CRISES IN CLIMATOLOGY

Guest essay by Donald C. Morton

Herzberg Program in Astronomy and Astrophysics, National Research Council of Canada

ABSTRACT

The Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released in September 2013 continues the pattern of previous ones raising alarm about a warming earth due to anthropogenic greenhouse gases. This paper identifies six problems with this conclusion – the mismatch of the model predictions with the temperature observations, the assumption of positive feedback, possible solar effects, the use of a global temperature, chaos in climate, and the rejection of any skepticism.

THIS IS AN ASTROPHYSICIST’S VIEW OF CURRENT CLIMATOLOGY. I WELCOME CRITICAL COMMENTS.

1. INTRODUCTION

Many climatologists have been telling us that the environment of the earth is in serious danger of overheating caused by the human generation of greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution. Carbon dioxide (CO2) is mainly to blame, but methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O) and certain chlorofluorocarbons also contribute.

“As expected, the main message is still the same: the evidence is very clear that the world is warming, and that human activities are the main cause. Natural changes and fluctuations do occur but they are relatively small.” – John Shepard in the United Kingdom, 2013 Sep 27 for the Royal Society.

“We can no longer ignore the facts: Global warming is unequivocal, it is caused by us and its consequences will be profound. But that doesn’t mean we can’t solve it.” -Andrew Weaver in Canada, 2013 Sep 28 in the Globe and Mail.

“We know without a doubt that gases we are adding to the air have caused a planetary energy imbalance and global warming, already 0.8 degrees Celsius since pre-industrial times. This warming is driving an increase in extreme weather from heat waves to droughts and wild fires and stronger storms . . .” – James Hansen in United States, 2013 Dec 6 CNN broadcast.

Are these views valid? In the past eminent scientists have been wrong. Lord Kelvin, unaware of nuclear fusion, concluded that the sun’s gravitational energy could keep it shining at its present brightness for only 107 years. Sir Arthur Eddington correctly suggested a nuclear source for the sun, but rejected Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar’s theory of degenerate matter to explain white dwarfs. In 1983 Chandrasekhar received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his insight.

My own expertise is in physics and astrophysics with experience in radiative transfer, not climatology, but looking at the discipline from outside I see some serious problems. I presume most climate scientists are aware of these inconsistencies, but they remain in the Reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), including the 5th one released on 2013 Sep 27. Politicians and government officials guiding public policy consult these reports and treat them as reliable.

2. THEORY, MODELS AND OBSERVATIONS

A necessary test of any theory or model is how well it predicts new experiments or observations not used in its development. It is not sufficient just to represent the data used to produce the theory or model, particularly in the case of climate models where many physical processes too complicated to code explicitly are represented by adjustable parameters. As John von Neumann once stated “With four parameters I can fit an elephant, and with five I can make him wiggle his trunk.” Four parameters will not produce all the details of an elephant, but the principle is clear. The models must have independent checks.

clip_image002

Fig. 1. Global Average Temperature Anomaly (°C) upper, and CO2 concentration (ppm) lower graphs from http://www.climate.gov/maps-data by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The extension of the CO2 data to earlier years is from the ice core data of the Antarctic Law Dome ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/paleo/icecore/antarctica/law/law_co2.txt.

The upper plot in Fig. 1 shows how global temperatures have varied since 1880 with a decrease to 1910, a rise until 1945, a plateau to 1977, a rise of about 0.6 ºC until 1998 and then essentially constant for the next 16 years. Meanwhile, the concentration of CO2 in our atmosphere has steadily increased. Fig. 2 from the 5th Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2013) shows that the observed temperatures follow the lower envelope of the predictions of the climate models.

clip_image004

Fig. 2. Model Predictions and Temperature Observations from IPCC Report 2013. RCP 4.5 (Representative Concentration Pathway 4.5) labels a set of models for a modest rise in anthropogenic greenhouse gases corresponding to an increase of 4.5 Wm2 (1.3%) in total solar irradiance.

Already in 2009 climatologists worried about the change in slope of the temperature curve. At that time Knight et al. (2009) asked the rhetorical question “Do global temperature trends over the last decade falsify climate predictions?” Their response was “Near-zero and even negative trends are common for intervals of a decade or less in the simulations, due to the model’s internal climate variability. The simulations rule out (at the 95% level) zero trends for intervals of 15 yr or more, suggesting that an observed absence of warming of this duration is needed to create a discrepancy with the expected present-day warming rate.”

Now some climate scientists are saying that 16 years is too short a time to assess a change in climate, but then the rise from 1978 to 1998, which was attributed to anthropogenic CO2, also could be spurious. Other researchers are actively looking into phenomena omitted from the models to explain the discrepancy. These include

1) a strong natural South Pacific El Nino warming event in 1998 so the plateau did not begin until 2001,

2) an overestimate of the greenhouse effect in some models,

3) inadequate inclusion of clouds and other aerosols in the models, and

4) a deep ocean reservoir for the missing heat.

Extra warming due to the 1978 El Nino seems plausible, but there have been others that could have caused some of the earlier warming and there are also cooling La Nina events. All proposed causes of the plateau must have their effects on the warming also incorporated into the models to make predictions that then can be tested during the following decade or two of temperature evolution.

3. THE FEEDBACK PARAMETER

There is no controversy about the basic physics that adding CO2 to our atmosphere absorbs solar energy resulting in a little extra warming on top of the dominant effect of water vapor. The CO2 spectral absorption is saturated so is proportional to the logarithm of the concentration. The estimated effect accounts for only about half the temperature rise of 0.8 ºC since the Industrial Revolution. Without justification the model makers ignored possible natural causes and assumed the rise was caused primarily by anthropogenic CO2 with reflections by clouds and other aerosols approximately cancelling absorption by the other gases noted above. Consequently they postulated a positive feedback due to hotter air holding more water vapor, which increased the absorption of radiation and the backwarming. The computer simulations represented this process and many other effects by adjustable parameters chosen to match the observations. As stated on p. 9-9 of IPCC2013, “The complexity of each process representation is constrained by observations, computational resources, and current knowledge.” Models that did not show a temperature rise would have been omitted from any ensemble so the observed rise effectively determined the feedback parameter.

Now that the temperature has stopped increasing we see that this parameter is not valid. It even could be negative. CO2 absorption without the presumed feedback will still happen but its effect will not be alarming. The modest warming possibly could be a net benefit with increased crop production and fewer deaths due to cold weather.

4. THE SUN

The total solar irradiance, the flux integrated over all wavelengths, is a basic input to all climate models. Fortunately our sun is a stable star with minimal change in this output. Since the beginning of satellite measures of the whole spectrum in 1978 the variation has been about 0.1% over the 11-year activity cycle with occasional excursions up to 0.3%. The associated change in tropospheric temperature is about 0.1 ºC.

Larger variations could explain historical warm and cold intervals such as the Medieval Warm Period (approx. 950 – 1250) and the Little Ice Age (approx. 1430 – 1850) but remain as speculations. The sun is a ball of gas in hydrostatic equilibrium. Any reduction in the nuclear energy source initially would be compensated by a gravitational contraction on a time scale of a few minutes. Complicating this basic picture are the variable magnetic field and the mass motions that generate it. Li et al. (2003) included these effects in a simple model and found luminosity variations of 0.1%, consistent with the measurements.

However, the sun can influence the earth in many other ways that the IPCC Report does not consider, in part because the mechanisms are not well understood. The ultraviolet irradiance changes much more with solar activity, ~ 10% at 200 nm in the band that forms ozone in the stratosphere and between 5% and 2% in the ozone absorption bands between 240 and 320 nm according to DeLand & Cebula (2012). Their graphs also show that these fluxes during the most recent solar minimum were lower than the previous two reducing the formation of ozone in the stratosphere and its absorption of the near UV spectrum. How this absorption can couple into the lower atmosphere is under current investigation, e. g. Haigh et al. (2010).

clip_image006

Fig. 3 – Monthly averages of the 10.7 cm solar radio flux measured by the National Research Council of Canada and adjusted to the mean earth-sun distance. A solar flux unit = 104 Jansky = 10-22 Wm-2 Hz-1. The maximum just past is unusually weak and the preceding minimum exceptionally broad. Graph courtesy of Dr. Ken Tapping of NRC.

Decreasing solar activity also lowers the strength of the heliosphere magnetic shield permitting more galactic cosmic rays to reach the earth. Experiments by Kirkby et al. (2011) and Svensmark et al. (2013) have shown that these cosmic rays can seed the formation of clouds, which then reflect more sunlight and reduce the temperature, though the magnitude of the effect remains uncertain. Morton (2014) has described how the abundances cosmogenic isotopes 10Be and 14C in ice cores and tree rings indicate past solar activity and its anticorrelation with temperature.

Of particular interest is the recent reduction in solar activity. Fig. 3 shows the 10.7 cm solar radio flux measured by the National Research Council of Canada since 1947 (Tapping 2013) and Fig. 4 the corresponding sunspot count. Careful calibration of the radio flux permits reliable comparisons

clip_image008

Fig. 4. Monthly sunspot numbers for the past 60 years by the Royal Observatory of Belgium at http://sidc.oma.be/sunspot-index-graphics/sidc_graphics.php.

over six solar cycles even when there are no sunspots. The last minimum was unusually broad and the present maximum exceptionally weak. The sun has entered a phase of low activity. Fig. 5 shows that previous times of very low activity were the Dalton Minimum from about 1800 to 1820 and the Maunder Minimum from about 1645 to 1715 when very few spots were seen. Since

these minima occurred during the Little Ice Age when glaciers were advancing in both Northern and Southern Hemispheres, it is possible that we are entering another cooling period. Without a

physical understanding of the cause of such cool periods, we cannot be more specific. Temperatures as cold as the Little Ice Age may not happen, but there must be some cooling to compensate the heating that is present from the increasing CO2 absorption.

Regrettably the IPCC reports scarcely mention these solar effects and the uncertainties they add to any prediction.

5. THE AVERAGE GLOBAL TEMPERATURE

Long-term temperature measurements at a given location provide an obvious test of climate change. Such data exist for many places for more than a hundred years and for a few places for much longer. With these data climatologists calculate the temperature anomaly – the deviation from a many-year average such as 1961 to 1990, each day of the year at the times a measurement

is recorded. Then they average over days, nights, seasons, continents and oceans to obtain the mean global temperature anomaly for each month or year as in Fig. 1. Unfortunately many parts of the world are poorly sampled and the oceans, which cover 71% of the earth’s surface, even less so. Thus many measurements must be extrapolated to include larger areas with different

climates. Corrections are needed when a site’s measurements are interrupted or terminated or a new station is established as well as for urban heat if the meteorological station is in a city and altitude if the station is significantly higher than sea level.

clip_image010

Fig. 5. This plot from the U. S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency shows sunspot numbers since their first observation with telescopes in 1610. Systematic counting began soon after the discovery of the 11-year cycle in 1843. Later searching of old records provided the earlier numbers.

The IPCC Reports refer to four sources of data for the temperature anomaly from the Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research and the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forcasting in the United Kingdom and the Goddard Institute for Space Science and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the United States. For a given month they can differ by several tenths of a degree, but all show the same long-term trends of Fig. 1, a rise from 1978 to 1998 and a plateau from 1998 to the present.

These patterns continue to be a challenge for researchers to understand. Some climatologists like to put a straight line through all the data from 1978 to the present and conclude that the world is continuing to warm, just a little more slowly, but surely if these curves have any connection to reality, changes in slope mean something. Are they evidence of the chaotic nature of climate with abrupt shifts from one state to another?

Essex, McKitrick and Andresen (2007) and Essex and McKitrick (2007) in their popular book have criticized the use of these mean temperature data for the earth. First temperature is an intensive thermodynamic variable relevant to a particular location in equilibrium with the measuring device. Any average with other locations or times of day or seasons has no physical meaning. Other types of averages might be more appropriate such as the second, fourth or inverse power of the absolute temperature, each of which would give a different trend with time. Furthermore it is temperature differences between two places that drive the dynamics. Climatologists have not explained what this single number for global temperature actually means. Essex and McKitrick note that it “is not a temperature. Nor is it even a proper statistic or index. It is a sequence of different statistics grafted together with ad hoc models.”

This questionable use of a global temperature along with the problems of modeling a chaotic system discussed below raise basic concerns about the validity of the test with observations in Section 2. Since climatologists and the IPCC insist on using this temperature number and the models in their predictions of global warming, it still is appropriate to hold them to comparisons with the observations they consider relevant.

6. CHAOS

Essex and McKitrick (2007) have provided a helpful introduction to this problem. Thanks to the pioneering investigations into the equations for convection and the associated turbulence by meteorologist Edward Lorenz, scientists have come to realize that many dynamical systems are fundamentally chaotic. The situation often is described as the butterfly effect because a small change in initial conditions such as the flap of a butterfly wing can have large effects in later results.

Convection and turbulence in the air are central phenomenon in determining weather and so must have their effect on climate too. The IPCC on p. 1-25 of the 2013 Report recognizes this with the statement “There are fundamental limits to just how precisely annual temperatures can be projected, because of the chaotic nature of the climate system.” but then makes predictions with confidence. Meteorologists modeling weather find that their predictions become unstable after a week or two, and they have the advantage of refining their models by comparing predictions with observations.

Why do the climate models in the IPCC reports not show these instabilities? Have they been selectively tuned to avoid them or are the chaotic physical processes not properly included? Why should we think that long-term climate predictions are possible when they are not for weather?

7. THE APPEAL TO CONSENSUS AND THE SILENCING OF SKEPTICISM

Frequently we hear that we must accept that the earth is warming at an alarming rate due to anthropogenic CO2 because 90+% climatologists believe it. However, science is not a consensus discipline. It depends on skeptics questioning every hypothesis, every theory and every model until all rational challenges are satisfied. Any endeavor that must prove itself by appealing to consensus or demeaning skeptics is not science. Why do some proponents of climate alarm dismiss critics by implying they are like Holocaust deniers? Presumably most climatologists disapprove of these unscientific tactics, but too few speak out against them.

8. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS

At least six serious problems confront the climate predictions presented in the last IPCC Report. The models do not predict the observed temperature plateau since 1998, the models adopted a feedback parameter based on the unjustified assumption that the warming prior to 1998 was primarily caused by anthopogenic CO2, the IPCC ignored possible affects of reduced solar activity during the past decade, the temperature anomaly has no physical significance, the models attempt to predict the future of a chaotic system, and there is an appeal to consensus to establish climate science.

Temperatures could start to rise again as we continue to add CO2 to the atmosphere or they could fall as suggested by the present weak solar activity. Many climatologists are trying to address the issues described here to give us a better understanding of the physical processes involved and the reliability of the predictions. One outstanding issue is the location of all the anthropogenic CO2. According to Table 6.1 in the 2013 Report, half goes into the atmosphere and a quarter into the oceans with the remaining quarter assigned to some undefined sequestering as biomass on the land.

Meanwhile what policies should a responsible citizen be advocating? We risk serious consequences from either a major change in climate or an economic recession from efforts to reduce the CO2 output. My personal view is to use this temperature plateau as a time to reassess all the relevant issues. Are there other environmental effects that are equally or more important than global warming? Are some policies like subsidizing biofuels counterproductive? Are large farms of windmills, solar cells or collecting mirrors effective investments when we are unable to store energy? How reliable is the claim that extreme weather events are more frequent because of the global warming? Is it time to admit that we do not understand climate well enough to know how to direct it?

References

 

DeLand, M. T., & Cebula, R. P. (2012) Solar UV variations during the decline of Cycle 23. J. Atmosph. Solar-Terrestr. Phys., 77, 225.

Essex, C., & McKitrick, R. (2007) Taken by storm: the troubled science, policy and politics of global warming, Key Porter Books. Rev. ed. Toronto, ON, Canada.

Essex, C., McKitrick, R., & Andresen, B. (2007) Does a Global temperature Exist? J. Non-Equilib. Thermodyn. 32, 1.

Haigh. J. D., et al. (2010). An influence of solar spectral variations on radiative forcing of climate. Nature 467, 696.

IPCC (2013), Climate Change 2013: The Physicsal Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, http://www.ipcc.ch

Li, L. H., Basu, S., Sofia, S., Robinson, F.J., Demarque, P., & Guenther, D.B. (2003). Global

parameter and helioseismic tests of solar variability models. Astrophys. J., 591, 1284.

Kirkby, J. et al. (2011). Role of sulphuric acid, ammonia and galactic cosmic rays in atmospheric

aerosol nucleation. Nature, 476, 429.

Knight, J., et al. (2009). Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 90 (8), Special Suppl. pp. S22, S23.

Morton, D. C. (2014). An Astronomer’s view of Climate Change. J. Roy. Astron. Soc. Canada, 108, 27. http://arXiv.org/abs/1401.8235.

Svensmark, H., Enghoff, M.B., & Pedersen, J.O.P. (2013). Response of cloud condensation nuclei (> 50 nm) to changes in ion-nucleation. Phys. Lett. A, 377, 2343.

Tapping, K.F. (2013). The 10.7 cm radio flux (F10.7). Space Weather, 11, 394.

The climate data they don't want you to find — free, to your inbox.
Join readers who get 5–8 new articles daily — no algorithms, no shadow bans.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
316 Comments
Rhys Jaggar
February 17, 2014 7:10 am

A very good article.
Perhaps it is time to propose a global cooperative for the establishment, maintenance and provision of open access to high quality, consistent, long-term temperature data, a global, climatological equivalent of CERN??
Climate is truly global, not respecting national or even regional boundaries and it is clear that teleconnections occur between events half-way around the globe. The whole world will benefit from greater knowledge of climate and wars should reduce as a result.
It is a fairly obvious requirement for the next two centuries at least and all countries would contribute because data from all countries would be necessary to produce databases of sufficient quality to be worthy of the effort at all.
In the spirit of investment bankers not interfering in retail banking, perhaps it could also be stipulated that those who produce the primary data, develop instrumentation, automated data collection etc etc, should not be the ones analysing the data?? This would decouple any links between political correctness and data production, which is of course the most fundamental underpinning of any climate analysis, policy development and economic outcomes.

Mr Green Genes
February 17, 2014 7:11 am

David Wells says:
February 17, 2014 at 6:32 am

Convicted criminal and proven liarChris Huhne ex DECC Secretary of State said on the BBC Today program “we must stop climate change”.”
Fixed it for you.

February 17, 2014 7:12 am

To Prof. Morton:
IPCC climate models are and must be outright wrong, because 5 astronomical
climate drivers are omitted in model inputs. Global warming hit the very top
in the past decade, the temp plateau will continue and will fall
thereafter into the renewed future Little Ice Age. Because omitted climate drivers
are astronomical, I suggest to check:
http://www.knowledgeminer.eu/eoo_paper.html, all explained in detail.
JS.

Jeff Alberts
February 17, 2014 7:20 am

Essex, McKitrick and Andresen (2007) and Essex and McKitrick (2007) in their popular book have criticized the use of these mean temperature data for the earth. First temperature is an intensive thermodynamic variable relevant to a particular location in equilibrium with the measuring device. Any average with other locations or times of day or seasons has no physical meaning. Other types of averages might be more appropriate such as the second, fourth or inverse power of the absolute temperature, each of which would give a different trend with time. Furthermore it is temperature differences between two places that drive the dynamics. Climatologists have not explained what this single number for global temperature actually means. Essex and McKitrick note that it “is not a temperature. Nor is it even a proper statistic or index. It is a sequence of different statistics grafted together with ad hoc models.”

I’ve been pointing this out for some time, yet we keep getting graphs with one number. If physicists know this, why is it still presented this way? Just because “it’s all we have” doesn’t make it meaningful.

Jim Cripwell
February 17, 2014 7:21 am

Donald, I have had a thought as to what can actually be done with your wonderful essay. You are living in Canada, as I am, and as is Dr. Andrew Weaver. Dr. Weaver was a science professor at, IIRC, Simon Fraser University, and is an out and out warmist. Now Andrew has recently been elected to the BC legislature. Under our Canadian system, if a constituent writes, officially, to his/her elected member, that member is obliged to respond. I don’t this that this is a legal requirement, but it most certainly is a moral one, and, if not followed, should be the subject of public disclosure.
Could you find a constituent of Dr. Weaver’s, and persuade that person to write officially to him, asking him for a detailed response to your statements? If you could, the results could be very interesting.

Ken Hall
February 17, 2014 7:22 am

Models of a hypothesis are not a valid test of the hypothesis. Only the comparison of the prediction of the hypthesis against empirical observation of reality is a suitable basis for testing the CAGW hypothesis. Anything else is snake oil sales technique.
The only scientifically valid conclusion of totality of the available evidence is that the CAGW hypothesis must be rejected. It is falsified.

pokerguy
February 17, 2014 7:23 am

“Unfortunately many parts of the world are poorly sampled and the oceans, which cover 71% of the earth’s surface, even less so.
This syntax is either meaningless or self-contradictory. The “so” in “less so” has no useful referent. Less poorly sampled is obviously not your intent. But “less well sampled” would make sense.”
They obviously mean “land” in the first clause…. which is poorly sampled…. as opposed to the ocean which represents much more of the earth’s surface and is hardly sampled at all.

David Ball
February 17, 2014 7:24 am
NikFromNYC
February 17, 2014 7:24 am

Both the Marcott 2013 proxy data re-dating fraudulent hockey stick, cheered on by Mike Mann himself, and Steve Goddard’s recent plots of the massive peer review lacking historical revisionism of the global and especially US temperature averages point to corruption of science akin to the sway of the single bullet theory of heart disease whipped up by Ancel Keys that led to the carbohydrate loaded Food Pyramid. Any essay like this that avoids calling out this strong and morally upstanding version of climate skepticism merely enables talk show alarmists to discredit skeptics quite successfully by pointing out the idea that skepticism suggests a vast secret society conspiracy at work rather than just money fueled corruption with Gaian religious heroism thrown in. Merely criticizing use of universally accepted temperature averages themselves, however valid, also invites quite successful dismissal of skeptics as crackpots. With Bill Nye still holding up Mann’s original bad math hockey stick graphic on TV, where are the skeptics holding up the Marcott 2013 input data plots to finally show the public outside of blogs that here lies fraud? They finally showed their hand with this latest hockey stick, and not a single news story has appeared outside of blogs. My God, people, get the damn word out. The enemy of Mankind just handed you heroes an atomic bomb. Use it!
Marcott 2013 input data plotted by Willis and Mann’s Snoopy dance over it on Facebook is here:
postimg.org/jb6qe15rl/Marcott_2013_Eye_Candy.jpg

Alan the Brit
February 17, 2014 7:33 am

Wells.
If you’re ever down in Cream Tea country, I’ll buy you a beer! 😉

February 17, 2014 7:34 am

Insufficient coverage of solar factors, individual cold years in the past correlate very well to a lack of Aurora. Changes in Joule heating of the upper atmosphere in the polar regions are probably far more influential on the weather and climate of the mid latitudes than TSI variations.

Steve Keohane
February 17, 2014 7:35 am

Thank you, a good summary.

2kevin
February 17, 2014 7:40 am

So if a global temperature average is meaningless, what should be used as a metric? And why then, aside from the IPCC using this supposedly irrelevant information (when it suits them,) are skeptics continually going on about the ‘pause’? Doesn’t it become a moot point?
And in possiblecontradiction to the above…
One thing I’ve never understood since I am not knowledgeable on the subject: is it possible due to the addition of higher concentrations of GHG’s to have no apparent effect on temperature but to actually be retaining more heat in the atmosphere? (Like the idea that a pound of lead and two pounds of lead can be the same temperature but have different quantities of heat.) If so, what does it mean?

NotAGolfer
February 17, 2014 7:41 am

This article makes great points, but it needs to pile on with another point: the various temperature data sets have been adjusted and homogenized in ways that add a significant warming trend to the raw data. Set after set, which refuses to conform, is later adjusted. There will be more adjustments to overcome this current “pause,” so that the flow of climate-alarm funding will continue.

DMA
February 17, 2014 7:42 am

These points are clearly stated and should be reviewed by any diligent policy maker before considering major adjustments to our economies in the name of controlling the chaos. Another point that needs to be addressed by other good scientists is the finding of Murry Salby that the total atmospheric CO2 content is nearly non correlated to anthropogenic emissions. I have read one article confirming his findings but none that really disagree using anything like cogent arguments.

milodonharlani
February 17, 2014 7:45 am

“At least six serious problems confront the climate predictions presented in the last IPCC Report. The models do not predict the observed temperature plateau since 1998, the models adopted a feedback parameter based on the unjustified assumption that the warming prior to 1998 was primarily caused by anthopogenic CO2, the IPCC ignored possible affects of reduced solar activity during the past decade, the temperature anomaly has no physical significance, the models attempt to predict the future of a chaotic system, and there is an appeal to consensus to establish climate science.”
Well summarized. “At least” is correct, since there are more.
I’ve always preferred “plateau” to “pause” or “hiatus” since coming decades could be warmer, cooler or stay the same. The latter two terms imply a resumption of warming.
IMO “affects” should be “effects”.
In the absence of predominantly positive feedbacks (such as follow-on rise in H2O vapor) not in evidence, the effect of increasing CO2 is sure to be negligible. Even should its concentration reach 560 ppm (doubling from presumed 280 in AD 1850) in dry air by the end of this century, it will still constitute only a small fraction of all the GHGs in our atmosphere (less than 2%, up from 1%). And as its assumed heating effect is logarithmic, any resultant rise in temperature will be insignificant at best, not catastrophic.

richardscourtney
February 17, 2014 7:47 am

Alan the Brit:
At February 17, 2014 at 7:33 am you say

Wells.
If you’re ever down in Cream Tea country, I’ll buy you a beer! 😉

I add that if Mr Green Genes ever continues on to here where we put the jam and cream on the right way up then I will buy him a cider (see his post here).
Richard

Stephen Richards
February 17, 2014 7:48 am

I’ve been pointing this out for some time, yet we keep getting graphs with one number. If physicists know this, why is it still presented this way? Just because “it’s all we have” doesn’t make it meaningful.
Jeff, it’s because it conveys the right message. The sheoples can’t take in anything that does not include tits and bingo.

more soylent green!
February 17, 2014 7:49 am

Here are some of the natural systems which affect the climate:
–The atmosphere
–The hydrosphere
–The cryosphere
–The lithosphere
–The biosphere
–The heliosphere
Which of these do the global warming (“General Circulation Models) attempt to model, and which do they ignore?

Kelvin Vaughan
February 17, 2014 7:53 am

Measured the sky and air temperatures today from the ground. They were half a degree different. Yesterday they were 40 degrees different. All that increased back warming from the sky has made no difference to the air temperature.

Ron Richey
February 17, 2014 7:54 am

Good Post Mr. Morton.
It was written in a way that science dummies like me can actually understand …..I appreciate that, and I am saving it.
One thing that dummies like me do know is: When a scientist (or politician) says “the debate is over” you can be sure of two things:
1. The debate is not over.
2. The scientist (or politician) that said it is losing the debate.
Ron Richey

Pete
February 17, 2014 7:57 am

I would like to see information about what would be the optimum CO2 concentration for humanity. Is there an optimum CO2 level to breathe? Can animal life be better, even longer, with higher (or lower) CO2? I expect one could easily find correlation between longevity and CO2, though we ought to be skeptical. We know food grows well in the tropics and not so well in polar regions. We know lower food production costs and plentiful food help us live longer.
I expect humanity has become more “brainy” because of living longer rather than breathing CO2, but it certainly appears that CO2 is a factor in longevity. Of course “more brainy” increases longevity, but leaving aside the idiocy of a runaway planet, can someone suggest what might be the optimum CO2 level for us to live in?

milodonharlani
February 17, 2014 7:57 am

Dr Norman Page says:
February 17, 2014 at 6:29 am
Morton is entirely right in his views . Climate forecasts based on the IPCC models are clearly useless.
———————–
How about “worse than worthless” v. “useless” as climate forecasts?

Jeff Alberts
February 17, 2014 7:59 am

Stephen Richards says:
February 17, 2014 at 7:48 am
Jeff, it’s because it conveys the right message. The sheoples can’t take in anything that does not include tits and bingo.

Wait, there’s bingo??

RichardLH
February 17, 2014 8:00 am

“The upper plot in Fig. 1 shows how global temperatures have varied since 1880 with a decrease to 1910, a rise until 1945, a plateau to 1977, a rise of about 0.6 ºC until 1998 and then essentially constant for the next 16 years. Meanwhile, the concentration of CO2 in our atmosphere has steadily increased.”
In think the most interesting view on all of this is if you extend the temperature record (by including some proxies) back just a little further in time to 1800.
http://i29.photobucket.com/albums/c274/richardlinsleyhood/Fig9MannLoehleHadCrutGISSRSSandUAHGlobalAnnualAnomalies-Aligned1979-2013_zps0100f1cd.png
Now the CO2 line most definitely does NOT explain those extra, only 50, years. Of non-declining temps as CO2 would require.
The proxies MUST be valid for that small extra time span, otherwise how can they be relevant in the year since then to match themselves to the thermometer record!
And the CO2 picture starts to come apart already at that point.