AN ALTERNATIVE VIEW FROM DOWN UNDER
Geologist & environmental scientist
Katharine Hayhoe, PhD, who wrote the December AITSE piece “Climate Change: Anthropogenic or Not?”, is an atmospheric scientist and director of the Climate Science Center at Texas Tech University. She is senior author of the book “A Climate for Change: Global Warming Facts for Faith-Based Decisions”.
I am a senior research geologist who has published more than 100 peer-reviewed papers on palaeo-environmental and palaeo-climatic topics and also author of the book, “Climate: the Counter Consensus”.
Quite clearly, Dr. Hayhoe and I are both credible professional scientists. Given our training and research specializations, we are therefore competent to assess the evidence regarding the dangerous global warming that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) alleges is being caused by industrial carbon dioxide emissions.
Yet at the end of her article Dr. Hayhoe recommends for further reading the websites RealClimate.org and SkepticalScience.com, whereas here at the outset of writing my own article I recommend the websites wattsupwiththat.com and www.thegwpf.org (Global Warming Policy Foundation). To knowledgeable readers, this immediately signals that Dr. Hayhoe and I have diametrically opposing views on the global warming issue.
The general public finds it very hard to understand how such strong disagreement can exist between two equally qualified persons on a scientific topic, a disagreement that is manifest also on the wider scene by the existence of equivalent groups of scientists who either support or oppose the views of the IPCC about dangerous anthropogenic (human-caused) global warming (DAGW).
In this article I shall try to summarize what the essential disagreement is between these two groups of scientists, and show how it has come to be misrepresented in the public domain.
Common ground amongst DAGW protagonists
Though you wouldn’t know it from the antagonistic nature of public discussions about global warming, a large measure of scientific agreement and shared interpretation exists amongst nearly all scientists who consider the issue. The common ground, much of which was traversed by Dr. Hayhoe in her article, includes:
· that climate has always changed and always will,
· that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas and warms the lower atmosphere,
· that human emissions are accumulating in the atmosphere,
· that a global warming of around 0.5OC occurred in the 20th century, but
· that global warming has ceased over the last 15 years.
The scientific argument over DAGW is therefore about none of these things. Rather, it is almost entirely about three other, albeit related, issues. They are:
· the amount of net warming that is, or will be, produced by human-related emissions,
· whether any actual evidence exists for dangerous warming of human causation over the last 50 years, and
· whether the IPCC’s computer models can provide accurate climate predictions 100 years into the future.
Dr. Hayhoe’s answers to those questions would probably be along the line of: substantial, lots and yes. My answers would be: insignificant, none and no.
What can possibly explain such disparate responses to a largely agreed set of factual climate data?
How does science work?
Arguments about global warming, or more generally about climate change, are concerned with a scientific matter. Science deals with facts, experiments and numerical representations of the natural world around us. Science does not deal with emotions, beliefs or politics, but rather strives to analyse matters dispassionately and in an objective way, such that in consideration of a given set of facts two different practitioners might come to the same interpretation; and, yes, I am aware of the irony of that statement in the present context.
Which brings us to the matter of Occam’s Razor and the null hypothesis. William of Occam (1285-1347) was an English Franciscan monk and philosopher to whom is attributed the saying ‘Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate’, which translates as ‘Plurality should not be posited without necessity.’ This is a succinct statement of the principle of simplicity, or parsimony, that was first developed by Aristotle and which has today come to underlie all scientific endeavour.
The phrase ‘Occam’s Razor’ is now generally used as shorthand to represent the fundamental scientific assumption of simplicity. To explain any given set of observations of the natural world, scientific method proceeds by erecting, first, the simplest possible explanation (hypothesis) that can explain the known facts. This simple explanation, termed the null hypothesis, then becomes the assumed interpretation until additional facts emerge that require modification of the initial hypothesis, or perhaps even invalidate it altogether.
Given the great natural variability exhibited by climate records, and the failure to date to compartmentalize or identify a human signal within them, the proper null hypothesis – because it is the simplest consistent with the known facts – is that global climate changes are presumed to be natural, unless and until specific evidence is forthcoming for human causation.
It is one of the more extraordinary facts about the IPCC that the research studies it favours mostly proceed using an (unjustified) inversion of the null hypothesis – namely that global climate changes are presumed to be due to human-related carbon dioxide emissions, unless and until specific evidence indicates otherwise.
What hypothesis do we wish to test?
Though climate science overall is complex, the greenhouse hypothesis itself is straightforward and it is relatively simple to test it, or its implications, against the available data. First, though, we need to be crystal clear about precisely what we mean by the term.
In general communication, and in the media, the terms greenhouse and greenhouse hypothesis have come to carry a particular vernacular meaning – almost independently of their scientific derivation. When an opinion poll or a reporter solicits information on what members of the public think about the issue they ask questions such as “do you believe in global warming”, “do you believe in climate change” or “do you believe in the greenhouse effect”.
Leaving aside the issue that science is never about belief, all such questions are actually coded ones, being understood by the public to mean “is dangerous global warming being caused by human-related emissions of carbon dioxide”. Needless to say, this is a different, albeit related, question. These and other sloppy ambiguities (“carbon” for “carbon dioxide”, for example) are in daily use in the media, and they lead to great confusion in the public discussion about climate change; they also undermine the value of nearly all opinion poll results.
The DAGW hypothesis that I want to test here is precisely and only “that dangerous global warming is being caused, or will be, by human-related carbon dioxide emissions”. To be “dangerous”, at a minimum the change must exceed the magnitude or rate of warmings that are known to be associated with normal weather and climatic variability.
What evidence can we use to test the DAGW hypothesis?
Many different lines of evidence can be used to test the DAGW hypothesis. Here I have space to present just five, all of which are based upon real world empirical data. For more information, please read both Dr. Hayhoe’s and my book.
Consider the following tests:
(i) Over the last 16 years, global average temperature, as measured by both thermometers and satellite sensors, has displayed no statistically significant warming; over the same period, atmospheric carbon dioxide has increased by 10%.
Large increases in carbon dioxide have therefore not only failed to produce dangerous warming, but failed to produce any warming at all. Hypothesis fails.
(ii) During the 20th century, a global warming of between 0.4O C and 0.7O C occurred, at a maximum rate, in the early decades of the century, of about 1.7O C/century. In comparison, our best regional climate records show that over the last 10,000 years natural climate cycling has resulted in temperature highs up to at least 1O C warmer than today, at rates of warming up to 2.5O C/century.
In other words, both the rate and magnitude of 20th century warming falls well within the envelope of natural climate change. Hypothesis fails, twice.
(iii) If global temperature is controlled primarily by atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, then changes in carbon dioxide should precede parallel changes in temperature.
In fact, the opposite relationship applies at all time scales. Temperature change precedes carbon dioxide change by about 5 months during the annual seasonal cycle, and by about 700-1000 years during ice age climatic cycling. Hypothesis fails.
(iv) The IPCC’s computer general circulation models, which factor in the effect of increasing carbon dioxide, project that global warming should be occurring at a rate of +2.0O C/century.
In fact, no warming at all has occurred in either the atmosphere or the ocean for more than the last decade. The models are clearly faulty, and allocate too great a warming effect for the extra carbon dioxide (technically, they are said to overestimate the climate sensitivity). Hypothesis fails.
(v) The same computer models predict that a fingerprint of greenhouse-gas-induced warming will be the creation of an atmospheric hot spot at heights of 8-10 km in equatorial regions, and enhanced warming also near both poles.
Given that we already know that the models are faulty, it shouldn’t surprise us to discover that direct measurements by both weather balloon radiosondes and satellite sensors show the absence of surface warming in Antarctica, and a complete absence of the predicted low latitude atmospheric hot spot. Hypothesis fails, twice.
One of the 20th century’s greatest physicists, Richard Feynman, observed about science that:
In general we look for a new law by the following process. First we guess it. Then we compute the consequences of the guess to see what would be implied if this law that we guessed is right. Then we compare the result of the computation to nature, with experiment or experience; compare it directly with observation, to see if it works.
It’s that simple statement that is the key to science. It does not make any difference how beautiful your guess is. It does not make any difference how smart you are, who made the guess, or what his name is. If it disagrees with experiment it is wrong.
None of the five tests above supports or agrees with the predictions implicit in the greenhouse hypothesis as stated above. Richard Feynman is correct to advise us that therefore the hypothesis is invalid, and that many times over.
Summary
The current scientific reality is that the IPCC’s hypothesis of dangerous global warming has been repeatedly tested, and fails. Despite the expenditure of large sums of money over the last 25 years (more than $100 billion), and great research effort by IPCC-related and other (independent) scientists, to date no scientific study has established a certain link between changes in any significant environmental parameter and human-caused carbon dioxide emissions.
In contrast, the null hypothesis that the global climatic changes that we have observed over the last 150 years (and continue to observe today) are natural in origin has yet to be disproven. As summarised by an seo consultant in the reports of the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC), literally thousands of papers published in refereed journals contain facts or writings consistent with the null hypothesis, and plausible natural explanations exist for all the post-1850 global climatic changes that have been described so far.
Why is this conclusion not generally understood?
I commented earlier that science is not about emotion or politics, despite which it is uncomfortably true also that public discussion of the global warming issue is conducted far more in accordance with those criteria than it is about science. As discussed at more length in my book, there are three prime reasons for this.
First, as a branch of the United Nations, the IPCC is itself an intensely political and not a scientific body. To boot, the IPCC charter requires that it investigate not climate change in the round, but solely global warming caused by human greenhouse emissions.
Second, from local green activist groups up to behemoth NGOs like Greenpeace and WWF, over the last 20 years the environmental movement has espoused saving the planet from global warming as its leit motif. This has had two devastating results. One is that radical environmentalists have worked relentlessly to sow misinformation about global warming in both the public domain and the education system. And the other is that, faced with this widespread propagandization of public opinion and young persons, and by also by strong lobbying from powerful self-interested groups like government research scientists, alternative energy providers and financial marketeers, politicians have had no choice but to fall into line. Whatever their primary political philosophy, all active politicians are daily mindful of the need to assuage the green intimidation and bullying to which they and their constituents are incessantly subjected.
Third, and probably most influential of all, with very few exceptions major media outlets have provided unceasing support for measures to “stop global warming”. This behaviour appears to be driven by a combination of the liberal and green personal beliefs of most reporters, and the commercial nouse of experienced editors who understand that alarmist environmental reporting sells both product and advertising space.
But given that the science remains uncertain, shouldn’t we give earth the benefit of the doubt?
This famous slogan (and note its deliberately emotive phrasing) is attributed to News Corporation’s Rupert Murdoch; it bears all the hallmarks of having been produced by a green focus group or advertising agency. The catchy phrase also reveals a profound misunderstanding of the real climatic risks faced by our societies, because it assumes that global warming is more dangerous, or more to be feared, than is global cooling; in reality, the converse is likely to be true.
It must be recognized that the theoretical hazard of dangerous human-caused global warming is but one small part of a much wider climate hazard that all scientists agree upon, which is the dangerous natural weather and climatic events that Nature intermittently presents us with – and always will. It is absolutely clear from, for example, the 2005 Hurricane Katrina and 2012 Hurricane Sandy disasters in the US, the 2007 floods in the United Kingdom and the tragic bushfires in Australia in 2003 (Canberra), 2009 (Victoria) and in January this year (widespread), that the governments of even advanced, wealthy countries are often inadequately prepared for climate-related disasters of natural origin.
We need to do better, and squandering money to give earth the benefit of the doubt based upon an unjustifiable assumption that dangerous warming will shortly resume is exactly the wrong type of “picking winners” approach.
Because many scientists, including leading solar physicists, currently argue that the position that the Earth currently occupies in the solar cycle implies that the most likely climatic trend over the next several decades is one of significant cooling rather than warming. Meanwhile, the IPCC’s computer modellers assure us with all the authority at their command that global warming will shortly resume – just you wait and see.
The reality is, then, that no scientist on the planet can tell you with credible probability whether the climate in 2030 will be cooler or warmer than today. In such circumstances the only rational conclusion to draw is that we need to be prepared to react to either warming or cooling over the next several decades, depending upon what Nature chooses to serve up to us.
What is the best way forward?
Given that we cannot predict what future climate will be, do we still need national climate policies at all?
Indeed we do, for a primary government duty of care is to protect the citizenry and the environment from the ravages of natural climatic events. What is needed is not unnecessary and penal measures against carbon dioxide emissions, but instead a prudent and cost-effective policy of preparation for, and response to, all climatic events and hazards as and when they develop.
As Ronald Brunner and Amanda Lynch have argued in their recent book, Adaptive Governance and Climate Change, and many other scientists have supported too:
We need to use adaptive governance to produce response programs that cope with hazardous climate events as they happen, and that encourage diversity and innovation in the search for solutions. In such a fashion, the highly contentious ‘global warming’ problem can be recast into an issue in which every culture and community around the world has an inherent interest.
Climate hazard is both a geological and meteorological issue. Geological hazards are mostly dealt with by providing civil defense authorities and the public with accurate, evidence-based information regarding events such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis, storms and floods (which represent climatic as well as weather events), and by mitigating and adapting to the effects when an event occurs.
New Zealand’s GeoNet natural hazard network is a world-best-practice example of how to proceed. GeoNet is New Zealand’s national natural hazard monitoring agency. GeoNet operates networks of geophysical instruments to detect, analyse and respond to earthquakes, volcanic activity, landslides and tsunami. The additional risk of longer-term climate change, which GeoNet currently doesn’t cover, differs from most other natural hazards only in that it occurs over periods of decades to hundreds or thousands of years. This difference is not one of kind, and neither should be our response planning.
The appropriate response to climate hazard, then, is national policies based on preparing for and adapting to all climate events as and when they happen, and irrespective of their presumed cause. Every country needs to develop its own understanding of, and plans to cope with, the unique combination of climate hazards that apply within its boundaries. The planned responses should be based upon adaptation, with mitigation where appropriate to cushion citizens who are affected in an undesirable way.
The idea that there can be a one-size-fits-all global solution to deal with just one possible aspect of future climate change, as recommended by the IPCC and favoured by green activists and most media commentators, fails entirely to deal with the real climate and climate-related hazards to which we are all exposed every day.
—————————————————————————————————————
Robert (Bob) Carter is a marine geologist and environmental scientist with more than 40 years professional experience who has held academic positions at the University of Otago (Dunedin) and James Cook University (Townsville), where he was Professor and Head of School of Earth Sciences between 1981 and 1999. His career has included periods as a Commonwealth Scholar (Cambridge University), a Nuffield Fellow (Oxford University) and an Australian Research Council Special Investigator. Bob has acted as an expert witness on climate change before the U.S. Senate Committee of Environment & Public Works, the Australian and N.Z. parliamentary Select Committees into emissions trading, and was a primary science witness in the U.K. High Court case of Dimmock v. H.M.’s Secretary of State for Education, the 2007 judgement from which identified nine major scientific errors in Mr Al Gore’s film “An Inconvenient Truth“. Carter is author of the book, Climate: the Counter Consensus (2010, Stacey International Ltd., London).
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Izen says
Polar amplification has been seen at the North pole of course, the Antarctic however is significantly decoupled from the global climate and still effected by the ozone depletion from CFCs causing an intensification of the circumpolar vortex.
henry says
the arctic melt is due to the warmer Gulf Stream
same as here:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2008/03/16/you-ask-i-provide-november-2nd-1922-arctic-ocean-getting-warm-seals-vanish-and-icebergs-melt/
(2012-88=1924)
However, the warming (looking at energy-in) has ended in 1995 when ozone started increasing.
The warming started in 1951 when ozone (& others) started decreasing.
http://blogs.24.com/henryp/2012/10/02/best-sine-wave-fit-for-the-drop-in-global-maximum-temperatures/
I have ozone data from the Swiss alps showing 1951 and 1995 as bending points. I have also data from the SH showing 1950 and 1995 as bending points. The notion of CFC’s destroying ozone was probably a red herring or a minor factor.
don’t listen to anything Leif Svalgaard has to say about this – for some reason he is just trying to get us all off that trail.
leif svalgaard says
(referring to the Gleissberg solar/weather cycle)
There is no such weather cycle and there is currently no such solar cycle [it is more like 105 years, but is not a real cycle].
Henry says
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 108, 1003, 15 PP., 2003
doi:10.1029/2002JA009390
Persistence of the Gleissberg 88-year solar cycle over the last ∼12,000years: Evidence from cosmogenic isotopes
Alexei N. Peristykh
Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA
Paul E. Damon
Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA
link: http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2003/2002JA009390.shtml
Among other longer-than-22-year periods in Fourier spectra of various solar–terrestrial records, the 88-year cycle is unique, because it can be directly linked to the cyclic activity of sunspot formation. Variations of amplitude as well as of period of the Schwabe 11-year cycle of sunspot activity have actually been known for a long time and a ca. 80-year cycle was detected in those variations. Manifestations of such secular periodic processes were reported in a broad variety of solar, solar–terrestrial,and terrestrial climatic phenomena. Confirmation of the existence of the Gleissberg cycle in long solar–terrestrial records as well as the question of its stability is of great significance for solar dynamo theories. For that perspective, we examined the longest detailed cosmogenic isotope record— …..
etc
izen says:
January 30, 2013 at 6:01 am
“That is an equilibrium figure not expected to be reached until all the effects of the extra energy from raised CO2 have impacted the system.”
Extra energy? Where does the extra come from? Does CO2 produce its own energy? Please explain.
As to the accusations of cherry picking, since Hansen’s grandstand in 1988 with the AGW mantra, till date, in 25 years, the numbers of years for which there has been no statistically significant increase in warming out number the warming years by a wide margin. And CO2 rise has been steady through the entire period. So much for the models and their garbage.
Professor Robert (Bob) Carter: “a large measure of scientific agreement and shared interpretation exists amongst nearly all scientists who consider the issue. The common ground, much of which was traversed by Dr. Hayhoe in her article, includes:
· that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas and warms the lower atmosphere,
· that a global warming of around 0.5OC occurred in the 20th century, but”
===========================================================
Not true. I humbly allow me to refer to a previous comment of mine on a study dealing with the “consensus” issue: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/04/30/consensus-argument-proves-climate-science-is-political/#comment-972119
The reason why the 16 years is significant is because it shows how bad their models are, using their own words. See 15 years and 17 years below.
izen says:
January 30, 2013 at 6:01 am
Of course the warming IS statistically significant over 14 or 18 years, the 16 year period is a cherry pick.
I went by http://www.skepticalscience.com/trend.php
Here is what I found.
For RSS the warming is NOT significant for over 23 years.
For RSS: +0.126 +/-0.136 C/decade at the two sigma level from 1990
For UAH, the warming is NOT significant for over 19 years.
For UAH: 0.143 +/- 0.173 C/decade at the two sigma level from 1994
For Hacrut3, the warming is NOT significant for over 19 years.
For Hadcrut3: 0.098 +/- 0.113 C/decade at the two sigma level from 1994
For Hacrut4, the warming is NOT significant for over 18 years.
For Hadcrut4: 0.095 +/- 0.111 C/decade at the two sigma level from 1995
For GISS, the warming is NOT significant for over 17 years.
For GISS: 0.116 +/- 0.122 C/decade at the two sigma level from 1996
If you want to know the times to the nearest month that the warming is not significant for each set, they are as follows: RSS since September 1989; UAH since April 1993; Hadcrut3 since September 1993; Hadcrut4 since August 1994; GISS since October 1995 and NOAA since June 1994.
PLEASE TELL ME WHERE I MISSED THAT 14 YEARS OF SIGNIFICANT WARMING.
Georgi says: “How does the quantum mechanical ‘many worlds’ interpretation fit with Occam’s razor? Always puzzled me.”
Many worlds is a product of interpreting quantum mechanical behavior within the limits imposed by Einstein’s theory of relativity. Yet we often forget that Einstein’s theory of relativity has created a need to consider time as a physical dimension rather than an illusion of change documented by cyclic devices (clocks). Maybe we have been taken in by the anthropogenic interpretation of time, we sense it passing, we sense the past therefore it must exist and thus we can measure it, instead of what should be the ‘null hypothesis’, that time is a product of using a cyclic tool to measurement non cyclic change. In fact, Einstein’s theory has now become the null hypothesis since no new experiment attempts to challenge the fundamental interpretation. I suspect however that the theory suffers from anthropogenic observer bias..the assumption that whatever we observe, measure and test must signal the underlying physical mechanisms. Yet complexity theory teaches us that simple feedbacks of simple systems result in incredibly complex emergent behaviors (non-linear dynamic system) that reveal nothing about the simple physics that created that behavior.
Maybe one day we will look back on Einstein’s theory of relativity at its collapse and discovery the inadequacy of our scientific approach. Or maybe not!
Dick Witman:
re your rant at January 30, 2013 at 8:24 am
Weather and climate change. They always have, everywhere. Live with it.
Yes, new high temperature records are set every year, and new low temperature records are, too. That is because the temperatures have only been measured for a short time.
AGW sceptics are NOT in the pay of ‘Big Oil’.
If any energy company were to offer me money then I would take every penny (I suppose Bob Carter and Anthony Watts would, too, but I don’t know that).
Energy companies fund CRU, Phil Jones, Michael Mann, and other warmunists: they don’t fund people like Bob Carter who tell the truth about there being no threat from AGW.
Richard
The best summary of the issue I ave ever read.
lsvalgaard says:
January 30, 2013 at 6:28 am
There is no such weather cycle and there is currently no such solar cycle [it is more like 105 years, but is not a real cycle].
Yes, I am pleased that you agree, there is 105 year ‘cycle’ (history of our discussion on the existence or non-existence of such period goes back few years), but more to the point it appears that the changes in the earth’s magnetic field exhibits more or less the same 105 year period of change as shown in the second illustration of
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/EarthNV.htm
Agree with HenryP that the most if not all of global warming appear to be NATURAL.
Good article, one small beef though: Although it pains me to say it, the lack of warming in the last 16 years does not automatically void the assumption of a link between CO2 and warming, because there could be hysteresis, time delays in the system.
I don’t personally believe this to be the case, but since it’s a possibility, it would be foolish to ignore it in these sorts of discussions until we have passed a period where it can’t possibly be a fluctuation (they keep expanding the definition of this time period, but I would say 20 years would pretty much cover it)
You are quite correct, but you failed to note his discussion about the null hypothesis. The entire point of the hockey stick graph from the beginning is that without some supposedly credible curve that “erased” the MWP and LIA and replaced them with a flatline up to an industrial era hockey stick increase, nobody would ever have drunk the IPCC kool-ade in the first place!
That is, if it was really just as warm (withing noise) in the MWP or the RWP as it is today (as apparently it was) without CO_2, it is very difficult to argue that it is only as warm as it is today because of CO_2. If the LIA was really the coldest single century in eleven thousand years (as apparently it was) than it is hardly surprising that the Earth might spend several centuries warming back up from it, a process that occurred independent of CO_2 levels and that continues similarly independent today.
That’s the point of the “natural variability”. Michael Mann became famous strictly because he managed to cook up a graph that utterly eliminated it on a millennial time scale, erasing the evidence of natural variability altogether so the current variation could be blamed on CO_2 and human influences. Humans really aren’t that dumb — sheer common sense would have prevented most people from buying the CAGW or DAGW (is this a renamed, kinder gentler version of CAGW, one where warming is merely “dangerous” and no longer “catastrophic”?) hypothesis when there was nothing extraordinary about the present compared to the past. It still would, but at this point the big lies have already been told, and a thousand small lies support them. There is a large social-inertia mass to be moved and only the weight of truth to move it. Historically that weight is up to the task, but it often takes decades to centuries to work.
So you are dead right. The C/DAGW hypothesis has not been disproven. Nor has the hypothesis that the next glaciation is going to start in 2014, with the coming solar minimum ushering in a century or more of unrelenting cooling in the teeth of increased CO_2, as occurred before during the Ordovician-Silurian transition — an ice age where the minimum CO_2 concentration in the atmosphere was roughly 10x that of the present, and where the ice age began with CO_2 concentration 17 times higher than it is today. Nor is the hypothesis disproven that the climate will be dead on stable within 0.2C for the next century. Nor is the hypothesis disproven that magnetic monopoles exist and are the correct explanation for the quantization of charge.
This is why the null hypothesis is so important, especially in arenas where we have little real understanding and our theories at best weakly explain only certain aspects of the data in a non-unique way. In the next decade, it might warm, cool, or remain the same. Do we really know enough to predict which one?
Probably not.
If you’d gotten all of the members of the IPCC together in 1998 and forced them to bet on whether the 33 year anomaly at the end of 2012 would be a whopping 0.2C, with no statistically discernible warming since 1998, you could have gotten any odds you like from them on a bet of no. They would have said no, no, no, absolutely impossible, I’ll bet you ten dollars to a dime that it cannot happen.
But it did, and continues to happen. The only significant cliimate event of the last 33 years appears to be the 1997-1998 super El Nino. Nothing else mattered. Not CO_2, not volcanoes, not aerosols, not black soot. And what caused that ENSO event? Surely not CO_2 — it was an accidental confluence of several chaotically oscillating events and (very probably) a pair of back-to-back strong solar maxima. CO_2 may have contributed — one expects CO_2 alone to contribute roughly 0.1 C/decade of warming along its current path of increase — but there is no plausible explanation for ENSO events being caused by CO_2 levels, or even a theory for how they might affect them. There is no quantitatively predictive theory for ENSO events at all.
At the moment, with La Nina events stacking up, the ocean looks rather like it is in neutral. With the Sun quite possibly having already passed the weakest solar maximum observed in over a century and on the long slope downhill to a protracted minimum that might be followed by an actual Maunder style minimum, an event correlated (possibly causally, possibly not) with the LIA, with the PDO in a different phase that is chilling Alaska and the west coast of the US, with the Atlantic oscillation holding steady enough but bound to invert its phase eventually (it is one of the least predictable of the oscillations) who knows what will happen?
You might still find IPCC members and CAGW warmists to take a bet for the resumption of warming, but would they give you strong odds or bet their own money — not grant money, not other people’s money, but their own life savings — on major, high climate sensitivity warming? Only if they are stupid. It’s a lot easier to play poker with other people’s money, or to play for plastic chips. As soon as you’re betting real money, your own money, you suddenly either grow a brain or are quickly cleaned out and leave the game.
At the moment, the “best” bet supported by a linear time model built on the reliable 33+ year satellite data is for a gradual warming at a rate less than 0.15 C/decade. Of course, there is little reason to pick a linear model, and note that I said linear time, not linear CO_2 concentration. CO_2 is entirely covariant with time — a monotonic nearly linear function — so there isn’t really any difference. The “best” causal model supported by the same data is that strong ENSO events cause discrete jumps between otherwise stable temperature regimes. Historically super El Ninos are rare, so the best extrapolation is for no change (pending something like a string of La Nina’s, weak El Ninos, or another super El Nino). And in all of this there are many wild cards — the effect of the gradually increasing CO_2, the longer term effect of the PDO inversion, the possible effect of a phase inversion over the Atlantic as well, the unknown effect of solar state on climate given a pending series of solar minima that are extreme, if not grand, compared to most of the last century, and the inexorable progression of the earth in cycles of orbital resonance, axial precession, continental drift slowly altering oceanic circulation patterns, volcanic activity, and other human but non-CO2 influences such as irrigation, deforestation, aerosol production, soot production, silting and fertilizer induced algae bloom altering oceanic albedo, UHI effects…
To me the really amazing thing is that somebody thinks that they can predict climate at all, even one lousy decade out. As far as I know, there are no models out there that causally explain the temperature record of the last eleven thousand years of the Holocene only, let alone the last fifty or sixty million years, where temperatures are mostly warm except when, for no reason that anyone can positively determine or predict, it decides to spend anything from a few hundred thousand to a few million years all iced up. We could never have predicted, using GCMs, the RWP, the MWP, the LIA, or the modern warm period back (say) in the year 1000 BCE, even given excellent data on the previous 500 years of global climate at that time plus a knowledge of the Sun’s state up to that time.
The Null Hypothesis thus goes unchallenged, unless and until somebody comes up with enough data to convincingly falsify some of the many warming and cooling and remaining the same alternative hypotheses. A tiny variation in the Earth’s albedo is more than enough to plunge temperatures by 1 to 2 C almost immediately and trigger a return to LIA conditions or worse. A tiny variation the other way might similarly warm it. We don’t understand clouds, or clouds and the sun and their nonlinear interactions. We don’t fully understand how they all three tie into the state of the oceans, the phases and details of the global atmospheric circulation, and more. Our ignorance (and ability to compute) vastly exceeds our knowledge in the case of global climate.
How, then, is this settled science? The best that we can say about climate science is that it is a work in progress, a work that has yielded almost no a priori predictive value so far as far as a whole decade out.
Spending vast sums of public money to prevent “dangerous” anthropogenic climate change at a time when the poorest people in the world need a hand up to achieve the simplest of the comforts of modern civilization is not just a mistake, it is a catastrophe all by itself. The followers of the modern “Green” religion have managed what even the Catholic Church failed to do — they have made the pursuit of simple human comfort enabled by the use of our natural resources and ethically neutral science into a sin.
Today, right now, over the next hour, millions of women will carry laundry not into a machine but down to a river, over to a well, out to a large bucket. Using cold water and rocks or boards, they will scrub that clothing by hand, over hours, then rinse it and wring it out. They will lay it out to dry on whatever is handy — trees or rocks, a fence. After a day’s hard work, their family will be able to wear clothes that aren’t horribly filthy for a few days — and even this assumes that they are wealthy enough to have the idle time needed to do the laundry at all (millions more, tens of millions more, do no). Then they will go home to fix food on a fire fueled with wood, or charcoal, or dried dung, feed their family, and go to bed with the sun in a smoke-filled, filthy hut infested with insects and co-inhabited by animals both wild and domesticated. Tomorrow they will rise to work once more, all day, at the difficult business of merely staying alive in a world where the only energy available to them is food fueling their own human strength, a handful of burnable material, and if they are fortunate the energy they can derive from a domesticated animal or two.
Today, right now, there are people selling “Carbon Futures” in an absurd trading scheme that enriches the rich and won’t ameliorate the unproven DAGW hypothesis at all, not even if it works they way it is supposed to! Much of the money that disappears into the pockets of energy companies or shell companies set up solely to allow companies to “import” carbon consumption rights that exist only in the imagination comes from our own pockets, and could have been spent instead building energy resources that could profoundly change the lives of all of those people who still do not have electric lights, refrigeration, washing machines, clean water and safe sewage treatment, enough to eat, reliable jobs, political and social security, health care, or any means of transportation that doesn’t have fur.
The greatest crime of the age, the true catastrophe of the age, the most horrible sin of the age — is this.
rgb
Dear Professor Carter,
” • that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas and warms the lower atmosphere,”
An excellent article but it contains what is to me the biggest logical flaw that has beset the climate argument since it re-emerged in its current form in the ‘seventies. Unlike you I am not a professional scientist, credible or otherwise. I dropped out of High School back in 1950 (not really voluntarily) and I had to learn to think for myself, logically, from that day on. From that day to this I have considered a number of scientific matters with particular interest in statistical fraud, medical research fraud and political fraud. I became interested in AGW only about five or six years ago.
In my experience the majority of people carrying out statistical analysis have picked up the mechanics of the subject along the way without any study of first principles. They have learned how to juggle Excel or OpenOffice without any study of the basics of data selection. They went from an hour or two of instruction, straight to a spreadsheet. Consequently, as with far too much of statistical analysis, there is no credible grounding for the numbers bandied about in “climatology”. They would better have commenced with Pascal and Fermat but instead settled for Messrs. Microsoft.
When my attention was caught by AGW I did not have the benefit of what Anthony was to teach me about such things as urban heat islands etc., etc., etc. But I was astonished to find that the argument depended on junk numbers.
The methods of compilation of very old temperature data was rough and ready and could only produce information of limited accuracy – an error of’ perhaps’ two degrees Fahrenheit either way, and we are looking for changes of fractions of a degree per decade. These numbers had been converted to Celsius to two decimal places! Two decimal places! To me those two decimal places screamed out fraud. Not innocent error – not sheer dumb headedness, but deliberate fraud. I had thought that I was looking at a science that had not previously engaged my attention but what I saw was fraud staring me in the face. Not even the “statisticians” who learned their craft from Excel are that dumb headed.
I looked at other things such as the averaged nature of the calculations, the totally inadequate distribution of the gathering points, and the mismatched timings of temperature readings. Junk.
I looked at the central, virtually first principle nature of the claim for a greenhouse gas and a greenhouse effect. My first principles were the first and second laws of thermodynamics and the ideal gas law. It seemed to me that to accept the greenhouse effect I had to take it that all three of these first principles had been rejected or overridden. But this was not the case. Very few ‘credible’ physicists had, at that time, debunked this spurious ‘first principle’ of greenhouse effect.
Pascal drew attention to the fact that first principles can never be proved to be correct and I am ready to see my favourite first principles turned aside if someone will take the trouble to persuade me that they are disproved. Of all the scientists around the world feeding themselves on the taxpayers’ shilling, not a single one has yet made a serious attempt to do the disproving. Anthropogenic Global Warming is not happening, period, while those three first principles remain standing.
As an anecdotal non-scientific aside regarding that fearsome greenhouse gas, water vapour, let me say that as I sit here typing alongside the sub tropical beach where I live, I am very uncomfortable. The sweat pours down my brow. The temperature is a modest 26C but the humidity is through the roof. Humidity is not comfortable. While my neighbours complain, as they always do at this time of year, I am grateful for that vapour. I am grateful because if the humidity were not there, the temperature would be in the low forties and few of my age in my energy cost regime can afford the electricity for air conditioning any more. Water vapour is cooling of course.
Regards,
Ken Harvey
Chuck Nolan says:
One complaint is the use of DAGW
Where did this term come from?
____________________________________________________
It’s a Hansen favorite from way back, here’s one example:
”However, the 2°C scenario cannot be recommended as a responsible target, as it almost surely takes us well into the realm of dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system.”
“A Slippery Slope: How Much Global Warming Constitutes “Dangerous Anthropogenic Interference”?” — James E. Hansen
To those who say hysteresis, it is easy to show using standard radiative physics that there can be very little CO2-AGW.
It all comes down to the 50 year mistake by meteorologists who claim a pyrometer measures ‘back radiation’ when it’s really the temperature radiation field.
The IR absorption has been exaggerated by a factor of 6.84.
richardscourtney says:
January 30, 2013 at 8:54 am
“Energy companies fund CRU, Phil Jones, Michael Mann…”
I think Al Gore deserves to be mentioned too, after collecting from Al Jazeera.
Henry@Richard Petschauer Witman
http://www.adn.com/2012/07/13/2541345/its-the-coldest-july-on-record.html
I wonder what the farmers in Anchorage would say to you, Dick? Would they perhaps be thinking of you what I am thinking of you right now?
wikeroy:
re your comment to me at January 30, 2013 at 9:42 am.
Yes, I agree that Mr Gore is a warmunist and – as you say – his recent sale to Qatar he has also collected from ‘Big Oil’.
My entire sentence said,
Richard
henry@vukcevic
the Gleissberg cycle is well known but it seems more likely to be a weather cycle of 80-90 years rather than an exact solar cycle.
I therefore have a suspicion that the combination of the recurring 55 and 105 year solar cycles form this weather cycle.
HenryP says:
January 30, 2013 at 8:18 am
Persistence of the Gleissberg 88-year solar cycle over the last ∼12,000years
There is no 88-yr cycle now and the past 400 years.
vukcevic says:
January 30, 2013 at 9:01 am
Yes, I am pleased that you agree, there is 105 year ‘cycle’ (history of our discussion on the existence or non-existence of such period goes back few years)
Yes, I showed you long ago that there is a 105-yr cycle. Good you remember.
Agree with HenryP that the most if not all of global warming appear to be NATURAL.
A mark of pseudo-science is to agree on parts of something even if it contradicts what you say. Now tell Henry there is a 105-yr cycle.
And boy, oh boy, what a job FEMA does, too!
Great summary. Has somebody got the time to comment on this newsletter.
http://www.nnfcc.co.uk/publications/nnfcc-newsletter-issue-26.-carbon-capture-and-storage-special-issue
I looked at the central, virtually first principle nature of the claim for a greenhouse gas and a greenhouse effect. My first principles were the first and second laws of thermodynamics and the ideal gas law. It seemed to me that to accept the greenhouse effect I had to take it that all three of these first principles had been rejected or overridden. But this was not the case. Very few ‘credible’ physicists had, at that time, debunked this spurious ‘first principle’ of greenhouse effect.
Speaking as a skeptical physicist, I assure you that the greenhouse effect does not violate either of the laws of thermodynamics or any gas law, ideal or not. Furthermore, laws of physics aside, it can be directly observed in the differences between TOA and BOA IR radiation spectra. It therefore has direct empirical evidence supporting it as well as the simple and direct application of the laws of electrodynamics and statistical mechanics in context.
If you think otherwise, please provide an argument beyond “it seems to me”. Since I teach physics, including the laws of thermodynamics and quantum mechanics and electrodynamics, when I say “it seems to me” there might be some reason to take it seriously (or not — that’s up to you). In general, whether or not my opinion is valuable I can back up my opinions with any number of arguments and/or references to data. You by your own assertion state that you have no credentials and uncertain knowledge in what amount to some of the most difficult subjects humans ever learn or work with. Exactly why do you think that there is no greenhouse effect (as far as I can tell from your comment) at all?
rgb
Yes, new high temperature records are set every year, and new low temperature records are, too. That is because the temperatures have only been measured for a short time.
Oops, you mean every day, or very nearly so. That’s because temperatures have only been measured for a short time, are highly variable, highly local and because the Earth is a damn big place. We just set/tied a record low high temperature in Durham four or five days ago. Today (who knows) we may or may not set a record high high temperature or high low temperature. We set several high and/or low temperatures a year, on average (as do most places) and it doesn’t take many distinct places doing the same thing before you have many places setting records every day.
There, I fixed that for you (in the way you intended anyway:-).
rgb
“· that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas and warms the lower atmosphere,”
There is no evidence that this effect even is possible and, if it is, it would be undetectable. This is junk science. The effect requires that the tropical upper troposphere at -17 deg C is heating up and radiating IR at the surface, in turn heating it up and then the lower atmosphere. Well, the surface is 15 deg C and simply cannot absorb or be warmed by the colder source. Totally against thermodynamics. Furthermore, satellite measurements show that the tropical upper troposphere has not warmed, but in fact cooled a bit over recent decades.
The above failure of the greenhouse gas junks science totally sinks the entire demonization of CO2 and human activities related to CO2 emissions.
As we are cooling, we need all of the CO2 plant food we can get.