No matter if it's a climatic 'pause' or 'jolt', still no warming

Richard Kerr (Science) in 2009: Warming ‘Pause’ About to Be Replaced by ‘Jolt’

Guest essay by Robert Bradley Jr.

“Pauses as long as 15 years are rare in the simulations, and ‘we expect that [real-world] warming will resume in the next few years,’ the Hadley Centre group writes…. Researchers … agree that no sort of natural variability can hold off greenhouse warming much longer.”

– Richard Kerr, Science (2009)

That’s Richard A. Kerr, the longtime, award-winning climate-change scribe for Science magazine, the flagship publication of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The article, “What Happened to Global Warming? Scientists Say Just Wait a Bit,” was published October 1, 2009.

The article is important in the history of climate thought because it captures neatly the (over)confidence of the scientists who turn to models to justify their faith that past overestimation will soon be reversed. Judith Curry’s recent discovery of F. A. Hayek’s Nobel Prize Lecture in Economics, The Pretense of Knowledge, marks a new front in the mainstream climate debate. [1]

Secondly, today’s explanation for the “pause” (a term used in Kerr’s 2009 article) is not mentioned back then—ocean delay.

Third, Kerr frames the debate in political terms with Copenhagen just ahead—and fails to interview or include the contrary views about how climate sensitivity might be less than the climate models assume in their physical equations.

Here is the guts of the Kerr article as the 5th year anniversary comes this year:

The blogosphere has been having a field day with global warming’s apparent decade-long stagnation. Negotiators are working toward an international global warming agreement to be signed in Copenhagen in December, yet there hasn’t been any warming for a decade. What’s the point, bloggers ask?

Climate researchers are beginning to answer back in their preferred venue, the peer-reviewed literature. The pause in warming is real enough, but it’s just temporary, they argue from their analyses.

A natural swing in climate to the cool side has been holding greenhouse warming back, and such swings don’t last forever. “In the end, global warming will prevail,” says climate scientist Gavin

Schmidt of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York City.

The latest response from the climate community comes in State of the Climate in 2008, a special supplement to the current (August) issue of the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. Climate researcher Jeff Knight and eight colleagues at the Met Office Hadley Centre in Exeter, U.K., first establish that—at least in one leading temperature record—greenhouse warming has been stopped in its tracks for the past 10 years.

In the HadCRUT3 temperature record, the world warmed by 0.07°C±0.07°C from 1999 through 2008, not the 0.20°C expected by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Corrected for the natural temperature effects of El Niño and its sister climate event La Niña, the decade’s trend is a perfectly flat 0.00°C.

So contrarian bloggers are right: There’s been no increase in greenhouse warming lately. That result came as no surprise to

Knight and his colleagues or, for that matter, to most climate scientists. But the Hadley Centre group took the next step, using climate modeling to try to quantify how unusual a 10-year warming pause might be.

In 10 modeling runs of 21st century climate totaling 700 years worth of simulation, long-term warming proceeded about as expected: 2.0°C by the end of the century. But along the way in the 700 years of simulation, about 17 separate 10-year intervals had temperature trends resembling that of the past decade—that is, more or less flat.

From this result, the group concludes that the model can reproduce natural jostlings of the climate system—perhaps a shift in heat-carrying ocean currents—that can cool the world and hold off greenhouse warming for a decade. But natural climate variability in the model has its limits. Pauses as long as 15 years are rare in the simulations, and “we expect that [real-world] warming will resume in the next few years,” the Hadley Centre group writes.

And that resumption could come as a bit of a jolt, says Adam Scaife of the group, as the temperature catches up with the greenhouse gases added during the pause.

Pinning the pause on natural variability makes sense to most researchers. “That goes without saying,” writes climate researcher Stefan Rahmstorf of Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany by e-mail. “We’ve made [that point] several times on RealClimate,” a blog.

Solar physicist Judith Lean of the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C., and climate modeler David Rind of GISS reached the same conclusion in a peer-reviewed 15 August paper in Geophysical Research Letters. They broke down recent temperature variation into components attributable to greenhouse gases, pollutant aerosols, volcanic aerosols, El Niño/La Niña, and solar variability.

Combined, those influences explain all of the observed variability, by Lean and Rind’s accounting. But unlike the Hadley Centre’s model-based analysis, this assessment attributes a good deal of climate variability to variability in solar activity. That’s because most models can’t translate solar variability into climate variability the way the actual climate system can (Science, 28 August, p. 1058), Rind says.

Researchers may differ about exactly what’s behind recent natural climate variability, but they agree that no sort of natural variability can hold off greenhouse warming much longer. “Our prediction is that if past is prologue, the solar component will turn around and lead to rapid warming in the next 5 years,” says Rind.

Climate modeler David Smith of the Hadley Centre, who was not involved in the State of the Climate analysis, says his group’s climate model forecasts—made much the way weather forecasts are made—are still calling for warming to resume in the next few years as ocean influences reverse (Science, 10 August 2007, p. 746). Whether that’s in time to boost climate negotiations is anyone’s guess.

The ball is back in Richard Kerr’s court. Dr. Kerr, let’s have a five-year update for Science with a headline like “What Happened to Global Warming: Can Mainstream Climate Science Regain Its Footing?” His update might well take into account Judith Curry’s current post, IPCC AR5 weakens the case for AGW), that documented “several key elements … weakening of the case for attributing the warming [to] human influences:

  • Lack of warming since 1998 and growing discrepancies with climate model projections
  • Evidence of decreased climate sensitivity to increases in CO2
  • Evidence that sea level rise in 1920-1950 is of the same magnitude as in 1993-2012
  • Increasing Antarctic sea ice extent
  • Low confidence in attributing extreme weather events to anthropogenic global warming.”

———–

[1] Curry cited this quotation from Hayek’s 1974 lecture: “I confess that I prefer true but imperfect knowledge, even if it leaves much indetermined and unpredictable, to a pretence of exact knowledge that is likely to be false.”

– See more at: http://www.masterresource.org/2014/01/kerr-science-2009-pause-jolt/#sthash.WL2iT5vI.dpuf

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RichardLH
January 16, 2014 2:22 am

Allan,
I believe that it is possible to detect and demonstrate the 60 year signal in both the surface and satellite data sets. The satellite data set is not long enough yet to show the full 60 year cycle obviously. But the indications that it is that it is there are, I believe, clear.
This is using a very simple and well recognised ‘tool’ of Gaussian low pass filtering/smooth. Even Hansen uses this in some of his analysis. The question is what values to use to ‘see’ the 60 year signal if it is present.
In order not to predetermine the outcome we need to stay at least a octave or so away from any fundamental but not so far as to allow any harmonics of signal shape to confuse the picture.
I chose a period of 18 and a bit years which should suffice.
HadCrut4
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut4gl/plot/hadcrut4gl/mean:180/mean:149/mean:123/plot/hadcrut4gl/mean:720
UAH
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/uah/mean:90/mean:74/mean:62/plot/uah
(For those who will point out that a Triple Running Mean is not a true Gaussian smooth then please note that sampling and range figures dominate above the differences in outcome.)

RichardLH
January 16, 2014 2:26 am

Oops, I accidentally included the 15 year rather than the 18.33… year I had used in my first post but the differences are tiny 🙂

January 16, 2014 11:13 am

Thank you Richard.
Some apparent warming bias in Hadcrut4.
I expect more significant global cooling to follow.
Best, Allan

RichardLH
January 17, 2014 1:16 am

Allan M.R. MacRae says:
January 16, 2014 at 11:13 am
“Some apparent warming bias in Hadcrut4.”
There may well be, but that will show up in changes in the magnitude of the 100+ year cycle. Until we get adjustments that iron out the 60 year cycle it will remain there for all to see.
Its there in GISS and BEST (in the later years – the early years appear to have massaged it away) and in many other sources of climate data, both land and sea.
If we are at the peak of the 60 year as the data demonstrates then it all comes down to the 100+ year cycle and if that has reached a peak or not.
Using just observations of the data, there is a good chance that it is occurring there as well. That is because the 30 year positive mode is ‘zero crossing’ too early at ~20 years. This could mean that the 100+ year has stopped rising and started to level out.
In that case the data will soon support the projected fall. Time alone will tell.

January 17, 2014 2:08 pm

Hello again Richard,
Maybe you can find something of value in this data:
I have no Sunspot Number data before 1700, but the latter part of the Maunder Minimum had 2 back-to-back low Solar Cycles with SSNmax of 58 in 1705 and 63 in 1717 .
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/space-weather/solar-data/solar-indices/sunspot-numbers/international/tables/
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/solar/image/annual.gif
The coldest period of the Maunder was ~1670 to ~1700 (8.48dC year average Central England Temperatures) but the coldest year was 1740 (6.84C year avg CET).
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/hadobs/hadcet/data/download.html
The Dalton Minimum had 2 back-to-back low SC’s with SSNmax of 48 in 1804 and 46 in 1816. Tambora erupted in 1815.
Two of the coldest years in the Dalton were 1814 (7.75C year avg CET) and 1816 (7.87C year avg CET).
Now Solar Cycle 24 is a dud with SSNmax estimated at ~65, and very early estimates suggest SC25 will be very low as well.
The warmest recent years for CET were 2002 to 2007 inclusive that averaged 10.55C.
So here is my real concern:
IF the Sun does indeed drive temperature, as I suspect, then global cooling probably WILL happen within the next decade or sooner.
Best regards, Allan

RichardLH
January 18, 2014 1:55 am

The problem I have with temperatures before 1840 is that they cannot be considered to truly representative (to the accuracy required). They are either deficient in sampling in space or time (or both) as well as instrument/measurement accuracy.
I could take to observed minimum at around 1740 and subtract 60 years from it and come up with 1680 and note that it coincides rather well with the coldest period of the Maunder minimum as determined.
But that way madness lies. We are seeking a figure of only +-0.2C variation. Without a relatively high quality temperature instrument it is possible to ‘see’ it everywhere you look if so inclined. You can make the conjecture ‘fit’ but, to my mind at least, it can never be conclusive.
I do not know if it is the sun, the ocean or even little green men tweaking the thermostat. That sort of conclusion is way beyond my pay grade.
I can only be a ‘honest observer’. I CAN state that the measured temperatures have followed the trend/cycle observed in the period in which they have been recorded. I CAN state that there is a better than even likelihood that any such trend/cycle into the future.
Beyond that, we wait for more data.

January 18, 2014 3:14 am

I agree Richard – with for more data.
All I can see is the gross correlation that has been historically observed between low Sunspots during two significant cold periods – the Maunder and the Dalton,
I expect the Sun is the dominant factor, however, the ~90 year Gleissberg Cycle is in-and-out-of-phase with the ~60 year PDO.
I do expect global cooling in the next few years as stated above.
How much cooling? Not sure but probably significant enough to cause hardship for humanity in Northern climes. Hope to be wrong. Getting old and hate the cold.

January 18, 2014 3:42 am

correction: “wait for more data”

RichardLH
January 18, 2014 4:01 am

If you use an estimation of temperatures aka LOWESS or LOESS then you can get more than two cycles out of the data. And that can show a probability for a continued downward trend from here on for the next few years.
Again, though, that is an estimation, not a measurement.
As to the origin of what drives all this. There any many offerings as to that. Only when we get acknowledgement of the actual existence of the 60 year and 100+ year cycle will we then get serious research into what the drivers are.
So far, the first claim is, “you can’t do that to our lovely data” not “oh that’s interesting”.
I have a new slogan that I will use from here on out.
Null hypothesis = Scenario C
I was thinking of printing up cards and tee-shirts!
This observes that you can take Hansen’s Scenario C and change its wording slightly to be “any change in CO2 concentration from 2000 will not effect the GST. Only natural factors will influence the outcome”.
This is what happens if you turn all the greenhouse gas ‘knobs’ in the models down to zero effect. and run the models forward.
So far the data is agreeing rather well with that conclusion 🙂 Hansen may have been right all along, just not with the conclusion he drew.
http://stevengoddard.files.wordpress.com/2014/01/screenhunter_1741-jan-14-09-31.gif
I rather like the idea of agreeing with the modellers. They may not like it though.

January 18, 2014 5:42 am

Agree again.
As I have written previously:
“I therefore suggest that the oft-fractious “mainstream debate” between warmists and skeptics about the magnitude of ECS is materially irrelevant. ECS, if it exists at all, is so small that it just does not matter.“
____________
ECS = Equilibrium Climate Sensitivity, the theoretical warming resulting from a doubling of atmospheric CO2 from the alleged pre-industrial”” concentration of ~280ppm to 560ppm.
____________
More at http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/01/07/watch-the-usa-in-polar-vortex-deep-freeze-live/#comment-1532442

ThaCarMan
January 26, 2014 4:24 pm

A pause can only be a pause if it is preceeded and followed by identical behavior. It’s like a baseball player having a slump in hitting. If his batting average doesn’t resume, the “slump” was only the start of a different avarage. That’s what we have here with the climate models — we don’t know the future temperatures of years to come. It may be a pause or it may be a new temeprature pattern. I wonder just how long of a “pause” is required for the AGW crowd to admit it’s no longer a pause. If that cannot be established, all funding for such endevors should be carefully re-examined. Would you admit to surgery if upon new examinations you didn’t show any signs of a terminal illness? …. or would you just go along with the initial opinion and have it done anyway and incur the costs?

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