Another paper blames ENSO for global warming pause, calling it '… a major control knob governing Earth's temperature.'

English: This animation shows sea surface temp...
English: This animation shows sea surface temperature anomalies during the 1997-98 El Niño. Note the areas along the equator shown in red, where temperatures were warmer than average. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

UPDATE: Chris de Freitas responds to comments with an addendum below – Anthony

Readers may recall the recent paper that blamed “the pause” in global temperature on ENSO changes in the Pacific Ocean.

Recent global-warming hiatus tied to equatorial Pacific surface cooling

Yu Kosaka & Shang-Ping Xie Nature (2013) doi:10.1038/nature12534

Dr. Judith Curry called the paper “mind blowing

Now there’s another paper that reaches a similar conclusion:

Update of the Chronology of Natural Signals in the Near-Surface Mean Global Temperature Record and the Southern Oscillation Index

de Freitas and McLean, 2013, p. 237 (Int J Geosciences – open access):

“All other things being equal, a period dominated by a high frequency of El Niño-like conditions will result in global warming, whereas a period dominated by a high frequency of La Niña-like conditions will result in global cooling. Overall, the results imply that natural climate forcing associated with ENSO is a major contributor to temperature variability and perhaps a major control knob governing Earth’s temperature.”

ABSTRACT

Time series for the Southern Oscillation Index and mean global near surface temperature anomalies are compared for the 1950 to 2012 period using recently released HadCRU4 data. The method avoids a focused statistical analysis of the data, in part because the study deals with smoothed data, which means there is the danger of spurious correlations, and in part because the El Niño Southern Oscillation is a cyclical phenomenon of irregular period. In these situations the results of regression analysis or similar statistical evaluation can be misleading.

With the potential controversy arising over a particular statistical analysis removed, the findings indicate that El Nino-Southern Oscillation exercises a major influence on mean global temperature. The results show the potential of natural forcing mechanisms to account for mean global temperature variation, although the extent of the influence is difficult to quantify from among the variability of short-term influences.

Since the paper is open access, and available here: http://www.scirp.org/journal/PaperInformation.aspx?PaperID=27382

Here is the link to the PDF:

deFreitas_&_McLean_IJG_2013_SOI_&_Mean_Global_Temp

This figure is interesting:

SOI-hadcrut

Figure 1. Four-month shifted SOI anomalies with monthly MGT anomalies shown for periods 1950 to1970 (a), 1970 to 1990 (b) and 1990 to June 2012 (c), where the Y-axis scale is identical in each case. The dark line indicates SOI and light line indicates MGT. Periods of volcanic activity are indi-cated (see text).

Discussion and Conclusions

The results show that, by and large, the Southern Oscilla- tion has a consistent influence on mean global tempera- ture. Changes in temperature are consistent with changes in the SOI that occur about four months earlier. The rela- tionship weakens or breaks down at times of major volcanic eruptions. Since the mid-1990s, little volcanic activity has been observed in the tropics and global average temperatures have risen and fallen in close accord with the SOI of four months earlier; although with the unexplained divergence of NH and SH average temperature anomalies modifying the earlier relationship.

The strength of the SOI-MGT relationship may be indicative of the increased vigor in the meridional dispersal of heat during El Niño conditions and the delay in the temperature response is consistent with the transfer of tropical heat polewards. The mechanism of heat transfer is likely the more vigorous Hadley Cell Circulation on both sides of the Intertropical Convergence Zone distributing warm air from the tropical regions to higher lati- tudes. The process of meridional heat dispersal weakens during La Niña conditions and is accompanied by a lower than normal MGT. Hadley Cell Circulation is weakened when the Southern Oscillation is in a state associated with La Niña conditions (i.e. positive Troup SOI values), but strengthens as the Southern Oscillation moves to a condition consistent with El Niño conditions (that is negative SOI values) [6,7].

The precision of the 4-month lag period is uncertain, but the credibility of a lag of some length is not in dispute. Researchers [31] found that mean tropical temperatures for a 13-year record lagged outgoing longwave anomalies by about three months, while [32] found warming events peak three months after sea surface temperature (SST) in the Niño-3.4 region. On the same theme, [33] found lags between 1 – 3 months with SST in the Niño-3.4 region for the period 1950-1999. Along the same lines [14] determined that the correlation between SST in the Niño-3 region and the MGT anomaly was optimum with a time lag of 3-6 months. The sequence of the lagged relationship indicates that ENSO is driving temperature rather than the reverse. Reliable ENSO prediction is possible only to about 12 months [34], which implies that improved temperature forecasting beyond that period is dependent on advancements in ENSO prediction.

The reason for the post-1995 period shift in the SOI- MGT relationship illustrated in Figure 1(c) is puzzling. An explanation may lie in changes in global albedo due to changes in lower-level cloud cover. In an analysis of Australian data, [34] found positive values of SOI anomalies to be associated with increased cloudiness and decreased incoming solar radiation. Data from the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP) indicate that, from 1984 to 2005, mid-level cloud cover in the tropics was relatively constant but both lower and upper level cloud cover declined slightly. In the exotropics (latitude > 20 degrees, low-level cloud progressively decreased from 1998 onwards. It is not clear whether the change is a cause or an effect of a parallel temperature change [35]. The post-1995 shift appears unrelated to carbon dioxide increase because it occurred long after atmospheric CO2 was known to be rising. It is important to see the shift as more of discrete (i.e. step) change rather than a divergence, with the relationship reestablished after 2 – 3 years. Another possibility is that there are problems with the HadCRUT4 1.1.0 data. For example, we note that the published monthly average global temperature anomalies are not equal to the mean of the two published corresponding hemispheric values.

The approach used here avoids a focused statistical analysis of the data, in part because the study deals with smoothed data, which means there is the danger of spu- rious correlations, and in part because the ENSO is a cyclical phenomenon of irregular period. In these situations, the results of regression analysis or similar statisti- cal evaluation can be misleading. With the potential con- troversy arising over a particular statistical analysis re- moved, the findings reported here indicate that atmos- pheric processes that are part of the ENSO cycle are col- lectively a major driver of temperature anomalies on a global scale. All other things being equal, a period dominated by a high frequency of El Niño-like condi- tions will result in global warming, whereas a period dominated by a high frequency of La Niña-like condi- tions will result in global cooling. Overall, the results imply that natural climate forcing associated with ENSO is a major contributor to temperature variability and per- haps a major control knob governing Earth’s temperature.

================================================================

UPDATE: 9/5/13 4:15PM PDT Chris de Freitas asked for this addendum to be posted in response to comments/discussion – Anthony

I understand concerns of the global warming alarmists. I too have been looking high and low for evidence that human-caused carbon dioxide increase is a major driver of mean global temperature. Our current is not part of that quest.

The intention of the work reported in the paper (de Freitas and McLean, 2013) was to stay as far away as possible from statistical massaging of the data. The reason is that, in our earlier 2009 work (McLean, de Freitas and Carter – references below), we were roundly criticised for the statistical methods we used. It detracted from the main finding of the work (i.e. Fig 7), which was free from statistical massaging; namely, that ENSO accounted for a great deal of the variability in mean global temperature; similar to that reported in the more recent paper in Nature (Kosaka and Xie, 2013).

In de Freitas and McLean (2013) we also stayed away from looking for trends. Determining trends and implementing detrending procedures can be important steps in data analysis. However, there is no precise definition of ‘trend’ or any ‘correct’ algorithm for extracting it. Consequently, identification of trend in a time series is subjective because a trend cannot be unequivocally distinguished from low frequency fluctuations. For this reason, a variety of ad hoc methods have been used to determine trends and to facilitate detrending methods (which are also subjective).  As regards the correlation routine (Table 2 of our IJG 2013 paper), the idea there was to look for guidance in aligning the X-axis of Figures 1 and 3. It could have (even) been done by eye.

The overriding message is this. Climate is never constant; it is always cooling or warming. Various things cause these trends. Ever since I began studying climate 40 years ago I have been looking for patterns along with possible mechanisms and explanations. I have not had great success; if fact nobody has, and we have all been wrong once or twice. Notwithstanding that, our IJG (2013) paper shows that ENSO correlates well with global temperature. A possible reason (as described) is enhanced (or reduced) Hadley circulation, which increases (or decreases) the effectiveness of meridional heat transfer from the vast tropical zone of surplus towards the poles. It could be that the same process causes vast amounts of stored ocean heat to be fed into the atmosphere over extended periods (or moved back into the ocean over lengthy periods) The result is planet-wide warming (or cooling). If this persists, we get decadal scale global warming (or cooling) trends.

Like the work of Kosaka and Xie (2013), our IJG (2013) and earlier work (2009) shows that the current (or past hiatus), or multi-decadal-scale cooling or warming (‘climate change’), are possibly a reflection of natural climate variability tied specifically to ENSO decadal-scale processes. I assume these are superimposed upon what seems for the moment to be the less potent CO2-caused warming, and likely other less potent mechanisms as well.

Whether the ENSO-caused multi-decadal trends are internal or forced is unknown. My guess is that cooling and warming trends we see, or hiatus, are probably due to natural internal variability rather than a forced response. But we don’t know.

Chris de Freitas

de Freitas, C.R. and McLean, J.D., 2013. Update of the chronology of natural signals in the near-surface mean global temperature record and the Southern Oscillation Index. International Journal of Geosciences, 4(1), 234-239.

Open access at:

http://www.scirp.org/journal/PaperInformation.aspx?paperID=27382&

McLean, J. D., C. R. de Freitas, and R. M. Carter, 2009b. Correction to ”Influence of the Southern Oscillation on tropospheric temperature”, Journal of Geophysical Research, 114, D20101, doi:10.1029/2009JD013006. ISSN 0148-0227

McLean, J. D., C. R. de Freitas, and R. M. Carter, 2009a. Influence of the Southern Oscillation on tropospheric temperature, Journal of Geophysical Research, 114, D14104, doi:10.1029/2008JD011637. ISSN 0148-0227

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

212 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
September 3, 2013 10:19 am

This is what we knew with confidence over ten years ago:
“That warming, known as the Great Pacific Climate Shift of 1976-1977, is not attributable to human causes but is a natural shift in the Pacific that occurs every 20 to 30 years.”
– Baliunas, Patterson and MacRae, PEGG November 2002
http://www.apegga.org/Members/Publications/peggs/WEB11_02/kyoto_pt.htm
[Excerpt]
This surface warming would suggest a temperature trend of about 1º C per century, which is less than that predicted by the computer simulations, but it is unlikely that even this recent trend in surface warming is primarily attributable to human-made greenhouse gases….
Both records show that the temperature of the lower troposphere does vary as a result of natural factors, e.g., the strong El Niño warming pulse of 1997-98 is obvious. However, no meaningful human warming trend, as forecast by the computer simulations, can be found…
Although the radiosonde record lacks the dense spatial coverage from satellites, it does extend back to 1957, a period that includes the recent rapid rise in atmospheric CO2 concentration. The radiosonde record shows no linear warming trend in global average temperature prior or subsequent to a dramatic shift in 1976-77. That warming, known as the Great Pacific Climate Shift of 1976-1977, is not attributable to human causes but is a natural shift in the Pacific that occurs every 20 to 30 years.
When compared to the observed response of the climate system, the computer simulations all have forecast warming trends much steeper over the last several decades than measured. The forecasts exaggerate to some degree the warming at the surface, and profoundly in the lower troposphere.

phlogiston
September 3, 2013 10:24 am

Steven Mosher says:
September 3, 2013 at 9:15 am
“Another possibility is that there are problems with the HadCRUT4 1.1.0 data. For example, we note that the published monthly average global temperature anomalies are not equal to the mean of the two published corresponding hemispheric values.”
DUH.
I see – so global warming = the bipolar seesaw. (Tzedakis might not quite see it that way.)

September 3, 2013 10:37 am

Chris Schoneveld:
re your post at September 3, 2013 at 10:09 am.
Ian Wilson has corrected his error concerning Arthur (which put me into a panic) in a later post.
Yes, the allegation is very serious. Please see my reply at September 3, 2013 at 5:34 am
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/09/03/another-paper-blames-enso-for-global-warming-pause-calling-it-a-major-control-knob-governing-earths-temperature/#comment-1406623
Richard

jorgekafkazar
September 3, 2013 10:49 am

Where to start? I could spend a week commenting on this, and I don’t even have a half hour. So: (1) An El Nino is a heat-shedding mechanism. The air warms a bit, but the sea loses heat for a net transfer outward. This reduces many comments above to irrelevance. (2) This study relies on wiggle matching (or Wackelnpassenden), a method that works except when it doesn’t, and here it doesn’t, lately. (3) The 1995/1996 divergence could involve thumbs in a variety of ways, one of which is well described by Bloke down the pub.
All in all, then, I’d call it appropriate to give the paper three thumbs up.

Janice Moore
September 3, 2013 10:52 am

Apparently the effort to blame the recent warming on human activities took too long, and natural variability is asserting itself, thus falsifying the AGW dream of the watermelons to use a natural warming period as a route to global socialist domination.

Michael Gersh, 9/3/13 at 1:03am.
Well put with admirable brevity.

jorgekafkazar
September 3, 2013 10:57 am

MattN says: “Once again, this surprises NO ONE who has actually been paying attention. But you know that they will just say that CO2 is influencing, if not outright controlling ENSO. I am 100% positive I remember reading a statement from Gavin on Reallywrong Climate years ago where he stated that the PDO was permanently positive now due to CO2.”
Did Gavin really say that? I wouldn’t be surprised. If he did. I’d sure like to see his putative mechanism for 400 ppm of CO2 affecting the PDO! What nonsense.

Janice Moore
September 3, 2013 10:59 am

Ian Wilson — thank you for so generously sharing your excellent work with us. I hope that A-th-y features it as a post in its own right.
I’m so sorry about your very likely having been robbed by two cowardly toads. I hope that you are swiftly and fully vindicated. At the very least, I hope the flaw in the system that afforded them the opportunity to steal will be fixed.

TRM
September 3, 2013 11:35 am

“phlogiston says: September 3, 2013 at 7:53 am
Bob Tisdale has changed the paradigm of climate science, his detailed explanation of how ENSO drives global temperature is on its way to becoming settled science, ”
I’m not trying to speak for Mr Tisdale as he seems very capable of speaking for himself but I think the better way of viewing it is that “his explanation of how ENSO drives global temperature is adding greatly to our understanding of a very complex chaotic system”. 🙂
Now how many factors can influence ENSO? Onward and upward with the scientific method!!!

September 3, 2013 12:07 pm

richardscourtney says:
September 3, 2013 at 8:19 am
richard:
I don’t care who gets the credit for correcting the science.
I care that the science gets corrected.
G.P.:
These are not exclusive statements. Couldn’t we have both? Imagine someone like a member of the Hockey Team stealing General Relativity or E=mc^2, or others of your choosing.
richard:
With respect, what I care about is my business.
The testiness from you for such a reasonable statement from me was unexpected. Sorry if I offended you in some way. I was negligent in not completely reading your offering in which you did, indeed, mention attribution would be a bonus. I naively take what I see here as all open for discussion. Subtle, perhaps I’m not.

Pamela Gray
September 3, 2013 12:44 pm

A proper research introduction would be a review of the literature. Most folks understand that to mean peer reviewed papers in high-level journals. However other citation sources (personal communication, paper in press, presentation, etc) do make it in as long as they are far and few between. Unfortunately, I don’t think Bob has sufficient scientific standing (yet) to serve as a source in what is an obviously highly controversial topic, one in which every speck of it should be based on vetted data and sources. As Leif says, science is a blood sport.
That said, I for one am positive that Ivory Tower scientists have been visiting skeptic blogs regularly, who wouldn’t, which I think has helped them take off the CO2-colored glasses so they could actually see where the rubber meets the road. So who is really getting the credit here? How many people visit this site? How many people have a subscription to “Int J Geosciences”? The numbers should tell us who is getting most of the credit for this work.

RERT
September 3, 2013 1:01 pm

Here are two charts. The first is just the cumulative sum of the MEI index, linearly scaled. The second is the 12-month average MEI indices and 12 month average Total Solar Insolation (with sunspot proxy before the satelite record.
http://www.robles-thome.talktalk.net/Insolation and MEI.pdf
http://www.robles-thome.talktalk.net/Temp and Cum MEI.pdf
I’ve always thought the first was a striking picture, and strongly related to what Bob Tisdale talks about on El-Nino. The second I think shows quite a relationship between insolation (or some derivative of it!) and turning points in the MEI. On the other hand, you stare at anything long enough and it will all start to make sense…
R.

Editor
September 3, 2013 1:12 pm

Stephen Wilde says: “You clearly told me that you preferred not to speculate about times when the ENSO data is less reliable than the post 1982 record and I told you I respected that position but did not feel similarly constrained.”
Your willingness to speculate does not in any way suggest that I am “avoiding” anything. I elect to work with and present data to support my findings. You elect to work without data and you present speculation to support your conjecture.

September 3, 2013 1:15 pm

Re: Natural temperature variability
‘Cyclical phenomena of irregular periods’:
AMO – Far north Atlantic Tectonics
PDO – Kamchatka – Aleutian Archipelago Tectonics
ENSO – Central Pacific Tectonics
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/TDs.htm
Stabiliser: Antarctic Circumpolar current

September 3, 2013 1:22 pm

Gary Pearse:
re your post at September 3, 2013 at 12:07 pm.
OK. If you prefer, without respect, what I care about is my business.
But I don’t understand why you prefer this testy reply instead of the reasonable one I gave.
Richard

September 3, 2013 1:26 pm

Pamela Gray says:
September 3, 2013 at 12:44 pm
How many people visit this site? How many people have a subscription to “Int J Geosciences”?
No idea, but StatCounter on my website (graphs) since mid 2009 shows number 203,751

Pamela Gray
September 3, 2013 1:36 pm

Vuk, your are too funny. I asked a set of rhetorical questions. From there you found a way to sneak in a popup.

Kevin Kilty
September 3, 2013 1:47 pm

From Xie reacts to Curry…

The IPCC conclusion applies to centennial warming from 1880. Much of the 0.8 C warming since 1900 is indeed due to anthropogenic forcing, because natural variability like PDO and AMO has been averaged out over this long period of time.

Is there any evidence that PDO or AMO are stationary processes over the time scale of a century? If not then I see no reason to suppose that what Xie claims here is true. PDO could be responsible for a lot of warming since 1880.

September 3, 2013 1:54 pm

Ms Gray
Idle minds find ways to keep themselves amused.

Janice Moore
September 3, 2013 1:55 pm

Gary Pearse, just want you to know at least one other WUWT commenter gets what you are saying to R.C.. I’m surprised that such a normally courteous, generous, spirit, would be so disingenuous.
Who knows what has happened to him today? We might gladly overlook his sharp retort if we only knew.
“With every step our lives, we enter into the middle of some story
which we are certain to misunderstand.”
G. K. Chesterton

September 3, 2013 2:01 pm

Bob Tisdale said:
“Your willingness to speculate does not in any way suggest that I am “avoiding” anything. I elect to work with and present data to support my findings. You elect to work without data and you present speculation to support your conjecture.”
Sigh.
I’ve lost count of the number of times I have expressed appreciation of your work but been rebuffed by what is known in the psychiatric profession as passive aggression.
I am working from data and joining the dots logically by combining observations with basic physical principles.
As far as I know you have never proposed a mechanism whereby ENSO could result in temperature stepping from one positive or negative phase to the next.
I have.
Furthermore it appears to be linked to the level of solar activity affecting global cloudiness and albedo on a millennial time scale.
My use of the term ‘avoidance’ was intended to be neutral and respectful but you have taken unnecessary offence.
The fact is that you do not extend your undoubted ENSO expertise in a way that can lead to a more complete explanation of the role of ENSO within the climate system.
ENSO is a short term internally induced disturbance of longer term externally induced solar influences on oceanic behaviour.
One can only derive upward and downward stepping from one phase to the next by superimposing a longer term non ENSO influence.
One can only obtain a change in the amount of energy available for ENSO from the sun.
It has to be variability in the amount of solar energy entering the oceans that skews El Nino and La Nina relative to one another beyond the basic 60 year cycle of phase changes.
Your work simply does not extend to that aspect.

Simon
September 3, 2013 2:30 pm

If ENSO is a climate forcing then a change in phase should lead to the temperature trend changing direction. It is interesting to note that the recent series of La Nina conditions has not lead to a decrease in temperature. That suggests that there are other active forcings as well.

September 3, 2013 2:35 pm

“the recent series of La Nina conditions has not lead to a decrease in temperature. That suggests that there are other active forcings as well.”
There is still residual warmth in the oceans near the poles from the run of strong late 20th century El Ninos.
Once the AMO goes properly negative then a decline should begin.

September 3, 2013 2:42 pm

Janice Moore says:
September 3, 2013 at 1:55 pm
“With every step our lives, we enter into the middle of some story
which we are certain to misunderstand.”
G. K. Chesterton”
Thank you for this. It could well be me who is out of sorts.

1 3 4 5 6 7 9