Guest essay by Christopher Monckton of Brencheley
The splendidly-titled Alberto Zaragoza Comendador, commenting on my recent posting taking apart Mr. Mann’s latest fantasia in Scientific American, was startled by my statement that only half of equilibrium global warming would emerge after a couple of hundred years, because –
“Equilibrium climate sensitivity is a measure of the global warming to be expected in 1000-3000 years’ time in response to a doubling of CO2 concentration, regardless of how that doubling came about. It has nothing to do with fossil-fuel emissions scenarios.”
El Comendador wrote:
“Whoa. Whoa whoa whoa. The effects of a CO2 doubling aren’t felt until 1000 years later? So if we hit 560 ppm we’ll in theory get 2.5°C of warming. But only 1.25°C will happen in the first 200 years? Am I getting this right? Can anybody please confirm?”
In fact, he had to write again, because I did not reply at once, for the fascinating answer to his entirely proper question needs a head posting to address it properly. He wrote:
“I have to ask the question again: is the literature certain (or as certain as climate science can be) about the time it takes for warming to kick in? At one point in the article Monckton says only half of the warming happens in the first 200 years. The rest may happen over the following 1000-3000 years. Politicians have set this nonsense 2 Cº limit, whichm when compared to pre-industrial times, means we only have 1.1 Cº warming left of warming before mega-disaster happens. I always knew it was a matter of decades, but now it seems to be a matter of centuries. If true, this takes the absurdity of the whole dangerous-anthropogenic-global-warming bandwagon to another level. And I wonder how many in the public know this: 0.01%, maybe? Of course it’s extremely convenient for the usual suspects that it will take so much time for warming to kick in: they can always claim the thing hasn’t been disproved, therefore the money should keep flowing.”
El Comendador is quite right to press his excellent question, and I must begin by apologizing that I was not able to answer it sooner.
I must also issue an Equation Alert. We’re going to have to review – in the simplest fashion – the fundamental equation of climate sensitivity, and then go deep into the IPCC’s documents to work out what they have hidden by their now-traditional device of not making it explicit what their projections entail. So, hold on to your hats. Here goes.
Climate sensitivity: The global warming ΔTt to be expected in response to a given proportionate increase in CO2 concentration over a specified term of years t is for present purposes sufficiently described by the simplified climate-sensitivity relation (1), where ΔTt, denominated in Kelvin or Celsius degrees, is the product of three quantities: the reciprocal of the fraction q of total anthropogenic forcing that is driven by CO2; a time-dependent climate-sensitivity parameter λt, which is itself the product of the instantaneous or Planck sensitivity parameter λ0 and a time-dependent temperature-feedback gain factor Gt; and the CO2 radiative forcing ΔFt. Annex B provides a more detailed discussion of (1), and of the uncertainties to which it gives rise.
Global warming ΔTt: On business as usual, without mitigation, global warming of 2.8 K from 2000-2100 is the mid-range projection in IPCC (2007, table SPM.3). Since the Earth has warmed at a rate well below those projected in all five IPCC Assessment Reports and there has been no global warming since 1996 (RSS, 2014), 2.8 K 21st-century warming will be taken as close to the upper bound.
CO2 concentration: On business as usual, unmitigated CO2 concentration over the 21st century will attain the annual values (in μatm) in Table 1, derived from the mid-range estimates in IPCC (2007).
CO2 forcing: According to the IPCC, a radiative forcing is an external perturbation in a presumed pre-existing climatic radiative equilibrium, leading to a transient radiative imbalance that will eventually settle toward a new equilibrium at a different global temperature. Experiment and line-by-line radiative transfer analysis have demonstrated that the CO2 radiative forcing ΔFt is reasonably approximated by the logarithmic relation (2),
where (Ct/C0) is a proportionate change in CO2 concentration over t years, with C0 the unperturbed value. Myhre et al. (1998), followed by IPCC (2001), give the coefficient k as 5.35, so that, for example, the CO2 forcing that arises from doubled concentration is 5.35 ln 2, or 3.708 W m–2.
Planck parameter λ0: Immediately after a perturbation by an external radiative forcing such as anthropogenically-increased CO2 concentration, the climate sensitivity parameter by which the forcing is multiplied to yield the global temperature response will take its instantaneous or Planck value λ0 = 0.31 K W–1 m2 (expressed reciprocally as 3.2 W m–2 K–1 in IPCC, 2007, p. 361 fn.).
The sensitivity parameter λn: To allow for the incremental operation of temperature feedbacks, considered by the IPCC to be strongly net-positive, λn is projected to increase over time. The IPCC implicitly takes λn as rising from the instantaneous value λ0 = 0.31 K W–1 m2 via the centennial value λ100 = 0.44 K W–1 m2 and the bicentennial value λ200 = 0.50 K W–1 m2 (derived in Table 2) to the equilibrium value λ∞ = 0.50 K W–1 m2. The equilibrium value is not attained for 1000-3000 years (Solomon et al., 2009).
Centennial parameter λ100: This and longer-term values of λn allow for longer-term mitigation benefit-cost appraisals. The IPCC projects CO2 concentration of 713 μatm in 2100 against 368 μatm in 2000, and a mid-range estimate of 2.8 K warming by 2100, of which 0.6 K is pre-committed (IPCC, 2007, table SPM.3), leaving 2.2 K of new warming, of which 70% (derived in Table 2), or 1.54 K, is CO2-driven. Therefore, the IPCC’s implicit centennial climate sensitivity parameter λ100 is 1.54 K divided by 5.35 ln(713/368) W m–2, or 0.44 K W–1 m2, representing an increase of 0.13 K W–1 m2 over a century against the Planck value λ0 = 0.31 K W–1 m2. This value is half of the equilibrium value λ∞, derived below.
Bicentennial parameter λ200: Examination of the six SRES emissions scenarios for 1900-2100 (Table 2) demonstrates the IPCC’s implicit bicentennial sensitivity parameter λ200 to be 0.50 K W–1 m2 on each scenario.
Equilibrium parameter λ∞: Dividing the IPCC’s 3.26 K central estimate of climate sensitivity to a CO2 doubling (IPCC, 2007, p. 798, box 10.2) by the 3.71 W m–2 radiative forcing in response to a CO2 doubling gives the implicit equilibrium sensitivity parameter λ∞ = 0.88 K W–1 m2, attained after 1000-3000 years.
CO2 fraction: In Table 2, the fraction q = 0.7 of total anthropogenic forcing attributable to CO2 emissions is derived from each of the six SRES standard emissions scenarios.
Plotting the four values λ0 = 0.31 K W–1 m2, λ100 = 0.44 K W–1 m2, λ∞ = 0.50 K W–1 m2, and λ∞ = 0.88 K W–1 m2, produces curve A in Fig. 1. As the inset panel A shows, the temperature rises quite sharply in the first century or two.
Figure 1. Two equally plausible evolutions of the climate-sensitivity parameter λn. Version A is implicit in IPCC (2007). However, version B, an epidemic curve, is equally plausible.
Now, the various values of the climate-sensitivity parameter arise over time because temperature feedbacks do not take effect instantaneously, particularly in the IPCC’s very high-sensitivity regime. They unfold on timescales of centuries to millennia.
One example of a millennial-scale feedback is the melting of the land-based ice in Greenland, which the IPCC says will only happen if global temperatures remain 2 Cº higher than today for several millennia. And even this is probably an exaggeration. Most of you are too young to remember, but 8000 years ago the mean temperature at the summit of the Greenland plateau was 2.5 Cº higher than it is today (Fig. 2), but the ice there did not melt. So the most one might expect, even after several millennia, is some further loss of ice around the coastal fringes of Greenland.
In passing, there is a characteristically hysterical recent piece (in The Guardian, inevitably) by the accident-prone Australian professional bed-wetter Graham Redfearn, saying that from 2002-2011 some 260 billion tons of ice a year has melted from Greenland. Oo-er! Even if that were the case, sea level would have risen by just 0.7 mm a year, or little more than a quarter of an inch over the decade.
Figure 2. Reconstructed temperatures at the summit of the Greenland ice cap, 6000 BC to date.
For reasons such as this, it is no less plausible that feedbacks will come into play slowly to start with, as in inset panel B, than that they will act near-instantaneously in the first century or two, as in the IPCC’s implicit regime (Fig. 1, inset panel A).
The literature is pointing ever more clearly towards only the smallest net-positive feedbacks even at equilibrium. In that event, the global warming from a doubling of Co2 concentration will not much exceed 1 Cº, and that will come about within a century or two rather than several millennia. But even on the IPCC’s high-sensitivity central case, after 100-200 years the warming in response to a CO2 doubling would not have reached much more than 1.5 Cº, because the feedbacks under a high-sensitivity regime take longer to come into full effect.
Under the IPCC’s imagined regime, of course, the warming would continue to increase all the way to equilibrium, though at a slower rate than in the first couple of centuries.
To be fair, one should also bear in mind that CO2 concentration on business as usual will continue to rise even beyond the doubling from the pre-industrial 280 μatm to 560 μatm in around 2080. However, CO2 concentration would have to double again, from 560 to 1120 μatm, to have the same warming effect as that of the previous doubling.
Finally, it is worth reiterating that there is no, repeat no, consensus in the scientific literature in support of the IPCC’s assertion that recent warming is mostly manmade. Legates et al. (2013) established that only 0.3% of abstracts of 11,944 climate science papers published in the 21 years 1991-2011 explicitly stated that we are responsible for more than half of the 0.69 Cº global warming since we began to have a theoretically-detectable effect on global temperature in 1950.
Suppose that 0.33 Cº – just under half of the observed 0.69 Cº – was our contribution to global warming since 1950. Suppose also that CO2 concentration in that year was 305 ppmv and is now 398 ppmv.
Then the radiative forcing from CO2 that contributed to that warming was 5.35 ln(398/305) = 1.42 Watts per square meter. Assume that the IPCC’s central estimate of 713 ppmv CO2 by 2100 (Table 1) is accurate. Assume also that the CO2 forcing from now to 2100 will be 5.35 ln(713/398), or 3.12 W m–2.
Assuming that the 0.7 ratio of CO2 forcing to that from other greenhouse gases (derived in Table 2) will remain broadly constant, and assuming that by 2100 temperature feedbacks will have exercised 0.44/0.31 of the warming effect seen to date, the manmade warming to be expected by 2100 on the basis of the 0.33 Cº warming since 1950 will be 3.12/1.42 x 0.33 x 0.44/0.31 = 1 Cº.
Broadly speaking, the IPCC expects this century’s warming to be equivalent to that from a doubling of CO2 concentration. In that event, 1 Cº is indeed all the warming we should expect from a CO2 doubling. And is that going to be a problem?
[No.]
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I am sorry. I am not impressed with all these estimations and calculations. The fact remains that no-one, and I mean no-one, has actually measured a CO2 signal in any modern temperature/time graph. To me this means that there is a strong indication that the climate sensitivity for a doubling of CO2 from recent levels is 0.0 C to one place of decimals or two significant figures.
Hi Richard: Consider two in-phase opposing monochromatic plane waves of equal amplitude. The average Poynting Vector, the ‘Irradiance’, is in W/m^2. They combine vectorally to zero.
A Radiation Field is the integral of all PVs. The Earth’s surface RF is near black body. All self-absorbed GHG emission bands appear at the surface at black body level. For equal surface and atmosphere temperature, net Irradiance is zero in these bands. Because of thermal incoherence, the real signal swings between +/- 4x nominal mean Irradiance at each band, averaging zero.
Hence net real IR from the Earth’s surface to the atmosphere is solely in the atmospheric window and non self-absorbed bands, mostly H2O; the mean net Irradiance for these bands is the difference of incident mean irradiance. For 16 deg C, 238.5 W/m^2 OLR, the integral of the total, the net RF, is ~160 W/m^2 split 1:2 in non self-absorbed GHG bands and the atmospheric window.
In practice, the surface vibrational energy that can be lost is also supplied to adsorbed gas molecules, convection, to vapourise water molecules, evapo-transpiration, and as net IR energy. The operational emissivity of the latter is about 0.16, a sixth of a black body.
This comes from the 0.4 fractional IR compared with the total 160 W/m^2 average surface heat loss, divided by the 396 W/m^2, the black body RF for 16 deg C in the 2009 Trenberth Energy Budget. I hope this master-class in real Radiative Physics is OK!
Notes: ‘Back Radiation’ gives a Perpetual Motion Machine of the 2nd Kind’. Offsetting 2/3 rds of this extra energy by applying Kirchhoff’s Law of Radiation at ToA in not allowed because the atmosphere is semi-transparent. The residual extra energy after the imaginary water evaporation which gives ‘positive feedback’ is offset by using ~2x real low level cloud optical depth in hind-casting. This, the final, very clever part of the scam, was only discovered recently.
The first time lambda(infinity) is mentioned (before Table 2) it has a value of 0.5, identical to that for lambda at 200 years. I assume this is a typo as later it is given as a larger number?
I’m wondering how these calculations and estimates account for co2 uptake by the oceans. We can calculate with certainty the amount of co2 a certain quantity of ocean can absorb. Even assuming the oceans have an unmeasured or unmeasurable absorption rate sufficient to maintain a certain range of temperature, there is still the affect that the additional co2 would have on marine organisms. Obviously this is not solely purview of climatologists.
Is it not so that there have been many periods in the ” climate history” of earth where CO2 levels were higher than today, at the SAME TIME that the climate was much colder than today?
If this is so, than CO2 levels in the atmosphere CANNOT BE the cause of climate changes, and other factors – as yet not understood or even known – are the mechanisms that drive climate.
If you cannot explain the historical climate, then you cannot presume to predict the climate.
co2 – the flow of energy around co2 carries on and upwards, it’s effect would be like tiny pebbles in a stream, there might be some slight disturbance but nothing to effect upstream.
http://acmg.seas.harvard.edu/people/faculty/djj/book/bookchap7.html
“while low clouds (such as stratus) cause net cooling….
….a low cloud, however, has a temperature close to that of the surface due to transport of heat by convection. As a result it radiates almost the same energy as the surface did before the cloud formed”
I would imagine co2, at least to the level of the clouds, has the same energy close to that of the surface and as such radiates the same energy as the surface did before co2 was there.
“hemionymous”?
Is that synonymous with half-baked, as in “modern climate science” or half-pregnant, as in “no cigar”?
I absolutely agree that experiment has emphatically proven that spectral analysis
reveals Carbon Dioxide in Earth’s atmosphere.
WIth all the upward flow of energy around co2 it really makes me wonder how there is any effect, the amount of delay before re-emission would determines how much heat is held within the atmosphere and does anyone know how long the delay is- micro seconds, but co2 on release of its energy surely would not cause any warming, it would just join the already massive upward flow of energy.
if there was any downward emission then surely the lower co2 would just absorb that and then release it, so that would seem like madness , a slow step by step of downward energy – perpetual motion? up it goes, whoa.. now it is coming downwards, yea sure!!!
Aren’t all of these CO2 emissions over the next 50 years based on the projection that we have enough oil to keep burning it in ever increasing amounts?
But doesn’t Peak Oil basically mean we are on a bell curve and oil emissions are due to start falling?
Which is it? Global Warming or Peak Oil? Because if oil supply is peaking and heading down the bell curve, then that certainly implodes the bulk of the Global Warming models.
In answer to the concisely pseudonymous “pwl”, there should be a question mark followed by the word “No.” at the end of the piece. Not sure where they went.
Bill W rightly spots a typo. The IPCC’s implicit central estimate of the equilibrium value of the climate sensitivity parameter should be 0.88 Kelvin per Watt per square meter, not 0.5, which is the implicit bicentennial value.
I am sure Anthony will kindly fix these typos.
[“No” is added. The second edit position is not clear: Are all 0.5 to be 0.88? Mod]
and
if some gives me a coin and I instantly give it back and he gives it back to me and i give it back to him , the question is , where is the gain,
oh and at night time I throw the coin away, the bank of energy closed.
If carbon dioxide really does insulate then someone would be selling double glazed windows filled with carbon dioxide. In fact nitrogen and oxygen molecules control surface cooling by conduction far more effectively that carbon dioxide. The energy which the nitrogen and oxygen molecules absorb is then transferred eventually to water gas and other radiating molecules which then radiate the energy away
my bank of energy closed from lack of funds.
One or two commenters seem to be straying in the direction of dragon-slayer territory.
Dr Burns asks for the evidence that CO2 has ever affected climate. He will find it valuable to read any elementary textbook of atmospheric physics, or visit any forest, where the timber is made of carbon from the CO2 that was once in the air, or visit any limestone building, or tap a wall made of gypsum. Well, the evidence of the impact of CO2 on our climate is all around us.
Mr Cripwell says he thinks the climate sensitivity to a doubling of CO2 is nil. That is self-evidently the case in the short term, for there has been no global warming to speak of for up to a quarter of a century, notwithstanding record increases in CO2 concentration. However, all other things being equal, one would expect some warming from a doubling of CO2 concentration – but probably not very much.
Mr Cripwell is quite right not to be impressed with all these calculations. I shouldn’t have had to do them. The IPCC should have been explicit about the fraction of anthropogenic warming attributable to CO2, and about the evolutionary profile of temperature feedbacks, and about the centennial, bicentennial, and equilibrium values of the climate sensitivity parameter. But it has been calculatedly vague, in the vain hope that no one will do what I did by back-engineering its math to find these values, which, now that one can see them, are manifestly absurd.
RMF asks how these calculations and estimates account for CO2 uptake by the oceans. They don’t. They are based on the IPCC’s mid-range estimates of the rate of net CO2 concentration growth in the atmosphere. But the oceans already contain 70 times as much CO2 as the atmosphere, so even if all the CO2 in the air ended up in the oceans it would not make much difference to them.
Mr Tyler asks whether there were earlier periods when CO2 concentrations were higher than today and the weather was colder. The best example of many is the Neorproterozoic era, 750 million years ago, when I was young. At that time there was at least 30% CO2 in the atmosphere, compared with 0.04% today, and yet glaciers came and went, at the equator, twice. It is fascinating watching true-believing paleoclimatologists trying to explain that one away. They usually do it by saying that the CO2 concentration must have been much more variable than it was. But we know it was at least 30%, for otherwise the dolomitic limestones could not have precipitated out of the oceans.
Monckton of Brenchley
Speaking of the oceans, solar radiation penetrates the surface layer, and hence you cannot determine the temperature of that surface layer using Steffan-Boltzmann calculations. It’s absorptivity is far less than its emissivity
Very confusing. Is this saying that we might still be doomed, but not quite yet?
The certainty on the human causation in the IPCC report is simply a necessary statement to justify the supposedly necessary adaptations by humans and changes in political governance models. Those are the real ends because of the social and political power involved. It also justifies the attached changes in 21st century education globally that the UN is pushing. They have said that repeatedly.
If we go back to the mid-90s to the UN’s Management of Social Transformations push the UN admits how specious all this modelling is, especially when human systems are involved. Yet human systems are the whole point because the whole purpose of all the mentions of ‘science’ is to justify new global decisionmaking power.
To the UN and a great deal of Soviet psychological research, cybernetics is a theory of how human behavior can be controlled through psychological processes. The UN in the 90s called the programs that the IPCC developed from “Cybernetics of Global Change: Human Dimension and Managing of Complexity.”
Monckton of Benchley,
Thanks for your reply. You said,
“But the oceans already contain 70 times as much CO2 as the atmosphere, so even if all the CO2 in the air ended up in the oceans it would not make much difference to them.”
I’m not sure what you mean by this. I’m not an oceanographer or marine biologist or geologist, but I would be wary of assuming that increased co2 would have no impact on marine organisms. (This is somewhat off topic to the main post I grant.)
An implication of our posts vis a a vis this thread, and what I consider a gap in climate modeling and discussions, is a clearer understanding and factoring in, of the role the oceans are playing in co2 uptake, exchange and mixing. Without doubt this role is not uniform or consistent because the temperatures and other properties of water, including the quantity of water, are variables.
Great article. Now to be pedantic. “just 0.7 mm a year, or little more than a quarter of an inch over the decade.” is incorrect. Either you accidentally chose 0.7 mm (millimeters) instead of 0.7 cm (centimeters). Or you misinterpreted 0.7 mm as being 0.7 cm to arrive at a “quarter of an inch”. 0.7 mm is approx. 1/32 of an inch. 0.7 cm is a little over a quarter of an inch.
patrioticduo says:
March 26, 2014 at 6:38 am
ummm….0.7 mm per year for a decade implies an increase of 7 mm over that ten year period…thats about a quarter of an inch (0.25″)
not to be pedantic…..
“According to the IPCC, a radiative forcing is an external perturbation in a presumed pre-existing climatic radiative equilibrium, leading to a transient radiative imbalance that will eventually settle toward a new equilibrium at a different global temperature.”
The additional forcing would just be damped by the heat capacity of the oceans until they can reach the new equilibrium too.
Alex H says:
March 26, 2014 at 5:28 am
If carbon dioxide really does insulate then someone would be selling double glazed windows filled with carbon dioxide.
————-
or the owners of massive greenhouses filled with co2 over 1000ppm 24×7 would be telling us how they see an increase in temps compared to ones without.
Oh and if anyone says ” yes but the doors to greenhouses get opened so the heat escapes”
well welcome to the real world of an open atmosphere and not a greenhouse.
In consideration of timeframes regarding heat transfer applications the earth’s core has been cooling for on the order of 4 billion years and it’s still pretty hot. My understanding is that systems never truly reach equilibrium, sorta like always getting halfway closer to your goal means you never arrive. It is no surprise then that climate sensitivity would take a long time to manifest itself.
Monckton of Brenchley says:
March 26, 2014 at 5:38 am
CACA advocates also say that the sun was less bright then, which is true. But solar irradiance fades at only about one percent per 110 million years, so the sun shone over 93% as brilliantly 750 Ma than now, not weak enough to compensate for so much more CO2 in the air if CACA orthodoxy holds water, so to speak.