Climate forcing by CO2 is the largest forcing, but it does not dwarf the others (Fig. 1). Forcing by CH4 (0.7 W/m2) is half as large as that of CO2, and the total forcing by non-CO2 GHGs (1.4 W/m2) equals that of CO2. Moreover, in comparing forcings due to different activities, we must note that the fossil fuels producing most of the CO2 are also the main source of aerosols, especially sulfates, black carbon, and organic aerosols (4, 23). Fossil fuels contribute only a minor part of the non-CO2 GHG growth via emissions that are not essential to energy production.
Aerosols cause a climate forcing directly by reflecting sunlight and indirectly by modifying cloud properties. The indirect effect includes increased cloud brightness, as aerosols lead to a larger number and smaller size of cloud droplets (24), and increased cloud cover, as smaller droplets inhibit rainfall and increase cloud lifetime (25). Absorbing aerosols cause a semidirect forcing by heating the atmosphere, thus reducing large-scale cloud cover (5). In addition, absorbing aerosols within cloud drops and in interstitial air decrease cloud brightness.
Forcing by atmospheric aerosols is uncertain, but research of the past decade indicates that it is substantial (4, 26–28). The aerosol forcing that we estimate (6) has the same magnitude (1.4 W/m2) but a sign that is opposite that of the CO2 forcing. Fossil fuel use is the main source of both CO2 and aerosols, with land conversion and biomass burning also contributing to both forcings. Although fossil fuels contribute to growth of some of the other GHGs, it follows that the net global climate forcing due to processes that produced CO2 in the past century probably is much less than 1.4 W/m2. This partial offsetting of aerosol and greenhouse forcings has been discussed (29–31). Offsetting of global mean forcings does not imply that climate effects are negligible.
A corollary following from Fig. 1 is that climate forcing by non-CO2 GHGs (1.4 W/m2) is nearly equal to the net value of all known forcings for the period 1850–2000 (1.6 W/m2). Thus, assuming only that our estimates are approximately correct, we assert that the processes producing the non-CO2 GHGs have been the primary drive for climate change in the past century.
…
An Alternative Scenario

Let us propose a climate forcing scenario for the next 50 years that adds little forcing (Fig. 5), less than or about 1 W/m2, and then ask whether the elements of the scenario are plausible. The next 50 years is the most difficult time to affect CO2 emissions, because of the inertia of global energy systems, as evidenced by Fig. 4. The essence of the strategy is to halt and even reverse the growth of non-CO2 GHGs and to reduce black carbon emissions. Such a strategy would mitigate an inevitable, even if slowing, growth of CO2. By midcentury improved energy efficiency and advanced technologies, perhaps including hydrogen-powered fuel cells, should allow policy options with reduced reliance on fossil fuels and, if necessary, CO2 sequestration.
…
Summary
Business-as-usual scenarios provide a useful warning about the potential for human-made climate change. Our analysis of climate forcings suggests, as a strategy to slow global warming, an alternative scenario focused on reducing non-CO2 GHGs and black carbon (soot) aerosols. Investments in technology to improve energy efficiency and develop nonfossil energy sources are also needed to slow the growth of CO2 emissions and expand future policy options.
A key feature of this strategy is its focus on air pollution, especially aerosols and tropospheric ozone, which have human health and ecological impacts. If the World Bank were to support investments in modern technology and air quality control in India and China, for example, the reductions in tropospheric ozone and black carbon would not only improve local health and agricultural productivity but also benefit global climate and air quality.
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So the strategy should be to focus on air pollution, not CO2
Think I made all this up? Read the paper at PNAS here.
(Big hat tip to WUWT reader Nick.)
Backup link in case it disappears like so many other things is here.
Now for the other shocker. This paper was published in the year 2000. So what happened to Hansen since then? He’s totally lost the plot from then, which from my perspective, seems reasonable, and one I could get behind.
Instead we have pronouncements like this:
2008 from a non peer reviewed paper published on Hansen’s personal website –
If humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to which life on Earth is adapted, paleoclimate evidence and ongoing climate change suggest that CO2 will need to be reduced from its current 385 ppm to at most 350 ppm.
2009 in a article in the UK Guardian. Hansen says –
“The trains carrying coal to power plants are death trains. Coal-fired power plants are factories of death.”
And this:
Clearly, if we burn all fossil fuels, we will destroy the planet we know. Carbon dioxide would increase to 500 ppm or more.
May 10th, 2012 Game over on Climate, New York Times op-ed –
Canada’s tar sands, deposits of sand saturated with bitumen, contain twice the amount of carbon dioxide emitted by global oil use in our entire history. If we were to fully exploit this new oil source, and continue to burn our conventional oil, gas and coal supplies, concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere eventually would reach levels higher than in the Pliocene era, more than 2.5 million years ago, when sea level was at least 50 feet higher than it is now. That level of heat-trapping gases would assure that the disintegration of the ice sheets would accelerate out of control. Sea levels would rise and destroy coastal cities. Global temperatures would become intolerable. Twenty to 50 percent of the planet’s species would be driven to extinction. Civilization would be at risk.
No mention of the other GHG’s, carbon soot, and aersols in that op-ed.
Clearly he seems to have abandoned the idea that seemed so reasonable and workable in his 2000 paper for the idea that CO2 reduction and removal of fossil fuels from the energy equation is the only possible scenario.
I think he was affected by the money, power, and hoopla surrounding Al Gore’s success with the alarming fabrications in An Inconvenient Truth as well as the hoopla and fame associated with the Nobel prize for the 2007 IPCC report. (Added: it is important to note that all of this backpedaling occurred after Hansen’s 1988 Senate testimony where he and sponsoring Senator Tim Wirth were so sure of the science blaming CO2 saying “that it was 99 percent certain that the warming trend was not a natural variation but was caused by a buildup of carbon dioxide and other artificial gases in the atmosphere.” that they had a thermostat malfunction in the hearing room, it came after Rio Earth Summit 1992, and the subsequent Kyoto protocol. Now Hansen has flip-flopped again with more recent CO2 pronouncements.)
When you go from scientist to arrested activist, the reasonable path just doesn’t get people stirred up. It seems Dr. Hansen has gone over to the dark side of the forcings.
Ask Dr. Hansen’s acolyte Bill McKibben how well reasonable approaches work in all the wailing hippie protests he organizes. You can connect the dots.
UPDATE: graph added, thanks to Joshua Halpern of Howard University who says:
Eli Rabett on 2012/06/03 at 10:42 am says:
That was 2000, this is 2012. As that paper said, the alternative strategy would buy time, not solve the problem. We didn’t follow it and are now running out of time. Twelve years is a while.
REPLY: Yes as noted clearly in red, that was 2000. Twelve years without warming is a while.

http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2000/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:2000/trend
What’s the rush? Meanwhile:
NOAA: Carbon dioxide levels reach milestone at Arctic sites
NOAA cooperative measurements in remote, northern sites hit greenhouse gas milestone in April
– Anthony
UPDATE2: It gets stranger. WUWT reader Jimbo points out in comments, that Hansen wrote a paper blaming soot for the Arctic ice melt, calling it twice as effective as CO2.
Soot climate forcing via snow and ice albedos James Hansen* †‡ and Larissa Nazarenko* †
Plausible estimates for the effect of soot on snow and ice albedos (1.5% in the Arctic and 3% in Northern Hemisphere land areas) yield a climate forcing of 0.3 Wm2 in the Northern Hemisphere. The ‘‘efficacy’’ of this forcing is 2, i.e., for a given forcing it is twice as effective as CO2 in altering global surface air temperature.
Global Warming. Soot snowice albedo climate forcing is not included in Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change evaluations. This forcing is unusually effective, causing twice as much global warming as a CO2 forcing of the same magnitude. This high efficacy is a straight-forward consequence of positive albedo feedbacks and atmospheric stability at high latitudes. Our estimate for the mean soot effect on spectrally integrated albedos in the Arctic (1.5%) and Northern Hemisphere land areas (3%) yields a Northern Hemisphere forcing of 0.3 Wm2 or an effective hemispheric forcing of 0.6 Wm2 . The calculated global warming in an 1880–2000 simulation is about one quarter of observed global warming
Source: pubs.giss.nasa.gov/docs/2004/2004_Hansen_Nazarenko.pdf

mfo says:
June 4, 2012 at 4:17 am
“The Washington Post and Rolling Stone. The most accurate summaries of our paper, in my
opinion, were an article in the Rolling Stone and an editorial in The Washington Post.”
Ah yes – PEER REVIEW! heh!!
I just love Hansen. He cracks me up.
NASA’s Hansen appears to have been censored, but not by Pres George Bush’s administration, rather it seems that Hansen was censored severely shortly after 2000 by the world leaders of CAGWism after his widely publicized and controversial ‘CO2 isn’t very alarming’ 2000 paper. I think he was censored by CAGWists because his paper did not support the CO2 alarmist ‘science’ agenda.
He appears to have been sent to a re-education conference sometime in late 2000 or early 2001 to put him firmly back on track in support of the ideologically oriented ‘scientific’ agenda on CO2 alarmism. The late 2000 or early 2001 re-education apparently stuck to him all the way to the present.
Based on that then I will conclude Hansen has always been a mere ‘scientific’ lackey; a useful tool for policy informed science; not a leader.
John
Jim Clarke says: June 3, 2012 at 2:54 pm
Well let me enlighten you: The answer was in front of your eyes:
http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/authors/jhansen.html
And watch how many new studies appeared after 2000. And this is just one author of the many.
Darren Potter says: June 3, 2012 at 3:18 pm
“Water Vapor is responsible for 95% of Green House Gas effect.”
Really!
Just show me where you got that number from?
Billy Liar says: June 3, 2012 at 5:55 pm
This information is there in the paper by Hansen et al 2000. Just read it. It is not a misinterpretation. I interpreted the paper. That’s all.
Btw: Was that site http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/aggi/ also there in 2000?
I think not. That’s what we gained at knowledge in the last 12 years.
Your terrible analogy proves that YOU don’t understand physics.
A constant current source is NOT a constant power source. The power output of a constant current source INCREASES as the resistance in the circuit is increased. Certainly, the power output of the sun doesn’t INCREASE due to any supposed increase in thermal resistance in the earth’s atmosphere.
Replace your constant current source with a constant power source (a better sun analogy), then the power dissipated by the resistor is exactly the same regardless of the size (resistance value) of the resistor. As a matter of fact, even if resistance approaches infinity (infinite resistance being an open circuit), then current approaches zero – which makes perfect sense. Current doesn’t flow in an open circuit even with a constant power source.
the real shocker is that it took you until 2012 to read this article from the year 2000
REPLY: what is even more of a shocker is the article itself, and the fact that Hansen does not list it on his page here: http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/
Apparently there was a tiff with UCS and this paper got buried. Anthony
Looks like the same old standard CAGW line. Now that they’ve given up on explaining the recent lack of warming in light of continuing CO2 release, they have to dredge up old research that justifies a completely different position with the same conclusion. Much like when snow was going to be a thing of the past, and then when good old Mother Nature decided to drop a metric ton of snow on the planet, all of sudden they were citing research that said there would be more ‘precipitation’. You can’t falsify this junk because it’s not science; it’s religion. These people do more ret-conning than Star Tek writers. No matter what happens, CO2 and global warming will be to blame in their eyes. If the sun turned into a blueberry muffin tomorrow, before the death of the planet and all human life as we know it, Hanson et al. would publish a paper linking Betty Crocker to rising CO2 levels.
So he published this in 2000 and by 2005 realized he had gotten this wrong as well?
Appendix: Climate forcing scenarios
http://naturalscience.com/ns/articles/01-16/ns_jeh6.html
Non-CO2 forcings Methane (CH4) causes the second largest GHG climate forcing. Hansen and Sato (Reference 1a) show that actual growth rate of CH4 is falling below all IPCC scenarios. In the past two years, the gap between the IPCC CH4 scenarios and reality has widened. Other large anthropogenic forcings are those of black carbon and O3. Unfortunately, neither of these is being measured well enough globally to determine its rate of change. I leave it to the reader to mull: do you believe that the amount of these air pollutants will be larger in 2050 than it is today, as it is in the IPCC scenarios? If it is not, their added forcing will be zero or negative. Finally, note that IPCC assumes that the net climate forcing by CFCs and their replacements will increase this decade. Observations show that the CFC forcing is below the IPCC scenarios and may shift to a small negative annual change by 2005.
It is reasonable to project that further change in non-CO2 forcings could be minimal in the 21st century. Small decreases in CFCs and some air pollutants could tend to balance modest increases in other pollutants and N2O. However, such a near balance will not happen automatically. It will require concerted actions and international cooperation.
Does his work meet the requirements of an argument after attempts to silence and discredit opposition have failed?
Official: the more scientifically illiterate you are, the more you believe in ‘climate change’
James Delingpole
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/jamesdelingpole/100161868/official-the-more-scientifically-illiterate-you-are-the-more-you-believe-in-climate-change/
Unless I’m missing something, Hansen and Sato pointed out in 2001, “The growth rate of climate forcing by measured greenhouse gases peaked near 1980”.
If it peaked near 1980, doesn’t this minimize CO2 from the warming scenereo as its been rising ever since?
Trends of measured climate forcing agents
James E. Hansen and Makiko Sato
December, 2001
Abstract
The growth rate of climate forcing by measured greenhouse gases peaked near 1980 at almost 5 W/m² per century. This growth rate has since declined to ≈3 W/m² per century, largely because of cooperative international actions. We argue that trends can be reduced to the level needed for the moderate “alternative” climate scenario (≈2 W/m² per century for the next 50 years) by means of concerted actions that have other benefits, but the forcing reductions are not automatic “co-benefits” of actions that slow CO2 emissions. Current trends of climate forcings by aerosols remain very uncertain. Nevertheless, practical constraints on changes in emission levels suggest that global warming at a rate +0.15 ± 0.05°C per decade will occur over the next several decades.
source: http://www.pnas.org/content/98/26/14778.full
(Added: it is important to note that all of this backpedaling occurred after Hansen’s 1988 Senate testimony where he and sponsoring Senator Tim Wirth were so sure of the science blaming CO2 saying “that it was 99 percent certain that the warming trend was not a natural variation but was caused by a buildup of carbon dioxide and other artificial gases in the atmosphere.”
My emphasis.
I suggest you look at Fig 2 in Hansen’s 1988 paper, except for scenario C non-CO2 GHGs were expected to have a significant contribution, particularly scenario A where they would dominate.
John Whitman says:
June 4, 2012 at 7:14 am
NASA’s Hansen appears to have been censored, but not by Pres George Bush’s administration, rather it seems that Hansen was censored severely shortly after 2000 by the world leaders of CAGWism…
He appears to have been sent to a re-education conference sometime in late 2000 or early 2001 …
_______________________________________
NAH, they just sicced Mike Mann on him and Mann brought him back into line. Why do you think Mann is fighting tooth and nail to keep his e-mails from the public??? He doesn’t want people to realize he is the CAGW “Enforcer” /sarc
But in the summary iy goes on to say
‘Business-as-usual scenarios provide a useful warning about the potential for HUMAN-MADE CLIMATE CHANGE’
So changes must be made to stop runaway climate change!
REPLY: what is even more of a shocker is the article itself, and the fact that Hansen does not list it on his page here: http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/
Apparently there was a tiff with UCS and this paper got buried. Anthony
It is on his homepage. How is that buried?
This link says:
http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/
See Dr. Hansen’s bibliography webpage on the NASA GISS website for publications prior to 2004.
Click on his link here and there it is clear as day.
http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/authors/jhansen.html
REPLY: Yes buried. Seen any discussion of this paper since Al Gore let loose with AIT? Or since IPPC 2007? – Anthony
Robbie – “Really! Just show me where you got that number from?”
> Darren Potter – “Water Vapor is responsible for 95% of Green House Gas effect.”
From several places. But one place you might accept is from Skeptical Science where they attempt to counter the following: “Water vapour is the most important greenhouse gas. This is part of the difficulty with the public and the media in understanding that 95% of greenhouse gases are water vapour.”
http://www.skepticalscience.com/water-vapor-greenhouse-gas-basic.htm
Take careful note of Skeptical Science’s counter. – Despite all the blah, blah, blah (aka SPIN) Skeptical Science (SS) never says that the 95% is incorrect. SS merely tries to downplay or skip around the 95% fact. SS also plays the scare words of Amplify, Forcing, Feedback / Doubling. Along with going off on tangents such as “Empirical Observations” from Mount Pinatubo. (face palm)
Realize, most AGWers’ charts that show GHGs leave off Water Vapor (or leave out its % effect) so that CO2 and N2O appear to be the big evils.
Myrrh says:
June 4, 2012 at 3:52 am
Here, a real picture of carbon dioxide levels worth a thousand words:
http://www.biomind.de/realCO2/literature/evidence-var-corrRSCb.pdf
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Thank you Myrrh.
I have never seen that shown in the link. I recommend anyone interested in CO2 take a look.
Interesting that research done prior to ‘politicized science’ could be so revealing.
Maybe Anthony could post this in ‘bold, red, and blinking’ along with some embedded sounds of bells. 😉
But even then some would not notice.
usJim says:
June 3, 2012 at 6:00 pm
Steven Hales says:
June 3, 2012 at 11:52 am
I always wanted to say that my A/C unit saved the planet when CFCs were banned. Actually the decline in their use worldwide coincides with the flat temp line. …
Correct me if I am wrong, but, the last data I saw actually showed CFC use up; just not in the ‘regulated’ countries like the US …
Jim, The most long lived CFCs have been banned and are being phased out worldwide. Total stratospheric loading has declined by over 10%. Certain refrigerant species are increasing but they are less damaging to the ozone layer and overall their pressence in the troposphere has had a negligible effect on global temps as they have a significantly lower GWP on average, some by a factor of 10 or more.
http://cienbas.galeon.com/04GW_Potential.htm — for a rundown of CFC species
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ozone_cfc_trends.png — CFC trends
2000 was also the year Hansen made his “adjustments” to U.S. SAT effectively wiping out the 1930’s warmth. Perhaps he had a vision.
Another shocker??
“Solar Cells Linked to Greenhouse Gases Over 23,000 Times Worse than Carbon Dioxide”
http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/738098
CO2 is a “trace gas” in air, insignificant by definition, 1/7th the absorber of IR, heat energy, from sunlight as water vapor which has 80 times as many molecules captures 560 times as much heat making 99.8% of all “global warming.” CO2 does only 0.2% of it.
Carbon combustion generates 80% of our energy. Control and taxing of carbon would give the elected ruling class more power and money than anything since the Magna Carta of 1215 AD.
The Two Minute Conservative at http://adrianvance.blogspot.com for political analysis, science and humor. Daily on Kindle.
REPLY: Yes buried. Seen any discussion of this paper since Al Gore let loose with AIT? Or since IPPC 2007? – Anthony
Sure look in the literature. It has been cited in numerous papers almost every year since it was published. Google scholar brings up 547 citations.
REPLY: I’m aware of that, my point it has been buried by the press and in general public discussion. – Anthony
REPLY: I’m aware of that, my point it has been buried by the press and in general public discussion. – Anthony
– – – – – – –
Anthony,
But now there will be some public scrutiny. Thank you for doing that here at your wonderful venue . . . . the famous intellectual salons of ~ 1900 Paris and Vienna were mere shadows compared to this intellectual / scientific e-salon of yours Anthony. Nice place.
John