Kevin Trenberth is one of the authors of new Balmaseda et al (2013) paper Distinctive climate signals in reanalysis of global ocean heat content.
I find the title of the paper somewhat odd. The paper is based on the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) Ocean Reanalysis ORAS4. That reanalysis is described in detail in the Balmaseda et al (2012) paper (submitted) Evaluation of the ECMWF Ocean Reanalysis ORAS4. Basically, the reanalysis is the product of a climate model that has data rolled into it. Since volcanic aerosols and sea surface temperatures are used as inputs, it should therefore come as no surprise that the reanalysis will include the “distinctive climate signals” associated with El Niños and volcanic eruptions.
FIRST: A BRIEF LOOK AT THE EARLIER PAPER THAT DESCRIBES THE ORAS4 REANALYSIS
Figure 1
My Figure 1 (with my note) is Figure 4 from the Balmaseda et al (2012) paper (submitted) Evaluation of the ECMWF Ocean Reanalysis ORAS4. (This is NOT the paper that Kevin Trenberth co-authored. But I want to discuss it before we move on to the more recent paper.) Figure 1 contains three time-series graphs that represent the temperatures of the global oceans at different depths from 1958 to 2009. Each cell contains three variables. The blue “control integration” (CNTL) curves are the outputs of the models that don’t fold in the data. Balmaseda et al describes them as:
It is important to evaluate the impact of assimilation in ORAS4 by comparing it with a simulation that does not assimilate data. This simulation, called the control integration (CNTL), uses the same spin-up, forcing fields, SST/sea-ice relaxation and relaxation to climatology (with 20-year time scale) as ORAS4.
The black curves are the five ensemble members of ORAS4. And the red “NoBias_Crtn” curve “is equivalent to the unperturbed member of ORAS4 but without bias correction.” All of the graphs show how poorly the model, the blue “control integration” (CNTL) curves, simulates the warming. The bottom cell shows no warming at depths below 2000 meters in both the black ORAS4 curves and the red “ORAS4 without bias correction” curve. For depths of 700m to 2000m, the right-hand cell, the red “ORAS4 without bias correction” shows the same temperature in 1958 and 2000, but the black ORAS4 curves show a gradual warming due to bias corrections. Is the upward swing in the red “ORAS4 without bias correction” a result of the introduction of ARGO floats to a dataset that had poor spatial coverage before them?
For the upper 700m, the red “ORAS4 without bias correction” curve shows little to no warming from the mid-1960s to the mid-1980s, when an upward shift takes place. The red “ORAS4 without bias correction” curve basically remains unchanged from the early 1990s to 2000, when another upward shift takes place, leading to another plateau. Upward shifts give the appearance that Mother Nature is the primary cause of warming, and that’s not practical in a world that’s supposed to be warmed by greenhouse gases, so that would definitely need to be corrected. The bias corrections in the black ORAS4 curves smooth out the 2000 upward shift to make it look like a more gradual increase, and the corrections lower the temperature significantly before 1990 to provide a greater long-term warming.
Some of you might think these are yet more examples of inconvenient results being resolved through corrections.
A BRIEF LOOK AT THE MORE RECENT PAPER
Okay, we’re back to the Balmaseda et al (2013) paper Distinctive climate signals in reanalysis of global ocean heat content. That’s the paper coauthored by Trenberth.
The abstract of Balmaseda et al (2013) reads (my boldface):
The elusive nature of the post-2004 upper ocean warming has exposed uncertainties in the ocean’s role in the Earth’s energy budget and transient climate sensitivity. Here we present the time evolution of the global ocean heat content for 1958 through 2009 from a new observational-based reanalysis of the ocean. Volcanic eruptions and El Niño events are identified as sharp cooling events punctuating a long-term ocean warming trend, while heating continues during the recent upper-ocean-warming hiatus, but the heat is absorbed in the deeper ocean. In the last decade, about 30% of the warming has occurred below 700 m, contributing significantly to an acceleration of the warming trend. The warming below 700 m remains even when the Argo observing system is withdrawn although the trends are reduced. Sensitivity experiments illustrate that surface wind variability is largely responsible for the changing ocean heat vertical distribution.
It would be interesting to see just how much the warming trend is reduced when ARGO data is removed.
Figure 2 is, I believe, Figure 1 from Balmaseda et al (2013). Since the paper is paywalled, the illustration is from the World’s oceans are getting warmer, faster post at CarbonBrief. It illustrates the warming of ocean heat content for the depths 0-300 meters, 0-700 meters and “total depth”, but because there has been no warming below 2000 meters in the ORAS4 reanalysis, the “total depth” is kind of misleading. The SkepticalScience post New Research Confirms Global Warming Has Accelerated also presents that same graph. And of course, Joe Romm cross posted Dana1981’s post from SkepticalScience as In Hot Water: Global Warming Has Accelerated In Past 15 Years, New Study Of Oceans Confirms over at Climate Progress. Curiously, looking back at my Figure 1, the only acceleration appears in the red “ORAS4 without bias correction” for depths of 700m to 2000m, but that should have been excluded from Balmaseda et al (2013).
Figure 2
Do Balmaseda et al (2013) address how much of the long-term warming is also a response to “surface wind variability”? As an example, see Figure 3, which shows the NODC ocean heat content (0-700 meters) for the North Pacific north of 24N, with and without the 1989-1990 shift that’s likely caused by a shift in the “surface wind variability”. Figure 3 was presented and discussed (as Figure 25) in the post Is Ocean Heat Content Data All It’s Stacked Up to Be?
Figure 3
CLOSING
Ocean heat content is at best a make-believe dataset. Refer again to the post Is Ocean Heat Content Data All It’s Stacked Up to Be? Even with all of the adjustments to the NODC’s ocean heat content data, the data still indicates the warming resulted from natural factors, as shown in that linked post.
A reanalysis is an even more abstract form of ocean heat content “data”—one that also requires “corrections” to provide the desired results.
Curiously, Paul Voosen’s October 2011 article Provoked scientists try to explain lag in global warming includes quotes from a handful of well-known climate scientists—including Kevin Trenberth. Voosen had this to say about Trenberth’s opinion of ARGO:
Trenberth questions whether the Argo measurements are mature enough to tell as definite a story as Hansen lays out. He has seen many discrepancies among analyses of the data, and there are still “issues of missing and erroneous data and calibration,” he said. The Argo floats are valuable, he added, but “they’re not there yet.”
A reanalysis didn’t make the ARGO floats any better; it simply provided a way for Trenberth to confirm his beliefs–regardless of whether or not those beliefs are realistic.
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Old’un says:
March 26, 2013 at 7:46 am
“Insolation!”
That’s not how you spell insolence.
If your fig 1 (their fig 4) Y-axis’ all had the same full scale temp range, i.e. T + 0.0 to T + 0.4°C, then the several hundredths of a degree changes below 700 M would visually disappear. In any event, I question whether measuring to <0.01°C accurately and precisely, across a multitude of measuring devices, e.g. Pt res., thermister, Hg thermo, other, is even possible. The noise must simply overwhelm any signal.
GIGO
BTW – I have an old differential Hg thermometer that does read to <<0.01°C but setting it accurately is near impossible. Good for small ∆T's only.
@izen
You start with a fallacy. Sea levels have varied considerably throughout the Holocene. A place to start is here, with the Older Peron transgression.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Older_Peron
izen says: “But is there anyone here that thinks the findings of this and other recent research that the oceans are warming is completely wrong or can be described {not explained} as an exclusively natural variation?”
Here’s a link to the essay that illustrates the warming of the global oceans has been natural since 1955 for ocean heat content and during the satellite era for sea surface temperatures (42MB):
http://bobtisdale.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/the-manmade-global-warming-challenge.pdf
In other words, there is nothing in the ocean heat content and sea surface temperature data to indicate there’s an anthropogenic component.
Regards
izen
March 26, 2013 at 8:03 am
“… i think there is a better than 95% probability that ocean heat content IS rising beyond the ‘natural variation’
You want precise evidence that nat variability could cause the increase in OHC and you offer: I think? Note the ordinate in the graphs show the delta T to be less than 0.1C over 50 years and they have even fiddled the data (removed ‘bias’).
Seth: In the linked post…
http://bobtisdale.wordpress.com/2013/03/11/is-ocean-heat-content-data-all-its-stacked-up-to-be/
…under the heading of “LACK OF OBSERVATIONAL DATA PRIOR TO ARGO” are 3 large gif animations of global maps that show the locations of the measurements at depths of 250m, 500m and 1500m for the temperature data included in the NOAA database. Maybe you can spot your handiwork. They’re pretty sparse so you might be able to find them.
Regards
lol The universe is full of irony.
Darth Trenberth continues his search for the missing heat, yet holds court with those who are convinced they have discovered a weapon of mass destruction.
izen says:
March 26, 2013 at 8:03 am
Before you dis people for their skepticism, can you offer proof of the above statement before we take up your challenge? Why do you say “ocean heat content has not varied like this in the past because sea levels have not altered in the lst few millennia”? What’s your basis for that correlation? Where’s your proof? Can you isolate all the contributing factors and eliminate all but the one you prefer?
Read this. What you want to know starts in paragraph five.
http://www.drroyspencer.com/2011/05/weak-warming-of-the-oceans-1955-2010-implies-low-climate-sensitivity/
So there are claims that the current ocean heat content and associated sea level rise ‘could’ be natural because early in the Holocene when the perihelion date caused extra N hemisphere warmth there are signs that this raised the sea level by between three and twelve feet.
Given that the present extra energy from rising CO2 is greater than the extra solar energy due to the perihelion date I don’t find this reassuring.
When do you expect the present sea level to reach the past Peron transgression levels given the similar conditions ?
“robust evidence” = model data (sarc)
izen says:
March 26, 2013 at 8:03 am
***
There is robust evidence that ocean heat content has not varied like this in the past because sea levels have not altered in the last few millennia as they have in the last few decades. I would be interested in anybody who can provide and argument for the recent changes seen NOT being clear evidence of energy accumulating in the oceans, given the credibility of the results from several sources and methods i think there is a better than 95% probability that ocean heat content IS rising beyond the ‘natural variation’ that might be eected from ENSO and volcanic influences.
You could be a little clearer concerning what you mean by the “last few millennia.” There are very clear indications from Australia, Tasmania, Oceania, Brazil, Southeast China and Texas, among other areas that Holocene sea-level high stands have been as much as 1.5 meters above the present. That works out to a downward trend in mean sea level over roughly the last 5,000 to 6,000 years of about 0.25 mm/yr even after you include the rise from the 19th century to the present. The timing of peak high stands in the mid-Holocene are uncertain and estimates range from 6,000 BP to as little as 1,500 B.P., e.g. Grossman et al. 1998 [Coral Reefs, September 1998, Volume 17, Issue 3, pp 309-327]. So, current sea level rise might simply be a product of the planet moving out of the LIA. Any argument regarding sea-level high stands is also complicated by possible tectonic and isostatic changes in land elevation following the Wisconsinan (Wurm) glacial epoch. While there is clear evidence of Holocene high stands in the areas mentioned above, along the west coast of North America such evidence appears to be absent, but may simply be masked in misinterpreted data. There is nothing simple about this issue and no one in the literature has offered a self-evidently reliable means of making any rational evaluation of “natural” vs. greater than natural heat content shifts.
Robert of Ottawa says:
I can see a Josh cartoon with pith-helmeted Trenbeth in a diving suite with butterfly net and magnifying glass looking for the missing heat in the ocean.
ferd berple says:
Trenberth’s search for the missing heat reminds me if Winnie the Pooh and the search for the North Pole
And I can see a variation on “The Hunting of the Snark”.
izen:
At March 26, 2013 at 8:03 am you posted falsehoods in this thread.
In response, several people – including me – quoted your falsehoods and requested explanation from you.
At March 26, 2013 at 10:05 am you have replied to the several objections to your falsehoods. Your reply does not apologise, does not explain your behaviour, and does not to attempt to substantiate your false claims.
Instead, you try to change the subject.
All your posts on WUWT are a waste of space, but your posts in this thread are not acceptable behaviour in any forum. WUWT is the most respected science blog precisely because it allows people to post nonsense of the kind that you do then allows others to point out that it is nonsense. Were you to obtain some sense then you would understand that your posts on WUWT bring scorn upon you so you would adjust your behaviour.
Please refrain from posting falsehoods which disupt the thread by need for rebuttals.
Richard
izen says:
There is robust evidence that ocean heat content has not varied like this in the past because sea levels have not altered in the last few millennia as they have in the last few decades.
——————————————————————————————————————-
So when do you expect the sea level benchmark on the Isle of the Dead in Tasmania to begin to be obscured at low tide? Will it be any day now?
Why does Trenberth, bring to mind a druggie staring at an off station TV , and claiming to see aliens?
The izens’s are insisting he really does see aliens, look he wrote a comic saying so.
Travesty mann will be retiring into obscurity soon enough, shame the taxpayer has to fund a pension for such an employee.
They left out deep ocean trenches as a place to hide ocean heat. That will be the last resort. You heard it here first.
Izen,
Your “given” is not necessarily taken.
Thanks Bob.
It does seem that when one alarmist claim bites the dust, they just change the goalposts.
Atmosphere not warming? Heat must be in the oceans.
Heat not in upper oceans? Must be in the darkest depths, where nobody can check.
So, ‘no warming’ problem solved. See?
This isn’t science. It’s a game of ‘bullshit’. http://www.wikihow.com/Play-Bullshit
Bob Tisdale says:
March 26, 2013 at 9:32 am
——————————————
Thank you, I just took a glance at the three gifs and could instantly recognize the shipping lanes in the earlier years. The one I was on at the time (JUNE 2004) was from the East Coast of the US on a great circle route that passes just south of the Azores before hitting Gibraltar. I’m sure our small part is hiding in there somewhere.
I would guess the earlier North Atlantic readings from vessels of opportunity would mostly be taken in the gulf stream heading East as ours were due to the obvious fuel/time savings taken advantage of by commercial vessels; also in the winter months the lanes move south, usually on a rhumb line, to avoid the nasty winter North Atlantic weather as much as possible.
I do remember now that he would launch a couple every 6 hours, 0000, 0600, 1200 and 1800 UTC corresponding to the times we were requested to send them our weather observations; he was up several days on my watch until the time changes took him to another watch.
I wish I was more aware of this then, I would have remembered a lot more detail.
I think Trenberth had better give up on this. Searching for the Missing Heat in the Deep Oceans will be all he is remembered for and to those with non-climate interests, it must sound like the title of one of those full length animated adventure stories a la TinTin. He’s spent probably a decade in the search of this Heat and he’s near retirement age (this kind of stuff might be a signal to oneself that it is time go). Its one thing to search for Troy or the Hanging Gardens of Babylon because history reports that they existed. It’s another when the hidden object is an artifact of dubious models, a faulty hypothesis that is collapsing at one’s feet and equivocal data. If Heat can hide on you guys, how can climate science even be a legitimate endeavor. You have had several hints that rather than heat hiding, the amount of heat you are looking for is not as great as you thought. Now Hadley C and even Pachauri are giving up on it and what do you do, you redouble your efforts in the quest! You are perhaps the most Quixotic among your colleagues.
Richard: Re izen – just wondering if he’s a genuine hippie local who drifts around in a cloud of alfalfa smoke.
Given that the present extra energy from rising CO2 is greater than the extra solar energy due to the perihelion date I don’t find this reassuring.
Who’s given? Where do you dream up this crap? Are you in colorado and started the pot smoking early.?
JOSH, where are you ? There’s got to be room here for one of your classic cartoons. You know, Trenberth looking everywhere for his heat. There could be some really funny places to look.
Pardon me if I get the scientific terminology wrong (!)
But as the oceans are a much bigger store of energy than the atmosphere will ever be, any warming effect on the oceans caused by GHG in the atmosphere will be minute in comparison
Can we possibly measure such minute changes over a handful of years, over such a vast area of sea, and down to such depths?
And given the temperature changes in the oceans we know of that are caused by various natural factors, would it not take decades, or even centuries, before any underlying GHG effects became apparent, never mind measurable?