Climate Insensitivity: What the IPCC Knew But Didn’t Tell Us
By Patrick J. Michaels and Paul C. “Chip” Knappenberger
In a remarkable example of scientific malfeasance, it has become apparent that the IPCC knew a lot more than it revealed in its 2013 climate compendium about how low the earth’s climate sensitivity is likely to be.
The importance of this revelation cannot be overstated. If the UN had played it straight, the “urgency” of global warming would have evaporated, but, recognizing that this might cause problems, they preferred to mislead the world’s policymakers.
Strong words? Judge for yourself.
The report “Oversensitive—how the IPCC hid the good news on global warming,” was released today by the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF)—a U.K. think-tank which is “concerned about the costs and other implications of many of the policies currently being advocated” regarding climate change (disclosure: our Dick Lindzen is a member of the GWPF Academic Advisory Council).
The new GWPF report concluded:
We believe that, due largely to the constraints the climate model-orientated IPCC process imposed, the Fifth Assessment Report failed to provide an adequate assessment of climate sensitivity – either ECS [equilibrium climate sensitivity] or TCR [transient climate response] – arguably the most important parameters in the climate discussion. In particular, it did not draw out the divergence that has emerged between ECS and TCR estimates based on the best observational evidence and those embodied in GCMs. Policymakers have thus been inadequately informed about the state of the science.
The study was authored by Nicholas Lewis and Marcel Crok. Crok is a freelance science writer from The Netherlands and Lewis, an independent climate scientist, was an author on two recent important papers regarding the determination of the earth’s equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS)—that is, how much the earth’s average surface temperature will rise as a result of a doubling of the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide.
The earth’s climate sensitivity is the most important climate factor in determining how much global warming will result from our greenhouse gas emissions (primarily from burning of fossil fuels to produce, reliable, cheap energy). But, the problem is, is that we don’t know what the value of the climate sensitivity is—this makes projections of future climate change–how should we say this?–a bit speculative.
Unsurprisingly, there has been a lot of recent scientific research aimed at gaining a better understanding of what the climate sensitivity may be. We have detailed much of this research in our ongoing series of articles highlighting new findings on the topic. Collectively, the new research indicates an ECS value a bit below 2°C. The latest in our series is here.
But in its Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) finalized this past January, the IPCC gave short shrift to the major implication of this collection of new research results—that the climate sensitivity is much lower than what the IPCC assessed it to be in its collection of previous assessment reports (issued every 6-7 years) and that the rate of climate change is going to be much less.
For example, formerly, in its Fourth Assessment Report (AR4), released in 2007, the IPCC had this to say regarding the equilibrium climate sensitivity:
It [the equilibrium climate sensitivity] is likely to be in the range 2°C to 4.5°C with a best estimate of about 3°C, and is very unlikely to be less than 1.5°C. Values substantial higher than 4.5°C cannot be excluded, but agreement of models with observations is not as good for those values. [emphasis in original]
In its new AR5, the IPCC wrote this:
Equilibrium climate sensitivity is likely in the range 1.5°C to 4.5°C (high confidence), extremely unlikely less than 1°C (high confidence), and very unlikely greater than 6°C (medium confidence)16. The lower temperature limit of the assessed likely range is thus less than the 2°C in the AR4, but the upper limit is the same. This assessment reflects improved understanding, the extended temperature record in the atmosphere and ocean, and new estimates of radiative forcing. [emphasis in original]
And IPCC AR5 footnote 16 states:
No best estimate for equilibrium climate sensitivity can now be given because of a lack of agreement on values across assessed lines of evidence and studies.
So, facing mounting scientific for a substantially lower climate sensitivity, the best the IPCC could bring itself to do was to reduce the low end of its “likely” range by one-half degree, refuse to put a value on its best guess, and still cling to its high end number. Big deal.
The reason that the IPCC could only make these meager changes was that the collection of climate models that the IPCC employs to make the bulk of its projections of future climate change (and future climate change impacts) has an average ECS value of 3.2°C. The IPCC couldn’t very well conclude from the scientific evidence that the real value was somewhere south of 2°C—if it were to do so, it would invalidate the climate models and, for that matter the meat of its entire report (that is, its climate change projections).
We described the situation the IPCC faced last summer (prior to releasing the final copy of the AR5) this way:
The IPCC has three options:
- Round-file the entire AR5 as it now stands and start again.
- Release the current AR5 with a statement that indicates that all the climate change and impacts described within are likely overestimated by around 50 percent, or
- Do nothing and mislead policymakers and the rest of the world.
We’re betting on door number 3.
As predicted, the IPCC chose option number 3.
The new GWPF report confirms, in detail, the IPCC’s choice and how it came to make it—by confusing the reader with a collection of evidence that was outdated, already disproven, based upon flimsy assumptions, not directly applicable, or flat-out wrong.
Putting it nicely, Lewis and Crok describe the situation thus:
The AR5 authors might not have wanted to declare that some studies are better than others or to adjudicate between observational and model-based lines of evidence, but we believe that this is exactly what an assessment is all about: using expert knowledge to weigh different sources of evidence. In this section we present reasoned arguments for a different assessment to that in AR5.
Lewis and Crok go, in detail, through each climate sensitivity paper considered (and relied upon) by the IPCC and identify its shortcomings. At the end, they are left with a collection of five papers that, while still containing uncertainties, are built upon the most robust set of assumptions and measurements.
From those papers the Lewis and Crok conclude the following:
A new ‘best observational’ estimate of ECS can now be calculated by taking a simple average of the different observationally-based estimates….This gives a best estimate for ECS of 1.75°C and a likely range of about 1.3–2.4°C. However, recognizing that error and uncertainty may be greater than allowed for in the underlying studies, and will predominantly affect the upper of the range, we conservatively assess the likely range as 1.25–3.0°C.
Now compare these figures with those in AR4 and AR5….Our new ‘best observational’ ECS estimate of 1.75°C is more than 40% lower than both the best estimate in AR4 of 3°C and the 3.2°C average of GCMs used in AR5. At least as importantly, the top of the likely range for ECS of 3.0°C is a third lower than that given in AR5 (4.5°C) – even after making it much more conservative than is implied by averaging the ranges for each of the observational estimates.
And as to what this means about the IPCC global warming projections, Lewis and Crok write:
The [climate models] overestimate future warming by 1.7–2 times relative to an estimate based on the best observational evidence.
This is a powerful and important conclusion.
We recommend that you read the full report. Not only is it a comprehendible and comprehensive description of the current science as it relates to the climate sensitivity, but it is an illumination of how the IPCC process does, or rather doesn’t, work.
The Obama Administration and its EPA will ignore this reality at their peril.
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Global Science Report is a feature from the Center for the Study of Science, where we highlight one or two important new items in the scientific literature or the popular media. For broader and more technical perspectives, consult our monthly “Current Wisdom.”
Lewis and Crok are referring to a sensitivity value in response to a doubling of CO2, e.g. 3 deg C or 3K or 5.4 deg F. They have concluded that true sensitivity is around 1.75 deg C or 1.75K or 3.15 deg F. They are perfectly justified, therefore, in using a percentage difference.
The Lewis & Crok sensitivity estimate is about 40% lower than the ‘IPCC’ sensitivity estimate.
bbc website has a hys on this story but if u post the link to here it goes into ‘moderation’.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-26468564
the bbc article sells the story as a pro co2er one
“Here was one of the world’s foremost bastions of contrariness when it comes to man-made climate change, admitting that temperatures were actually rising in response to human emissions of greenhouse gases.
And according to the study, the 2C threshold of dangerous warming would be crossed later on this century.
Huh? What about all that stuff we’ve heard in the past from those who refused to accept the science? That the whole thing was a warmist conspiracy, driven by out-of-work ex-communists?”
Temperature versus CO2 over the last 750 million years. This is based on 2,560 individual estimates of both that are from the exact same timeline.
Two versions; the first showing the observations/estimates versus the 3.0C and 1.0C per doubling logarithmic rising lines that many of you have seen.
http://s3.postimg.org/gu69jeh9f/Temp_vs_CO2_Last_750_Mys.png
And then on the “distribution” basis that climate science likes to use. While climate science seems to be able to squeeze the numbers into a Chi-Square distribution from 1.0C to 6.0C centre-weighted at 3.0C per doubling, the best estimates from the climate history of Earth are in the 1.0C per doubling range with a +/- 40.0C distribution.
http://s30.postimg.org/5mel2gyk1/Equil_CO2_Sensitivity_Last_750_Mys.png
I would conclude that it is really a “Null or 0.0C Sensitivity” result.
(I have also built in estimates of what Earth’s Albedo would have been over these timeframes based on the continental distributions and the extent of glacial ice, desert etc. from the reconstructions – and Albedo seems to vary from 0.250 to 0.500 on Earth mostly as a result of the extent of glacial ice which has by far the biggest impact on Albedo of all the various factors – and one would get a tighter distribution around 1.0C per doubling if this were included).
jauntycyclist says:
March 7, 2014 at 3:25 am
————————————
“those who refused to accept the science”
Just what “science” would that be? Would that be the “basic physics” of the “settled science”?
You know, the two shell radiative models where the speed of tropospheric convective circulation was held static for increasing concentrations of radiative gases? The junk science?
The same “basic physics” that claims the oceans would freeze without downwelling LWIR? That tripe?
Sceptics do not claim global warming is a communist conspiracy. Rather it is inane groupthink that attracted a vast crowd of fellow travellers who all foolishly thought it could further each of their agendas.
The co-founder of greenpeace makes the same claim here –
http://www.foxnews.com/on-air/hannity/2014/02/28/exclusive-former-greenpeace-founders-reality-check-liberals
The good news is that all the worlds most useless people continued to push global warming even in the age of the Internet. The name of every AGW propagandist is now a matter of permanent record as is the name of every one of the Professional Left who chose to vilify sceptics to silence them. We are living on a planet where radiative gases do not cause atmospheric warming. How is this going to end for the Professional Left? I’m sure, given time, even you can work this one out 😉
Been going on at IPCC since before Steve Milloy wrote his first junk science primer. Can a political organization commit scientific malfeasance or do you have to be a scientist being associated with it? Seems esoteric, but science by committee for the purpose of governance has malfeasance baked into the cake along with irresponsibility for the “science”. And the National Academy and the Royal Society are complicit.
Excerpt:
Unsurprisingly, there has been a lot of recent scientific research aimed at gaining a better understanding of what the climate sensitivity may be. We have detailed much of this research in our ongoing series of articles highlighting new findings on the topic. Collectively, the new research indicates an ECS value a bit below 2°C.
My comment:
“A bit below 2°C” is still much too high.
If ECS exists at all, it is below 1°C and probably below 0.2°C.
And it may not exist at all in the practical sense, since atmospheric CO2 LAGS temperature at all measured time scales, and the future cannot cause the past.
Alternatively, as Richard Courtney said some years ago, “Show me your time machine.”
Regards, Allan
@ur momisugly Konrad — YOU, GO, HERO WARRIOR FOR TRUTH!
Impressively powerful, efficient, fighting above — with deadly (to AGW) accuracy.
*********************************************************************
@ur momisugly Gail — If I have not offended you beyond the point of never speaking to me again… Did you see my comments at 1:21pm and 8:10pm yesterday? Mine a 1:21 was in moderation (I have no idea why — maybe spelling l-i-e-s with a “1” doesn’t work anymore) for awhile and perhaps you missed it and I’d hate to have you think I just blew you off. Please forgive my inadequate answer to your fine Q. Thanks (in advance, (smile)) for the ping-back. J.
Just curious — Moderator — do you have any idea why my 10:34am comment is
(like my 1:21pm yesterday comment) i
n moderation? Is it the version of the word: “lll-ii1i-ee-s”? Is it because I misspelled at (“Mine a 1:21”), lol?
Thanks. J.
[Reply: Have no idea. WordPress does what it wants. But I’ve posted it now. ~mod.]
Thanks for rescuing me from the Moderation Monster, Mod. My Hero.
#(:))
@Norman Woods
Thanks for the links. Perfect.
Perhaps you can answer a question for me.
Noted in another comment above is the phrase, ‘Adding radiative gases to the atmosphere reducing the atmospheres radiative cooling ability…’ which is oft-repeated.
If I want to increase the radiative cooling of a heat exchanger, I add to its ability to radiate by, say, painting it black instead of green. The concept that “adding CO2 to the atmosphere decreases its ability to radiate heat into space” is fundamentally flawed, because at the effective radiating altitude, there will be more little radiators working day and night to send IR into space.
The claimed effect is really one of insulating the lower altitudes with ‘back-radiation’ but those additional molecules are sending it down to an increased number of ‘forward radiating’ molecules.
In any insulating medium, say a dense foam, adding particles that are conductive decreases the insulating effect. Because it is conducting, not radiating, that is a one way trip. An experiment has been proposed that involves reflecting light onto a light bulb using a single reflector to see if it heat up. However this is not analogous to CO2 in the air. The light bulb would have to have an extra reflector added to send the light more effectively away, then a second mirror sending some of it back, in order to represent the atmosphere.
The fact that the experiment with one reflector failed to raise the temperature of the bulb is not the point. It is that increasing the CO2 concentration throughout the column as examined by the brothers will increase the ability of the atmosphere to rid itself of heat. Have you seen anything on line that explores this angle?
The schoolboy explanation which says “adding a radiative gas reduces the cooling ability” is an oxymoronic phrase.
Janice: I endorse the sentiment of your original post…
MARIO!
What a happy surprise. #(:))
So, you agree with THIS, I take it:
YOU ARE DOOMED, you AGWers, DOOMED, I say.
Bwah, ha, ha, ha, haaaaaaaaaaaaa!
CO2 UP. WARMING STOPPED.
Finis.
(just felt like shouting the entire thing, this time)
Thanks for letting me know my comment wasn’t invisible,
O Hero par excellence.
Your Janice pal
@ur momisugly John Finn
You are of course right! They were not talking about temperatures but sensitivities measured in degrees. Posted in haste. Sorry to have wasted readers’ time.
Because it is a Think Tank report not a peer-reviewed paper. Are you unfamiliar with these?
Konrad
I will not waste my time on you. Your ridiculous claims are the stuff of Dragon Slayers. I do my own experiments not for your satisfaction. You, like Doug Cotton, are hopeless. BTW my experiments disproved your claim that LWIR cannot heat water. But I don’t expect you to believe that. Long live the Dragon Slayers!
Dr. Strangelove,
While you may, indeed, have a genuine scientific difference with Konrad based on a well-conducted experiment, I have read enough of Konrad’s comments and also those of “Vis-it-ing Phy-si-cist” a.k.a. “Name du jour” a.k.a. D. C-o-ttn to know that your characterization of Konrad is grossly inaccurate.
C-o-ttn is, indeed, a kook. Konrad, on the other hand, presents solid, convincing, and persuasive, evidence for his conclusions.
That you felt it necessary to write as you did weakens your credibility. Next time, post the details of your experiment and contrast its results with Konrad’s. THEN, you might be persuasive.
Janice
Okay, I’ll re-post my 11:24am comment now in moderation for a reason I think I have partially guessed …
Dr. Str-a-nge-love,
While you may, indeed, have a genuine scientific difference with K-onr-a-d based on a well-conducted experiment, I have read enough of K-on-rad’s comments and also those of “Vis-it-ing Phy-si-cist” a.k.a. “Name du jour” a.k.a. D. C-o-ttn to know that your characterization of K-on-ra-d is grossly inaccurate.
C-o-ttn is, indeed, a kook. K-o-nra-d, on the other hand, presents solid, convincing, and persuasive, evidence for his conclusions.
That you felt it necessary to write as you did weakens your credibility. Next time, post the details of your experiment and contrast its results with K-onr-a-d’s. THEN, you might be persuasive.
Janice
Janice Moore;
C-o-ttn is, indeed, a kook. K-o-nra-d, on the other hand, presents solid, convincing, and persuasive, evidence for his conclusions.
>>>>>>>>
Only to anyone who doesn’t have a background in physics. He’s utterly convinced of his conclusions, no matter how much contrary evidence you put in front of him. He’s just as much a kook as cotton and the slayrs.
Dear davidmhoffer (per your request, I leave your name as printed),
I, not having a background in physics, cannot, of course, affirm what you say at 12:23PM today. However, I respect your opinion as one whose comments reveal a conscientious, educated, intelligent, honest, mind. Thus, I will more closely scrutinize both the evidence of K-on-rad and of his opponents in argument from now on.
Thank you for taking the time to warn me of what you consider to be a matter for serious concern.
With much admiration for all your erudition so nicely displayed on WUWT,
Janice
(if you like, you may use my given name, though I have a feeling you’d prefer not to)
Janice.
All you have to do is compare the average temperature of rain forests and deserts at the same latitude. If K. was correct, then, due to the the high water vapour (ghg) content in the rain forests, they would be cooler than dry (low ghg) deserts at the same latitude. We see the exact opposite of that. Deserts cool of dramatically at night because they have a sparsity of ghg’s, while rain forests stay warm because they have high levels of ghg’s. I could give you lost of other examples, but one is all you need to falsify his hypothesis.
Dear davidmhoffer,
Thank you for your explanation. It sounds plausible. I’d like to hear what K-onr-ad would say, too, of course.
In the interests of defeating the political movement we call “AGW,” might I suggest that when talking about a situation where water vapour is the only known effective “greenhouse gas,” that we just say, “water vapour.” Using the term “greenhouse gases” gives, simply by the mere mention of it, too much implied weight to the unproven conjecture that human CO2 is causing any significant changes in earth’s climate.
Thank you for taking the time to help me better understand. Glad to see you used my given name.
Sincerely,
Janice
Janice,
We’re stuck with the term. It is inaccurate, but it is pervasive. In the example above, since we have a desert and a rain forest at the same latitude, insolation (energy from the sun into the system) is identical. GHG’s other than water vapour are reasonably well mixed. So the major difference is water vapour concentration, which is in fact a GHG. The higher concentration with all other factors more or less equal gives the exact opposite effect to what K. claims.
Dear davidmhoffer,
I just want to make sure I understood your comment at 4:21pm. Is there NO situation (say, where we compare deserts to rain forests as per the example at 2:13pm above) in which water vapour is the only proven-effective “greenhouse gas,” thus, we could IN JUST THOSE SITUATIONS, simply talk about “water vapor” as the driver? This would (words are so powerful, as you, I can tell from your writing, are well aware) go a long way to counter the AGW propaganda which touts the conjectured power of the non-water GHG’s.
So, in the hopes that this will ensure that I communicate clearly, your example of 2:13pm would INSTEAD read:
________________________________________________
“If K. was correct, then, due to the high water vapour
(ghg)content in the rain forests, they would be cooler than dry (lowghgwater vapour) deserts at the same latitude. We see the exact opposite of that. Deserts cool of dramatically at night because they have a sparsity ofghg’swater vapour, while rain forests stay warm because they have high levels ofghg’swater vapour.___________________________________________________
Again, my strikes and adds are NOT to say that technically you were incorrect to use the conventionally accepted term “ghg (greenhouse gas).” I only cite the above edited version to ask (please know that I am not yelling, here, I just want to emphasize my main point to promote better communication): CAN WE USE “WATER VAPOUR” INSTEAD OF”ghg” where water vapour is the controlling (the null hypothesis having not been disproven as to any other “ghg’s”) causation (to avoid giving implied weight to AGW speculation)?
Boy! Communicating is SO much harder in writing than by speech!
With gratitude for your patience,
Janice
Words aren’t as good as speech but to really communicate technical issues, one needs a white board too. Blogs are SO limited in that aspect.
Yes you could word it as you have. But at day’s end, water vapour is a GHG. In fact, it is the dominant ghg. So variations in CO2 make little difference compared to water vapour. But to test K.’s theory, we can compare high water vapour (= high ghe) to low water vapour (= lower ghe).
Here is a good graphic:
http://eos.atmos.washington.edu/cgi-bin/erbe/disp.pl?net.ann.
Look at the tropics. Over the ocean where water vapour is very high, the earth is a net absorber of energy. Over rain forest (northern South America for example) water vapour is less than over the oceans, but still very high and still those areas are net absorbers. Over North Africa and Saudi Arabia though, while still in the tropics, these are desert areas, very dry, and are clearly net radiators of energy. Exactly the opposite of what K claims should be happening according to his theory.