The Shindell climate sensitivity paper: another 'GISS miss'

There was lots of breathless anticipation last week over the Drew Shindell paper on climate sensitivity, which was embargoed until 1800GMT on Sunday (see the embargoed PR from Nature here), but some people like Climate Nexus couldn’t help themselves and blurted it out anyway, breaking the embargo on Friday.

Shindell_nexus

I asked Shindell within minutes of that email if he was upset about the embargo being broken by email and by telephone (voicemail) and got no response. So I have to assume that he and GISS are OK with such things. We’ll remember that next time.

I sent my copy of the Shindell paper over to Nic Lewis, rather than worry about the embargo, and Nic has responded in great detail with a knockout analysis, see below.

While the usual suspects are now trumpeting the recently published Shindell (no et al, all his) paper which says that despite observations, climate sensitivity really is high, honest, the Shindell paper gets low marks when it is examined in detail. See the analysis below the press release.

First, from GISS: RELEASE 14-073

Long-Term Warming Likely to Be Significant Despite Recent Slowdown

A new NASA study shows Earth’s climate likely will continue to warm during this century on track with previous estimates, despite the recent slowdown in the rate of global warming.

This research hinges on a new and more detailed calculation of the sensitivity of Earth’s climate to the factors that cause it to change, such as greenhouse gas emissions. Drew Shindell, a climatologist at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York, found Earth is likely to experience roughly 20 percent more warming than estimates that were largely based on surface temperature observations during the past 150 years.

Shindell’s paper on this research was published March 9 in the journal Nature Climate Change.

Global temperatures have increased at a rate of 0.22 Fahrenheit (0.12 Celsius) per decade since 1951. But since 1998, the rate of warming has been only 0.09 F (0.05 C) per decade — even as atmospheric carbon dioxide continues to rise at a rate similar to previous decades. Carbon dioxide is the most significant greenhouse gas generated by humans.

Some recent research, aimed at fine-tuning long-term warming projections by taking this slowdown into account, suggested Earth may be less sensitive to greenhouse gas increases than previously thought. The Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which was issued in 2013 and was the consensus report on the state of climate change science, also reduced the lower range of Earth’s potential for global warming.

To put a number to climate change, researchers calculate what is called Earth’s “transient climate response.” This calculation determines how much global temperatures will change as atmospheric carbon dioxide continues to increase – at about 1 percent per year — until the total amount of atmospheric carbon dioxide has doubled. The estimates for transient climate response range from near 2.52 F (1.4 C) offered by recent research, to the IPCC’s estimate of 1.8 F (1.0 C). Shindell’s study estimates a transient climate response of 3.06 F (1.7 C), and determined it is unlikely values will be below 2.34 F (1.3 C).

Shindell’s paper further focuses on improving our understanding of how airborne particles, called aerosols, drive climate change in the Northern Hemisphere. Aerosols are produced by both natural sources – such as volcanoes, wildfire and sea spray – and sources such as manufacturing activities, automobiles and energy production. Depending on their make-up, some aerosols cause warming, while others create a cooling effect. In order to understand the role played by carbon dioxide emissions in global warming, it is necessary to account for the effects of atmospheric aerosols.

While multiple studies have shown the Northern Hemisphere plays a stronger role than the Southern Hemisphere in transient climate change, this had not been included in calculations of the effect of atmospheric aerosols on climate sensitivity. Prior to Shindell’s work, such calculations had assumed aerosol impacts were uniform around the globe.

This difference means previous studies have underestimated the cooling effect of aerosols. When corrected, the range of likely warming based on surface temperature observations is in line with earlier estimates, despite the recent slowdown.

One reason for the disproportionate influence of the Northern Hemisphere, particularly as it pertains to the impact of aerosols, is that most man-made aerosols are released from the more industrialized regions north of the equator. Also, the vast majority of Earth’s landmasses are in the Northern Hemisphere. This furthers the effect of the Northern Hemisphere because land, snow and ice adjust to atmospheric changes more quickly than the oceans of the world.

“Working on the IPCC, there was a lot of discussion of climate sensitivity since it’s so important for our future,” said Shindell, who was lead author of the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report’s chapter on Anthropogenic and Natural Radiative Forcing. “The conclusion was that the lower end of the expected warming range was smaller than we thought before. That was a big discussion. Yet, I kept thinking, we know the Northern Hemisphere has a disproportionate effect, and some pollutants are unevenly distributed. But we don’t take that into account. I wanted to quantify how much the location mattered.”

Shindell’s climate sensitivity calculation suggests countries around the world need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions at the higher end of proposed emissions reduction ranges to avoid the most damaging consequences of climate change. “I wish it weren’t so,” said Shindell, “but forewarned is forearmed.”

For more information about the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, visit:

http://www.giss.nasa.gov

-end-

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

OK now have a look at what Nic Lewis has to say about it on Climate Audit. It seems the results are all about adjustments and not the actual sensitivity.

Basically  Shindell used CMIP5 models does an analysis to show that there are gaps between the climate sensitivity response to different types of forcings.

So, once these are “adjusted for”,  Shindell claims that the lower climate sensitivity to carbon dioxide is not possible. He’s claiming that anything lower than 1.3 is bogus.

Some adjustments applied seem almost as large as the effect. Nic Lewis writes at Climate Audit:

One of those adjustments is to add +0.3 W/m² to the figures used for model aerosol forcing to bring the estimated model aerosol forcing into line with the AR5 best estimate of -0.9 W/m². He notes that the study’s main results are very sensitive to the magnitude of this adjustment.

If it were removed, the estimated mean TCR would increase by 0.7°C.  If it were increased by 0.15 W/m², presumably the mean TCR estimate of 1.7°C would fall to 1.35°C – in line with the Otto et al (2013) estimate. Now, so far as I know, model aerosol forcing values are generally for the change from  the 1850s, or thereabouts, to ~2000, not – as is the AR5 estimate – for the change from 1750. Since the AR5 aerosol forcing best estimate for the 1850s was -0.19 W/m², the adjustment required to bring the aerosol forcing estimates for the models into line with the AR5 best estimate is ~0.49 W/m², not ~0.3 W/m². On the face of it, using that adjustment would bring Shindell’s TCR estimate down to around 1.26°C.

It’s just like what GISS does to the temperature record, they can’t get there without adjusting the data. They don’t represent base reality, but rather an adjusted reality:

To summarise, four out of six models/model-averages used by Shindell are included…in AR5 Figure 10.4 … none of these show scaling factors for ‘other anthropogenic’…that are consistent with unity at a 95% confidence level. In a nutshell, these models at least do not realistically simulate the response of surface temperatures and other variables to these factors.

Yes, adjusted, modeled, non-reality. That’s the world NASA GISS lives in, and it started all the way back in 1988 when Hansen and Wirth decided to adjust the temperature of the Senate Hearing room when Hansen made his “we must do something” pitch on global warming:

Just like the clown show on the Senate Floor last night, it is all sound and fury, signifying nothing.

Now here’s the part that really pisses me off. This paper is done entirely on the taxpayer’s dime, publicly funded at NASA, yet it is behind a paywall at Nature Climate Change. Perhaps the next time I get an “embargoed” paper where GISS and Shindell don’t care about the embargo when notified of a breach, and put publicly funded work behind a paywall, I think I’ll just publish it right then and there.

Here’s the part of the Shindell paper the public is allowed to read:

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

Inhomogeneous forcing and transient climate sensitivity

Drew T. Shindell Nature Climate Change (2014) doi:10.1038/nclimate2136

Received 02 October 2013 Accepted 16 January 2014 Published online09 March 2014

Abstract:

Understanding climate sensitivity is critical to projecting climate change in response to a given forcing scenario. Recent analyses1, 2, 3 have suggested that transient climate sensitivity is at the low end of the present model range taking into account the reduced warming rates during the past 10–15 years during which forcing has increased markedly4. In contrast, comparisons of modelled feedback processes with observations indicate that the most realistic models have higher sensitivities5, 6. Here I analyse results from recent climate modelling intercomparison projects to demonstrate that transient climate sensitivity to historical aerosols and ozone is substantially greater than the transient climate sensitivity to CO2. This enhanced sensitivity is primarily caused by more of the forcing being located at Northern Hemisphere middle to high latitudes where it triggers more rapid land responses and stronger feedbacks. I find that accounting for this enhancement largely reconciles the two sets of results, and I conclude that the lowest end of the range of transient climate response to CO2 in present models and assessments7 (<1.3 °C) is very unlikely.

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

For a dose of reality, read Nic Lewis paper that is observationally based, and without adjustments applied:  The Lewis and Crok exposition – Climate less sensitive to Carbon Dioxide than most models suggest

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Crispin in Waterloo
March 11, 2014 1:47 pm


Right on.
Homogenisation is the new Black. When you find that clear, precise measurements of the phenomenon you are investigating shows that your guestimates of what should be, is not, you smear the data over a larger well-chosen area until the result is ‘inconclusive’ (as was the case in AR5 for the fabled Hot Spot) or you adjust the numbers involved until you have a result that ‘lowers our confidence in uncomfortable numbers’.
It is truly breathtaking because it is not the result of incompetence, it is the result of trying to support a preconceived result – the antithesis of science and the core of propaganda.
From the article above:
“This difference means previous studies have underestimated the cooling effect of aerosols.”
Really!! So all those other studies are invalidated by this one? Well, it is good to see we have so much ‘progress’ correcting all that rubbish science done by all those other CAGW-promoting scientists who claimed the world was about to tip over into hellfire and …. wait a minute! What they are really saying is, “It’s worse that we thought!”
But I already knew that, with a very different take on what the subject of ‘worse’ was.

Neo
March 11, 2014 1:49 pm

So, once again we get an example of why the “United Nations Convention against Torture” should apply to data sets.

M Seward
March 11, 2014 1:55 pm

What is good for a goose is great for propaganda.

March 11, 2014 1:55 pm

Tom J at 1:33 pm
Exactly. Todat the Burlington Free Press (the main newsrag for VT, had on its cover an Olympic Cross Country skier saying “We are losing our winters and have to DO something about it”, this after one of the coldest Vermont winters in 20 years and a storm poised to dump 12-20 inches of snow on the state tomorrow.
It’s a bunch of brainwashed idiots chanting the same stupid claims. But if you chance to look out the window or keep track of a thermometer, reality is quite different.

Bruce Cobb
March 11, 2014 2:00 pm

And the winning excuse for the 17+ year warming slowdown/pause/halt/reversal – aerosols! I was wondering which of the 10 “Wayne’s World” excuses they’d pull out of their nether regional orifice. Do they just put them all in a hat, and draw one out at random?

Gail Combs
March 11, 2014 2:11 pm

Patrick B says: March 11, 2014 at 10:40 am
I hate that these papers use “studies” as if real world data was taken….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
I hate how they use the term: A new NASA study shows…”
It used to be that NASA stood for good science instead of the material coming out of the back end of a pig.
Actually the stuff coming out of the pig is worth more than the Big Green Slime™ coming under the name of A new NASA study

Duster
March 11, 2014 2:14 pm

Rob Dawg says:
March 11, 2014 at 10:44 am

I’m pretty sure water vapor is emitted by humans and is the most significant GHG.

IIRC, your SUV actually puts out a slightly greater volume of water vapour than CO2 by volume for each gallon burned. That may vary with the blend.

Crispin in colder than average Waterloo
March 11, 2014 2:16 pm

Dawg
“I’m pretty sure water vapor is emitted by humans and is the most significant GHG.”
I thought exactly the same thing and was running a few scenarios through my mind involving watering lawns, running watercraft over lakes and evaporating water in salt pans. And a couple of other things like burning natural gas, wood, oil coal. There is a long list of activities that produce AG Water vapour AGWv™.
Just take natural gas alone (CH4): there are two H2O molecules produced for every CO2. With global consumption of natural gas at 3.3 trillion cubic metres of NG per year. Each cubic metre burned creates 1.6 kg of H2O and 1.96 kg of CO2. As water vapour is a much more powerful GHG than CO2, this bears looking into: 5.2 gigatons of water vapour from this source alone is nothing to be sneezed at.
The implications are huge: as the amount of AGWv™ has increased during the ‘hiatus’ as well as the CO2 we all know so much about, there is even more ‘splaining to do about why there is not a heck of a lot more warming going on.

Duster
March 11, 2014 2:18 pm

ed K says:
March 11, 2014 at 1:15 pm

PPM is not a percentage.

alcheson
March 11, 2014 2:18 pm

Although I agree with this posting, that this study really is pretty much bogus. If they are going to maintain that aerosols are much more effective than previously believed, then they ALSO have the cure to control the manmade global warming, it is MUCH cheaper to just increase our aerosols as needed and remove the restrictions on coal and CO2. CO2 increase for crop yield benefits, and a little more aerosols to “control” the fictional warming. So, once again, this study shows that CO2 regulations are a complete waste of money and will lower everyones standard of living and quality of life for no reason

NRG22
March 11, 2014 2:21 pm

outdoorrink says:
March 11, 2014 at 11:34 am
Until the public gets so sick of it that they force their governments to stop giving money to these scammers, the con will continue.
You would think. But we have generations of kids now being taught from kindergarten that man made global warming is a fact. They’re taught this right through their college years. We have, in the US at least, a big push for more college students. More students are going into climate, environment, and sustainability studies. They’re invested in the belief.
Teens aren’t known to watch the news or look into opposing views on issues. They’re specifically being taught not to look at opposing views regarding climate science, not only by teachers and professors, but also by their politicians and president. They are encouraged to laugh at and belittle skeptics. Mann flat out told students in his Q&A that science doesn’t advance by repeating what has already been done. His advice was to start with the fact that AGW is real and branch out from there. They took it at face value, I wondered why he doesn’t want his science looked at closely or repeated.
If governments can push though their agenda before some of these kids get a clue, the government can claim their policies were a success. The economy may be wrecked, and jobs may be hard to find, but imagine how much worse it would have been if the planet had warmed!
My opinion, for what it’s worth.

clipe
March 11, 2014 2:23 pm

[climatology]
She should have died hereafter;
There would have been a time for such a word.
Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,
To the last syllable of recorded time;
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury
Signifying nothing. — Macbeth (Act 5, Scene 5, lines 17-28)

holts7
March 11, 2014 2:30 pm

look its worse than we thought our computer models say so….what! you don’t feel hot!,take that jumper off wake up to yourself my computer model says you should feel hot…end of story!

JohnR
March 11, 2014 2:34 pm

¨Until the public gets so sick of it that they force their governments to stop giving money to these scammers, the con will continue¨
Sheep. Just sheep. So used to being fed lies by their media news apparatus that they believe what they read/hear.

March 11, 2014 2:44 pm

As always, the team got its reply out very quickly…

March 11, 2014 4:02 pm

Of course a lot of water vapour is produced by humans when hydrocarbons or carbohydrates are burned, but once you get a relative humidity of 100%, it condenses out as rain or snow. In theory, you can increase the CO2 concentration 10 fold, but you cannot do that with H2O.

Robert of Ottawa
March 11, 2014 4:14 pm

It really is worse than we thought.

Chuck Wiese
March 11, 2014 4:39 pm

More of the same crap from this crowd…clear sky flux calculations that have to assume a global surface temperature and assume a constant water vapor optical depth that is actually constantly changing. This is complete BS and at odds with all of the founding work that points at the hydrological cycle as the controlling function that governs the earth’s OLR, not CO2, and from this they have to assume water vapor feedbacks are positive against those optical depths and from which there is no proof of in the record, in fact, the real data shows the opposite and supports the contention the feedbacks are actually negative.
Chuck Wiese
Meteorologist

Anto
March 11, 2014 6:30 pm

“If the observations don’t agree with the models, then the observations must be wrong.”
Lecture 1 – Climate science 101

Reply to  Anto
March 11, 2014 7:26 pm

Anto:
The pertinent logical principle is: “If the observations don’t agree with the predictions, then these predictions are false propositions.” Climate models, however, make “projections” rather than “predictions.” and a projection is neither a proposition nor a set of propositions. What’s wrong with global warming climatology is not that its models state false propositions but rather that they state no propositions. A model that states no propositions is not a scientific model, IPCC claims to the contrary not withstanding.

Pamela Gray
March 11, 2014 6:41 pm

The man has written a paper with the wrong title. Here, let me fix it for him:
Shindell, DT (2014). How to put lipstick on a pig. Nature Climate Change doi:10.1038/nclimate2136

Mike Webb
March 11, 2014 10:05 pm

wbrozek says:
March 11, 2014 at 4:02 pm
Of course a lot of water vapour is produced by humans when hydrocarbons or carbohydrates are burned, but once you get a relative humidity of 100%, it condenses out as rain or snow. In theory, you can increase the CO2 concentration 10 fold, but you cannot do that with H2O.

Yes, and present CO2 and water concentrations already absorb nearly all sunlight in the CO2 infrared absorption spectra, so that theoretical CO2 climate sensitivity must approach zero.

March 11, 2014 11:07 pm

I would like to suggest a paper by Stephen Schwartz of Brookhaven Laboratory, Heat capacity, time constant, and sensitivity of Earth’s climate system. Schwartz S. E. J. Geophys. Res., 112, D24S05 (2007). doi:10.1029/2007JD008746
As I understand the paper Dr. Schwartz estimate climate sensitivity to doubling of CO2 as 1.1 ± 0.5 K. He based his estimate on ocean heat content.
In my opinion, heat content of the world ocean is the key to climate sensitivity because the ocean acts a huge buffer that averages out the various short term variations caused by volcanoes, ENSO etc.
I don’t see any justification for using temperature of the atmosphere, since the heat content of the atmosphere is equivalent to only about 10 meters of the world ocean.
Plus, the tropical oceans absorb the vast bulk of the Sun’s energy. Just have a look at an equal-area map of the world and judge for yourself what percentage of the Earth’s surface between 23.5 N and S latitude is land. There are global maps that show the insolation for each latitude, but eyeballing an equal-area map will help to understand the point.

March 11, 2014 11:09 pm

Sorry, that should be “the heat content of the atmosphere is equivalent to only about 10 meters DEPTH of the world ocean.”

rogerknights
March 11, 2014 11:50 pm

Henry Galt says:
March 11, 2014 at 10:35 am
This is the party line. Toe it or else.

“And so say al. of us!”

rogerknights
March 12, 2014 12:04 am

omnologos says:
March 11, 2014 at 11:01 am
Enough with this science by star paper after star paper…it definitely can’t be science

It’s flypaper.