Setting the record straight on ‘the cause of pause in global warming’

Guest essay by Don J. Easterbrook, Dept. of Geology, Western Washington University

Last week in my post ‘‘The cause of pause in global warming,” I presented data showing that the lack of global warming was not the ‘biggest mystery in climate science,’ “but, in fact, it really isn’t a mystery at all, it was predicted in 1999 on the basis of consistent, recurring patterns of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) and global climate.” This precipitated an avalanche of caustic comments by Bob Tisdale, almost all of which were totally irrelevant to what I said. This post is to set the record straight so there is no misunderstanding of the situation.

I like Willis Eschenback’s caveat: “if you disagree with something that I or someone else said, please QUOTE THEIR EXACT WORDS and state your objection. That way we can all understand just what you are objecting to, and the nature of your objection.” With that in mind, here is the crux of what I said.

Each time the PDO was warm, global climate warmed; each time the PDO was cool, global climate cooled.” “Each of the two PDO warm periods (1915-1945 and 1978-1998) and the three cool periods (1880-1915, 1945-1977, 1999-2014) lasted 25-30 years. If the flip of the PDO into its cool mode in 1999 persists, the global climate should cool for the next several decades. “

clip_image002

Figure 4. (Top) PDO fluctuations and projections to 2040 based on past PDO history.

 

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Figure 4. (Bottom) Projected global cooling in coming decades based on extrapolation of past PDO recurring patterns.

I plotted the oxygen isotope measurements made by Stuiver and Grootes (1997) for the past 450 years, which,

showed about 40, regularly-spaced, warm/cool periods with average cycles of 27 years, very similar to the PDO cycle. There was no way to determine what the PDO looked like that far back, but the GISP2 warm/cool cycles were so consistent that correlation with PDO 25-30 year cycles seemed like a good possibility. Historically known warm/cool periods showed up in the GISP2 curve, i.e., the 1945-1977 cool period, the 1915-1945 warm period, the 1880-1915 cool period, the Little Ice Age, Dalton Minimum cooling, the Maunder Minimum cooling, and many others, lending credence to the validity of the GISP2 measurements.

clip_image006

Figure 5. Warm and cool periods to 1480 AD from oxygen isotope measurements from the GISP2 Greenland ice core. The average length of a warm or cool cycle is 27 years.

Conclusions

“The ‘mysterious pause’ in global warming is really not mysterious at all. It is simply the continuation of climatic cycles that have been going on for hundreds of years. It was predicted in 1999, based on repeated patterns of cyclical warm and cool PDO phases so it is neither mysterious nor surprising. The lack of global warming for the past 17 years is just as predicted. Continued cooling for the next few decades will totally vindicate this prediction. Time and nature will be the final judge of these predictions.

What drives these oceanic/climatic cycles remains equivocal. Correlations with various solar parameters appear to be quite good, but the causal mechanism remains unclear.”

Bob Tisdale immediately launched an insulting verbal attack in which he said:

“Easterbrook’s post is misleading, it misinforms, it is contrived, it is far from good science”

“Easterbrook continues to present his misunderstandings of the PDO”

“Easterbrook does more to mislead and misinform than to teach and inform”

“It’s bogus!”

“He insists on misinforming readers”

“Easterbrook’s bogus-looking global temperature anomaly data”

“I suspect it’s a fantasy dataset

Now I enjoy a spirited discussion of issues as much as anyone and am always willing to discuss any scientific issue, but these unprofessional, insulting remarks are not what I call science and do nothing to advance the understanding of issues.  Tisdale completely missed the point of what I said and the basis for saying it. Virtually everything he said was irrelevant to the data that I presented and nothing he said disproves any of my data or my predictions (which so far seem to be right on track). Tisdale missed the boat when he ignored my statement at the outset, “it was clear that PDO drove global climate (Figs. 2,3), but what drove the PDO was not apparent,” and again at the end, “what drives these oceanic/climatic cycles remains equivocal. Correlations with various solar parameters appear to be quite good, but the causal mechanism remains unclear.”

In other words, I was correlating the chronology of the PDO with global climate and glacier fluctuations without worrying about the cause of the PDO. I don’t know what causes the PDO nor does anyone else, including Tisdale. I then used GISP2 Greenland ice core oxygen isotope data to show that 40 warm/cool cycles back to at least 1480 had 27 years cycle patterns very similar to those of the PDO and global warming cycles that we have observed in the past century. Tisdale vented his criticisms of my work on the basis of his interpretation of what causes the PDO, which is totally irrelevant to the data that I presented. The point here is I start with recognition of the existence of the PDO and it really doesn’t matter what the cause is—that’s a separate issue. Tisdale’s interpretations of the relationship of ENSO to the PDO may well be correct, but that does nothing to invalidate the data that I presented. As one of the commenters pointed out, “In addressing Don Easterbrook you assert repeatedly that the PDO is an “aftereffect” of the ENSO. This in no way contradicts anything that Don said, he left the cause of the PDO as unknown.” Tisdale failed to understand that none of his discussions about the cause of the PDO in any way invalidated the data presented.

Tisdale was very critical of figure 4, repeatedly calling it “bogus” (= false, fake, phony, counterfeit, sham) and “a fantasy dataset” (= made up, invented, fictional, imaginary, unreal) because the source of part of the curve from 1900-2000 wasn’t indicated. The logic of such a conclusion is not valid—just because you don’t know the source of data on a graph doesn’t render it ‘bogus’ or a ‘fantasy.’ Yes, it is perfectly reasonable to ask for source data and can reserve judgment until you get it, but Tisdale’s statements were way off base–not logical and unnecessarily insulting. Here is the original graph used for part of figure 4—it is neither ‘bogus’ nor a ‘fantasy.’

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This curve is now 14 years old, but because this is the first part of the curve that I originally used in 2000, I left it as is for figure 4. Using any one of several more recent curves from other sources wouldn’t really make any significant difference in the extrapolation used for projection into the future because the cooling from 1945 to 1977 is well documented. The rest of the curve to 2010 was grafted on from later ground measurement data—again, which one really doesn’t make any difference because they all show essentially the same thing. The extrapolated parts of the curve show three possible projections: (1) cooling similar to 1945-1977, (2) somewhat deeper cooling, perhaps similar to 1880-1915, (3) somewhat deeper cooling, perhaps similar to that of the Dalton Minimum. The last two are diagrammatic only– really guesses, but are shown to illustrate possible options. Nothing that Tisdale says in his comments in any way invalids this figure.

The last three graphs in my post are intended merely as illustrations of the global cooling that has occurred since 1998, confirming (so far) the predictions that I made 14 years ago. If you don’t like figure 6, throw it out–Figures 7 and 8 make the same point. Tisdale’s conclusion that “cooling is not occurring from the peak around 2001 through 2010” is easily proven false by the Christopher Monckton graph below.

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Global cooling from 1996 to 2013. Graph by Christopher Monckton http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/08/07/the-agu-policy-statement-as-redrafted-by-monckton/

Conclusions

1. I have neither the desire nor reason to quarrel with Bob Tisdale—I suspect our differences are less than one might imagine. His Enso interpretations may well be correct, but they have no relevance to the data presented in my WUWT post.

2. Nothing in any of Tisdale’s comments invalidates any of the data that I presented.

3. The global cooling predictions that I made in 2000, based on recurring patterns of PDO and global climate, have so far proven to be correct.

4. Nature and time will ultimately prove whether or not my all of my predictions are correct.

5. I hope that we can now move on to more productive issues, especially what is the principal driving force of climate changes. I welcome open discussions of scientific issues with anyone, including Bob Tisdale, but I confess to having little patience with argumentum ad hominem.

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Gail Combs
January 21, 2014 9:15 am

mpainter says: January 21, 2014 at 7:40 am
I challenge Judith Curry or anyone else to show any impact of anthropogenic CO2 on climate.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Note she did not say how much of an effect or if it could be measured. What she implied is negative feedback. She also did not say anthropogenic CO2.
You really have to watch the pea.

January 21, 2014 9:25 am

Ocean scientist Dr Francisco P. Chavez (originally from Peru and now at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute) likes to call the positive phase of the PDO – El Viejo, and the negative phase La Vieja. I think Bob rightly argues the primacy of El NIno events as the driving mechanism, but he would also agree that an El Nino event leaves warm water in the eastern Pacific. That warm water re-emerges every winter and contributes to a weakened east west temperature gradient and weaker Walker circulation and thus slower Trade Winds. Weaker Trade winds can not so easily constrain the warm pool in the western Pacific and thus allow for more El NIno events. The term El Viejo means old man and Dr. Chavez uses it to indicate that the positive PDO is a longer lasting (or mature ) after-effect of El NIno (boy) and as such it has a major effect on winds and currents and biological regime shifts.

Gail Combs
January 21, 2014 9:44 am

Greg says: January 21, 2014 at 8:19 am
…We should concentrate on asking what is driving ENSO.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Silly Wild Ass Guess
I would think it would be what happens down in the Antarctic specifically the winds and sea ice and Drake Passage.
This temperature image shows the tongue of colder water running along the edge of South America from the wind driven Antarctic Circumpolar Current.
Effect of the Drake Passage on the Cenozoic Glaciation of Antarctica (It is a model but interesting)
And another:

Effect of Drake Passage on the global thermohaline circulation
http://wind.mit.edu/~jscott/AMOC/toggweiler_samuels_95.pdf
Abstract
-The Ekman divergence around Antarctica raises a large amount of deep water to the ocean’ surface. The regional Ekman transport moves the up-welled deep water northward out of the circumpolar zone. The divergence and northward surface drift combine, in effect, to remove deep water from the interior of the ocean. This wind-driven removal process is facilitated by a unique dynamic constraint operating in the latitude band containing Drake Passage. Through a simple model sensitivity experiment WC show that the upwelling and removal of deep water in the circumpolar belt may be quantitatively related to the formation of new deep water in the northern North Atlantic. These results show that stronger winds in the south can induct more deep water formation in the north and more deep outflow through the South Atlantic. The fact that winds in the southern hemisphere might influence the formation of deep water in the North Atlantic brings into question long-standing notions about the forces that drive the ocean’ thermohaline s circulation.

Don Easterbrook
January 21, 2014 9:46 am

Anthony,
I think the best way to address this is to plot an updated temp curve and see if it makes any difference–I doubt that it will, but I’ll do it and see. It’s probably time to update that curve anyway–the only reason I left the old one in was because it was what I used in 2000.
Don

Andrew
January 21, 2014 9:51 am

Steve O.
Have a look at Length of Day (LOD) changes & AAM which is a ratio of North South to East West winds. LOD links to PDO & has links to other forces.

mpainter
January 21, 2014 9:55 am

Gail Combs says:
January 21, 2014 at 9:15 am
mpainter says: January 21, 2014 at 7:40 am
I challenge Judith Curry or anyone else to show any impact of anthropogenic CO2 on climate.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Note she did not say how much of an effect or if it could be measured. What she implied is negative feedback. She also did not say anthropogenic CO2.
You really have to watch the pea.
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
What could she have meant, if not AGW and CO2?

Gail Combs
January 21, 2014 9:56 am

dearieme says: January 21, 2014 at 8:20 am
I’m sorry, I’ve become a bit out of touch with these matters. Who is this [trimmed] Tisdale?
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
http://bobtisdale.wordpress.com/
Bob is our resident expert on ENSO, oceans, El Niño and La Niña.

Sweet Old Bob
January 21, 2014 10:00 am

If I may be so old (yes,old) as to suggest “The rock that sticks up is ground down”
Except when it is strong (hard?) enough to leave its mark.Sometimes to the point of altering the flow…
And it remains to be seen how two rocks may effect this flow…

Gail Combs
January 21, 2014 10:02 am

Meandering Thalweg says: January 21, 2014 at 8:31 am
This current inter glacial period is very long in the tooth….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
That has been covered here too by William McClenney.

…almost everyone still seems oblivious as to WHEN we live! I await a cogent consideration, aside from PDF, as to why the Holocene will/should/might go long….

He wrote the following WUWT threads:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/01/05/on-“trap-speed-acc-and-the-snr/
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/12/30/the-antithesis/
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/03/16/the-end-holocene-or-how-to-make-out-like-a-madoff-climate-change-insurer/
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/10/02/can-we-predict-the-duration-of-an-interglacial/

Gail Combs
January 21, 2014 10:13 am

RichardLH says: January 21, 2014 at 9:08 am
I too have pondered this question. The lateral tides on Earth from Sun and Moon are something rarely discussed….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Doesn’t even register in a search. The best discussion I have seen is over at E.M. Smiths Lunar Resonance and Taurid Storms and Lunar Cycles, more than one… Of interest in this discussion Why Weather has a 60 year Lunar beat

RobertInAz
January 21, 2014 10:21 am

Hi Don
Each of the two PDO warm periods (1915-1945 and 1978-1998 ) and the three cool periods (1880-1915, 1945-1977, 1999-2014) lasted 25-30 years. If the flip of the PDO into its cool mode in 1999 persists, the global climate should cool for the next several decades. “
1978-1998 is 20 years.

Don Easterbrook
January 21, 2014 10:23 am

Anthony,
I agree. I’ve had a lot of publication deadlines the past few years so that didn’t make it to the top of the priority list, but, yes, it is indeed time for an update. I’ve been out of town all of the past month and three out the past four months so am presently wading thru a mountain of things requiring my attention that were awaiting me when I returned home this weekend. I’ll get to the update as quickly as I can.
Don

David L. Hagen
January 21, 2014 10:27 am

Bob Tisdale
Re: “I did not use ad hominem arguments”
I second Don’s observation that you did. e.g. you stated:
“Easterbrook’s post is misleading, it misinforms, it is contrived, it is far from good science”
“Easterbrook does more to mislead and misinform than to teach and inform”
not only is Figure 6 not the best way to show it, it’s misleading.
“He insists on misinforming readers”
These are ad hominem abusive attacks against Easterbrook’s character, inferring bad or evil character. See definitions of:
Mislead>

: to cause (someone) to believe something that is not true

Misinform

:  to lead astray :  give a wrong impression

You further stated:
“It’s bogus!”
“But I suspect it does not exist. I suspect it’s a fantasy dataset”
“. . .HADCRUT is based on data. Easterbrooks fantasy version is obviously not.”
“Easterbrook’s bogus-looking global temperature anomaly data”
This is another ad hominem abusive attack against Easterbrook’s character accusing him of concocting data, and contriving misleading data. See:
Bogus

not genuine :  counterfeit, sham

Fantasy, definition:

the faculty or activity of imagining things, esp. things that are impossible or improbable.

That borders on serious libel against Easterbrook’s professional reputation as a scientist.
Libel

a published false statement that is damaging to a person’s reputation; a written defamation.

May I encourage you to actually study ad hominem attacks so you can avoid them. e.g. see The Fallacy Detective
To persuade people to your scientific argument, you need to make friends not enemies. e.g. see Dale Carnegie
May I encourage you to build your “Emotional Intelligence.”
e.g. study “Emotional Intelligence: Why it can matter more than IQ” Daniel Goleman
For Easterbrook’s subsequent work that incorporates much more on AMO etc. see
Don Easterbrook‘s Publications Climate Change e.g.,
Ch 5, Relationship of multidecadal global temperatures to oceanic oscillations
PS Matthew W
Why falsely attack me over not listening to the scientific debate when I made a statement on Tisdale’s using ad hominem logical fallacies and intemperate language? See my above followup to Tisdale. I recommend that you study logical fallacies so you can avoid them, and study how address a logical argument. I would also encourage you to build your emotional intelligence and persuasion skills. I’m still learning.

milodonharlani
January 21, 2014 10:28 am

Ben Wouters says:
January 21, 2014 at 6:25 am
Thanks for the excellent chart of Cretaceous & Cenozoic temperature reconstruction.
I’d be interested in your explanation for the hot water then & Oceanic Anoxic Event 3, during Coniacian-Santonian time of the Late Cretaceous. The standard school solution of course involves volcanism & CO2.

Gail Combs
January 21, 2014 10:32 am

mpainter says: January 21, 2014 at 9:55 am
What could she [Dr Curry] have meant, if not AGW and CO2?
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
That is why I said watch the pea. CO2 has many many sources. Mankind is a very small part. 117 ppm vs 350.2 ppm (natural) from a chart “adjusted for heat retention characteristics” and that is if you swallow what the IPCC crowd is telling you.
Here is the log graph for CO2 from Lindzen and Choi: http://joannenova.com.au/globalwarming/graphs/log-co2/log-graph-lindzen-choi-web.gif
Those two points combined means CAGW or even AGW is a tempest in a thimble. (It doesn’t even rate a teapot)
Dr. Curry knows all this but she is also good at playing politics.

January 21, 2014 10:34 am

Ocean CIRCULATION issues such as ENSO, PDO, AMO CYCLES are only products,
indicators, effects and results of other true CLIMATE DRIVERS.
All curve fitting exercise on a SIMULTANEOUS OCCURENCE does not prove
CAUSATION! Exactly the same applies with CO2: No causation is proven by curve
fitting exercise! The true climate drivers are determined in: Joachim Seifert “End
of global warming”. Detailed calculations are given, easy to follow. The booklet is
uncontested, unrefuted, take a look and try. JS.

Editor
January 21, 2014 10:35 am

Don
I reconstructed CET from its instrumental level of 1659 back to 1538 and hope to get it back to 1450 in next few months. I would be curious as to how well you believe it correlates with your graph.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/05/08/the-curious-case-of-rising-co2-and-falling-temperatures/
Presumably as the oceans flip from cool to warm (and vice versa) different places will react differently with their climate as dry weather becomes wet and vice versa.
Has anyone ever looked to see which countries respond to the changing ocean and how that manifests itself with temperatures?
tonyb

January 21, 2014 10:50 am

Don says
I don’t know what causes the PDO nor does anyone else, including Tisdale.
henry says
well, just for the record, I lhad long figured out that in the end the PDO, AMO< ENSO, etc
all depend on what, in due time, is let through the atmosphere.
In this respect it might be an eye opener to read what I found was merely a confirmation of what had already been established by a report in William Arnold in1985
(100% correlation of the Gleisberg solar cycle by solar-planetary forces)
http://blogs.24.com/henryp/2013/04/29/the-climate-is-changing/
Does anyone perhaps know what happened to William Arnold?

mpainter
January 21, 2014 10:50 am

Gail Combs says:
January 21, 2014 at 10:32 am
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
and so full circle: I challenge anyone, Dr. Curry included, to show that anthropogenic CO2 affects climate.

pokerguy
January 21, 2014 10:59 am

“Profanities in a blogpost only shows bad language skills.”
Too generous when directed at a fellow human being, especially a man like Bob T. Goes to character (of the commenter).

sabretruthtiger
January 21, 2014 11:03 am

“All other things being equal, adding more greenhouse gases to the atmosphere will have a warming effect on the planet,” Judith Curry, a climatologist at the Georgia Institute of Technology, told the Los Angeles Times. “However, all things are never equal, and what we are seeing is natural climate variability dominating over human impact.”
She’s right of course, but what Judith often fails to mention is the insignificance of the warming man adds via CO2, one third of the IPCC positive feedback-based predictions so naturally it will get lost in any natural noise. Long term cycles will more than drown out AGW and so even overarching multidecadal trends are hopeless for measuring CO2 based warming unless we can fully account for all multidecadal oceanic/solar etc cycles. Not to mention the fact that CO2 gets absorbed in to the environment and CO2 measurements via ice cores are inaccurate regarding past CO2 concentrations as CO2 diffuses through the ice, making even their CO2 increase estimates dodgy.
The Holocene climactic patterns show we’re at the peak of an optimum due for a descent into another ice age, no amount of CO2 is going to stop that.
A key tactic of the globalists is to insert shills/trolls into Skeptic’s blogs to start creating division. Their goal is to divide and conquer via the creation of opposing factions and arguments.
A similar, more effective tactic if they can pull it off is to convince a high profile truth advocate to ‘turn’ to the dark side at the right time derailing the movement.
This has worked well in other ‘truth’ movements where high profile scientists have inexplicably changed their minds and started using ludicrous anti-science arguments tinged with rabid ad hominems.
I’m sure Bob is nothing of the sort, he’s a great scientists and fighter for truth but we must be careful to prevent the same symptoms occurring via innocent misunderstandings.

John Finn
January 21, 2014 11:05 am

Don Easterbrook says:
January 21, 2014 at 8:56 am
As for Fig 6, if you don’t like it, throw it out–look at Monckton’s graphs and the other two figures. These are just illustrations showing that cooling is indeed happening–do you disagree with that?

I disagree. Monckton has used one dataset (at least he cites his source) which shows a negative trend of -0.02 degrees per century since 1996. This trend is nowhere near close to being statistically significant. The trend is indistinguishable from ZERO.

Let’s stop this squabbling and move on to more productive discussions.

No – let’s not. Let’s try and establish exactly what data your Fig 4 is using, i.e.
1. What data is represented by the graph for the period 1900-2000.
2. What data is used for the 2001-2010 period?
Note that your graph shows that 2000-2010 temperatures were consistently lower than those in the 1990s. You write

This curve is now 14 years old, but because this is the first part of the curve that I originally used in 2000, I left it as is for figure 4. Using any one of several more recent curves from other sources wouldn’t really make any significant difference in the extrapolation used for projection into the future because the cooling from 1945 to 1977 is well documented. The rest of the curve to 2010 was grafted on from later ground measurement data—again

Which ground measurement data?
Like, Bob, I believe your graph is reconstructed from bogus data and nothing you have written above has altered that fact.

herkimer
January 21, 2014 11:12 am

Don
You said
“Each time the PDO was warm, global climate warmed; each time the PDO was cool, global climate cooled.”
I would suggest
“Each time the PDO index was positive, global climate warmed; each time the PDO index was negative, global climate cooled.”
Don
You are one of the pioneers who recognized that climate runs in warm and cool phases and the decades ahead are more likely to be one of cooling rather than of warming. You were right when others in your field leaned the other way [some even do still as you have found out]. With respect to being able to correctly predict the cooling curve, I do not have problem here. No one is getting the prediction curve right. The key aspect of your work was that you correctly predicted the cooling trend leading to a 30 year or so pause, completely opposite of those alarmist projections and you are right on.

John Finn
January 21, 2014 11:24 am

David L. Hagen says:
January 21, 2014 at 10:27 am

Bob Tisdale has criticised Don Easterbrook’s graph. A lot of people, including many who are sceptical of CAGW, agree with Bob. This is a graph of the UAH satellite record presented by Roy Spencer
http://www.drroyspencer.com/latest-global-temperatures/
Note that the 2001-2010 period is consistently warmer (1998 apart) than the 1991-2000 period. All other datasets show a similar pattern. The Easterbrook graph (Fig 4), however, shows the 1990s warmer than the 2000s. Is it not reasonable, then, to ask for the source of the data? … and if the information is not forthcoming to conclude that the data is effectively made up?
Even in this “setting the record straight” article, Don Easterbrook still hasn’t clarified the source of his data.

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