Ten years of 'accelerated global warming' ?

Data doesn’t support Obama’s claim

Guest essay by Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

During the July 2013 U.S. Senate hearing at which Roger Pielke Jr. and Roy Spencer gave stellar testimony to the visible discomfiture of the climate-extremist witnesses, none of the “Democrat” Senators and none of the people they had chosen to testify before them was at all anxious to defend Mr. Obama’s assertion that over the past decade global warming has been accelerating at an unforeseen rate.

At a fund-raiser for the “Democratic” Congressional Campaign Committee in Chicago May 29, he had said, “We … know that the climate is warming faster than anybody anticipated five or ten years ago.” He had added, “I don’t have much patience for people who deny climate change.”

Well, I deny that the climate is warming faster than anybody anticipated five or ten years ago. But I deny it not because I take an aprioristic position opposite to Mr Obama’s aprioristic position, but because science is done by measurement, not by parroting the Party Line. And the measurements do not support the Party Line.

Let me demonstrate. First, what warming does the IPCC anticipate in its upcoming and much-leaked Fifth Assessment Report?

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The graph above, adapted from Figs. 11.33ab in the draft report, for which I am an expert reviewer, shows that from 2005-2050 (most of the past ten years fall within that period) the models expect an approximately linear warming of about 0.4 to 1.0 Cº per 30 years (this range is also explicitly stated in paragraph 11.3.6.3). That is equivalent to 1.33 to 3.33 Cº/century, with a mid-range estimate of 2.33 Cº/century.

The IPCC’s models’ mid-range projection implies that around 0.12 Cº of warming should happen over five years, and o.23 Cº over ten years. An eighth to a quarter of a Celsius degree: those are the benchmarks. Previous IPCC reports made broadly similar near-term projections.

What, then, is the consensus among the monthly global mean surface or lower-troposphere datasets about whether the climate is warming “faster than anybody anticipated five or ten years ago”? Or whether it is warming at all?

There are three terrestrial datasets: HadCRUt4, GISS, and NCDC. There are two satellite datasets: RSS and UAH. To forestall the usual futile allegations of cherry-picking, we shall look at all five of them.

For each dataset, two graphs will be displayed: the most recent 60 months of global temperature anomalies, and the most recent 120 months.

The graph will display the spline-curve of the monthly anomalies in dark blue, with a thicker light-blue trend-line, which is simply the least-squares linear-regression trend on the data. Over short periods, no more complex trend need be determined.

Nor is there any need to allow for seasonality, not only because the graphs analyze data over multiples of 12 months but also because globally the seasons cancel each other out, so that natural variability tends to make any seasonal pattern near-impossible to detect.

Linear regression determines the underlying trend in a dataset over a given period as the slope of the unique straight line through the data that minimizes the sum of the squares of the absolute differences or “residuals” between the data-points corresponding to each time interval in the data and on the trend-line.

The graphs, therefore, give a fair indication of whether global mean temperatures at or near the surface have been rising or falling over the past five or ten years.

Note, however, that – particularly with highly volatile datasets such as the global temperature anomalies – a statistical trend is not a tool for prediction. It indicates only what has happened, not what may or will happen.

And what has happened is, as we shall see, grievously at odds with the Party Line.

We begin with the terrestrial datasets.

GISS, five years:

clip_image004[4]

GISS, ten years:

clip_image006[4]

HadCRUT4, five years:

clip_image008[4]

HadCRUt4, ten years:

clip_image010[4]

NCDC, five years:

clip_image012[4]

NCDC, ten years:

clip_image014[4]

The mean of the anomalies on all three terrestrial datasets, five years:

clip_image016[4]

The mean of the anomalies on all three terrestrial datasets, ten years:

clip_image018[4]

Now for the two satellite datasets. RSS, five years:

clip_image020[4]

RSS, ten years:

clip_image022[4]

UAH, five years:

clip_image024[4]

UAH, ten years:

clip_image026[4]

The mean of the anomalies on the two satellite datasets, five years:

clip_image028[4]

The mean of the anomalies on the two satellite datasets, ten years:

clip_image030[4]

The mean of the anomalies on all five datasets, five years:

clip_image032[4]

The mean of the anomalies on all five datasets, ten years:

clip_image034[4]

The only dataset that shows any warming at all is UAH over ten years. The warming is a not particularly dizzying one twenty-fifth of a Celsius degree over ten years, equivalent to two-fifths of a degree per century.

The RSS satellite dataset, on the other hand, now shows no global warming at all for an impressive 199 months, or 16 years 7 months:

clip_image036[4]

Not much “acceleration” there. Will it reach 200 months? I’ll report next month.

Finally, here is the monthly Global Warming Prediction Index, which compares the projections backcast by the modelers to 2005 and published in the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report with the real-world outturn as measured by the two satellite datasets.

clip_image038[4]

The lower bound of the orange zone is the IPCC’s low-end projection. Warming should be occurring at a minimum of 1.33 Cº/century. The thick bright red line is the IPCC’s mid-range projection: warming should be occurring at 2.33 Cº/century.

The real-world trend, represented by the thick bright blue trend line, shows global temperatures declining since January 2005 at a rate equivalent to almost a quarter of a Celsius degree (half a Fahrenheit degree) per century.

You may think that going to the trouble of producing so many graphs is overkill. Yet when I first spoke up at the U.N. climate conference in Doha and pointed out that there had been no global warming for 16 years the delegates were furious. So were the news media. One reason for their unreason: they simply did not know the facts.

One would have thought that among all the hours of hand-wringing on the air and pages of moaning in print about “global warming”, most of the news media would be faithfully reporting the monthly temperature anomalies. But no. The facts do not fit the Party Line, so they are not reported. They are consigned to the Memory Hole.

As for Mr. Obama’s statement about “acceleration”, he was plain wrong. Instead of the warming equivalent to 2.33 Cº/century global warming that had been “anticipated”, there has really been no change in global temperature at all over the past five or ten years.

Will somebody tell the “President”?

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July 21, 2013 10:58 am

The Flat Earth Society: Still going strong.
Obama the spokesman, so what can go wrong?
All his “Carbon pollution”
is a Marxist collusion.
It’s food for the hungry, so let’s get along.

Pablo an ex Pat
July 21, 2013 11:01 am

So the major point that the Warmists appears to be making is that a warmer atmosphere can carry more water vapor and that in turn leads to more severe weather events ?
But if the atmosphere is NOT warming how does that fit with the narrative of blaming severe weather events on the extra water vapor in a warming atmosphere ? Yes I know the answer. It can’t they are mutually exclusive outcomes.
As for the Deep Ocean story it’s a meme that smacks of desperation :
1) We can’t find the “missing” heat in the atmosphere
2) It has to be here as if it isn’t our entire CO2 theory falls apart, it has to be somewhere.
3) Aha ! It’s gone from the atmosphere and infiltrated the deep ocean.
4) We know we can’t show that by measuring it to any meaningful degree, but trust us, it’s there.
Yeah, right. That’s not a scientific argument.

DirkH
July 21, 2013 11:10 am

izen says:
July 21, 2013 at 10:52 am
“Well I understand it much better now thanks to your lucid explanation.”
Well that is just great, Izen.
” I expect others now understand the futility of deriving rates of change of a trend from such short time periods as well.
So we can agree that His Excellency Barack Obama and the honorable Ms. Heidi Cullen were both talking out of their nether regions.
Agreement at last!

JimF
July 21, 2013 11:16 am

izen says:
July 21, 2013 at 10:52 am: “…Is a longer time period a better indication than a shorter one, what would be the minimum time period to avoid the ‘noise’ obscuring any trend?…”
Answer: 199 months, or 16 years 7 months. You’re welcome.

Ian W
July 21, 2013 11:25 am

Will somebody tell the “President”?
Whyever tell the President something he already knows? Indeed the press corps all probably know that the Earth has not warmed in more than 15 years. This is an artifice to justify taking more taxes and more control: part of Agenda 21 in which the President and the press have a ‘Common Purpose’.
What we are also witnessing is the death throes of the dinosaurs of the ‘Fourth Estate’ their monitoring is a complete failure. They are being rapidly replaced by blogs like this one but do not fully realize how they are hastening their own demise.

Neo
July 21, 2013 11:35 am

The typical Chicago greeting: Who sent you ?

Ed, Mr. Jones
July 21, 2013 11:35 am

Did anyone ask the attractive Bubblehead for the Data that shows ‘The Heat going into the Deep Oceans’ ? Major missed opportunity!

Greg
July 21, 2013 11:35 am

Interesting that Sen. Boxer should mention Alice in Wonderland. Perhaps she was confusing it with the companion work Alice Through the Looking Glass.
That seems more appropriate to her insistence that down is really up, that global warming “is happening now” and making the world COOLER.
President Obama’s blattently misleading and untruthful statement that warming has been “accelerating” over the last 5 or 10 years when it has been slowing.
Heidi Cullen is right beside the Red Queen, saying we can’t see the warming because it’s now happening down the rabbit hole. That the only reason that the average is flat is because some parts are getting hotter, while others are getting cooler.
Hell, that’s not “weird weather”, that’s what averages are for. That kind of statement will always be true unless climate really does get screuwed-up and it ends up being the same temperature everywhere.
Having peddled the global average concept as “proof” of global warming for the last 30 years, it’s somehow not the right metric any more. Having screamed about the warming of the surface temperature record for the last 30 years, suddenly it’s not what matters any more. It now hidden in the deep ocean, where the records are even more unreliable and sparse.
These people are not stupid or untrained or uninformed, they know they are not speaking the truth. They know they are lying to us. They just think that we are so stupid, untrained and ignorant that we will believe their BS.
Lies, damned lies, and climate statistics.
YA BASTA!

David Riser
July 21, 2013 11:35 am

Actually the reason 5years 6 months makes such a huge change is because lord monckton was using the seasons to cancel each other out in his 5 year example. Starting in the winter and ending in the summer means you have 6 winters and 5 summers so they have a hard time cancelling each other out. So you started from a very cold time and ended in a hot, which means the trend has to be positive. Lord Monckton balanced his by starting in one season and ending in the same season. Really its simple no need for the sarcasm.

izen
July 21, 2013 11:37 am

@- Pablo an ex Pat
“As for the Deep Ocean story it’s a meme that smacks of desperation :
1) We can’t find the “missing” heat in the atmosphere
2) It has to be here as if it isn’t our entire CO2 theory falls apart, it has to be somewhere.
3) Aha ! It’s gone from the atmosphere and infiltrated the deep ocean.”
Seems a reasonable hypothesis. It matches Bob Tisdales’ idea that the present La Niña pattern is one of the oceans gaining energy.
@- “4) We know we can’t show that by measuring it to any meaningful degree, but trust us, it’s there.”
It can certainly be measured to a degree.
the measured rise in sea level has as one explanation the thermal expansion of the oceans. Inevitably there is great uncertainty, but the less influence you ascribe to thermal expansion the more land based ice you have to find to explain the rising sea level.
The GRACE satellite measurement put constraints on how much ice has melted. It tracked the increased rainfall in 2010/2011which briefly led to a fall in sea level.
http://sealevel.colorado.edu/content/2011-la-ni%C3%B1a-so-strong-oceans-fell
But floods eventually return to the sea and the continued rise in sea level over the last ten years is a difficult datum to square with claims of no warming or slight cooling over the last decade. Perhaps it depends on how meaningful you regard an expanding ocean.
http://sealevel.colorado.edu/
@-“Yeah, right. That’s not a scientific argument.”
Okay, so what would be a scientific way to test the hypothesis that energy has continued to enter the oceans over the last decade?

Ed Barbar
July 21, 2013 11:38 am

One of the Climate people (climate something or other), claimed the heat was now in the deep oceans due to circulatory changes.

MikeN
July 21, 2013 11:45 am

Obama didn’t say global warming is happening faster than ten years ago, he said faster than anticipated. Linking to AR5 is pointless. You have to compare to the projections made in AR4 and TAR.
Also, showing a negative trend over ten years might not be good enough for the Tamino level word parsers. You have to show that global warming is not happening as fast as thought previously. ‘Happening’ can be many different things. If the AR5 forecasts are for higher warming than before, then Obama’s statement is still true.

F. Ross
July 21, 2013 11:48 am

“… Will somebody tell the “President”?”
It would seem that no one can tell His Omniscience anything.
Thanks for the great post.

Latitude
July 21, 2013 11:50 am

what a mess this man/president is…..
…he doesn’t even know when he’s admitting he’s a failure
Jun 3, 2008 – “This was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal.” — Barack Obama

July 21, 2013 11:58 am

MikeN says:
July 21, 2013 at 11:45 am
Obama didn’t say global warming is happening faster than ten years ago, he said faster than anticipated. Linking to AR5 is pointless. You have to compare to the projections made in AR4 and TAR.
Also, showing a negative trend over ten years might not be good enough for the Tamino level word parsers. You have to show that global warming is not happening as fast as thought previously. ‘Happening’ can be many different things. If the AR5 forecasts are for higher warming than before, then Obama’s statement is still true.

==========================================================================
I bet your favorite game when you were a kid was "Twister".

Kasuha
July 21, 2013 11:59 am

Alarmists are already switching gears for some time, from global temperatures to weird weather. So in five years we might pretty much be reducing “carbon pollution” to make days sunnier and grass greener and everybody will be surprised why these skeptical eccentrics are still discussing temperatures. And in ten more years we might find ourselves fighting global cooling again using pretty much the same means we are fighting global warming today (and were fighting global cooling in ’70s).

Greg
July 21, 2013 12:00 pm

Jun 3, 2008 – “This was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal.” — Barack Obama
That time he got it about right. It may have been nearer 2005 but he was about right. Now he’s off in cloud cuckoo land.
Trying to associate this with his coming to office (which I believe is what he was implying in that speech) is either delusional, dishonest or both.

John F. Hultquist
July 21, 2013 12:01 pm

The proper translation of
“global warming has gone into the deep ocean”
is: CAGW has gone in the tank.
That would be roundish type tank with a flushing action.
A skeptic might ask what happened some 15 or so years ago that caused the warming (such as it was) to switch from the atmosphere to the deep water of the world ocean.
———————————————–
CD (@CD153) says:
July 21, 2013 at 10:36 am
“I am an American voter and taxpayer.

Many readers can make the same claim. However, unless you donate large sums of money or “bundle” money from others you will not reach the ‘ear’ of the man. Neither will he appoint you to an ambassadorship nor seek to reward you in any other manner. He will guess that you did not vote for him but he does approve of you being a taxpayer.
————————————————
DirkH,
I note you are at the top of your game today.
I needed a good chuckle.

Greg
July 21, 2013 12:05 pm

MikeN on Monkton: “Linking to AR5 is pointless. ”
Yes, I thought that choice rather odd but the point in moot since whether it’s AR4 or AR5 they are a still predicting “alarming” and “catastrophic” warming when the reality is ZERO.
And ZERO is not “faster” than anyone expected five to ten years ago.

Gail Combs
July 21, 2013 12:09 pm

tgasloli says:
July 21, 2013 at 10:15 am
I’m generally a Monckton fan, but, this article is just silly. A climate cycle, glacial + interglacial period, is what, 100-150K years long. This article is looking at less than 10 years…..
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>..
The Essay is in response to

OBAMA: You know — as you know, Mark, we can’t attribute any particular weather event to climate change.
What we do know is the temperature around the globe is increasing. Faster than was predicted even ten years ago. We do know that the Arctic ice cap is melting, faster than was predicted even five years ago. We do know that there have been extraordinarily — there — there have been an extraordinarily large number of severe weather events here in North America, but also around the globe.
And I am a firm believer that climate change is real. That it is impacted by human behavior, and carbon emissions. And as a consequence, I think we’ve got an obligation to future generations to do something about it…. link

jai mitchell
July 21, 2013 12:12 pm

2.3% of all warming goes into the atmospheric charts you are showing.
The rest of the 97.7% of warming goes into the rest of the world.
This can most easily be demonstrated by analyzing the components of the sea level rise over the last 4 decades.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v453/n7198/fig_tab/nature07080_F3.html
The overwhelming majority of the sea level rise has been associated with thermal expansion of the oceans from 0-700 meters and from 700 to 2000 meters of depth.
This accounts for 65% of total sea level rise over the last 4 decades with the other components being land-based ice melt in antarctica (yes, land based ice levels are dropping even as sea ice levels are expanding) greenland and land-based glaciers.
It is also important to note that the amount of land based storage component of sea level rise has had a negative effect, which follows predictions of increased precipitation as temperatures rise, humidity increases and water vapor in the atmosphere creates an additional greenhouse effect that is slightly higher than that caused by anthropogenic CO2.
so, yeah, it is really convenient that ocean surface temperatures have gone down since the 1998 el nino due to wind patterns but that extra heat going into the ocean is just as much a component of warming as air temperatures.
Let me put it another way, if 2.3% of the warming went into the oceans and 97.7% of the warming went into the atmosphere, we would all be dead right now due to the warming that occured over only the last 5 years.
http://www.skepticalscience.com/graphics/Total_Heat_Content_2011_med.jpg

the1pag
July 21, 2013 12:15 pm

Another excellent essay by Lord Benchley!
Here’s a link to a document released a couple of days ago (July 18) as a minority report of the U.S. Senate’s Environment and Public Works Committee. The report is entitled “Critical Thinking on Climate Change”. On Page 5 is a chart that compares the actual satellite measurements vs the averaged predictions of 44 models from 1979 to the present. A very interesting 21-page report.
http://www.climatedepot.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/CriticalThinkingOnClimate.pdf

Gail Combs
July 21, 2013 12:20 pm

Chris4692 says:
July 21, 2013 at 10:20 am
…However there is an imbalance in the ration of land area to sea area between the north and southern hemispheres. If the temperature changes in the land area and sea area are not identical, seasonality will appear in the global average temperature. I have no idea whether it actually appears in the data and what its magnitude is, it just does not seem to be a valid assumption without some examination of the data…..
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
You are correct, John, the Inconvenient Skeptic, goes into that Misunderstanding of the Global Temperature Anomaly (See second graph)
This is well worth the read and Anthony might want to approach John about cross posting the essay. (Yeah it is that interesting)

Chad Wozniak
July 21, 2013 12:29 pm

All one has to do to establish a much longer downward regression for temps is to refer back to the 1930s,. the hottest period of the last 100 years. Despite cyclical ups and downs, temps today are substantially lower than in the 1930s – a period of 80 years, not 10 years, of an overall downward trend in temps. Notably also, the warm temps of the early 1990s – the last -peak – were considerably less than the 1930s.

Greg
July 21, 2013 12:34 pm

Dr Heidi in the ocean Cullen: “… with respect to President Obama’s specific comment, I can’t comment on that, but …”
Why can’t you comment Dr Cullen. Do you have trouble understanding the numbers?
“I think now we need to focus on the fact that the warming is happening very, very quickly…”
Bare-faced lie in front of Senate committee. Very impressive Dr Cullen, very, very impressive.
You will be getting a call from Mr Nutter the beginning of next week confirming your grant for next years work.