Ocean Acidification Expansion

Guest essay by Steven Burnett

Back in July I wrote a piece that was published at Wattsupwiththat.com regarding the ocean acidification hypothesis (OA) and some of the issues I had with it. After reading the comments and more importantly reading a rebuttal I went through my equations sheet and found a few errors. Unfortunately life issues ate up a bunch of my time over the fall and winter. I have been lucky to have a break recently from tutoring and the onboarding process for one of the atomic laboratories is a bit slow so I had the time to finish this piece.

I tried to push this project out a few months ago, however some grammatical errors resulted in a request for corrections, and I decided to do an entire rewrite. I chose to delay the submission because of a somewhat disconcerting conclusion I came to after reworking the equations and adding some of the peer reviewed studies. The findings are contained in the second section of the essay, but the synopsis is there is no real way to determine if the increase in atmospheric CO2 is mostly anthropogenic. The same equilibrium relationship that drives the doom and gloom predictions of rising atmospheric CO2, works in reverse if the pH drops below the atmospheric equilibrium value.

This may be one of the strongest arguments against an industrial impact on atmospheric CO2 and for natural forces affecting atmospheric CO2.

It would offer a plausible mechanism between the rise in temperature and the subsequent rise in CO2, even accounting for the lag period as a process response. There are still a variety of calculations that need to be performed but it does offer a reasonable null hypothesis to the idea of anthropogenic emissions being the majority of factor in atmospheric CO2

1. My Mistakes

For large complex systems I typically use PTC’s MathCAD for its excellent ability to display equations in true math format, store variables and carry units. The GUI for this program is simply amazing.  The original equation set that I used in the essay was generally correct, however it was developed to look at OA in response to a forum debate I was observing. Because I have yet to receive my big oil check (maybe it bounced), I developed the set as a back of the envelope calculation to evaluate, presented my results and let some of the engineers check my math.  It turns out there were some errors they did not catch, so when I wrote this essay and reviewed the equation sheet, it was only a cursory glance, after all it had passed a “peer review”. Here’s what I found on a more thorough investigation.

I mentioned the EPA value for change on ocean temperature as 1.5-1.75 C when in fact it was Fahrenheit. I assumed that all reputable agencies worked with SI units but I was wrong. Truthfully henry’s law constant corrections are not particularly necessary until you approach temperature variances of about 10C. This value was only researched and correction included because I saw a sceptic trying to claim the change in the henry’s law coefficient was what was responsible for changes in atmospheric CO2 concentrations, this is simply false the thermal variance is too small to significantly impact the direction of CO2 flux.

The second issue I found was a complete user error. When entering the unit set I wanted for atmospheric pressure I was thinking in PSI, not sure why I just was, however in the equation I defined it as atmospheres. Thus the partial pressure of CO2 in my systems of equations was increased by a factor of about 15. When evaluating answers we have a general range of value we find acceptable.  The multiplication factor produced a value of .001 for pH which was lower than expected but not so low as to automatically reject it. When the error was removed the calculated pH on my equation set fell to a change of about .0001 which is far too low to be reasonable.

So what happened? In short I took a shortcut which is mathematically invalid. Below are the four main equilibrium equations regarding an aqueous system of CO2.

image

The first equation is henry’s law which represents the equilibrium relationship between the partial pressure of CO2 and dissolved CO2 in water.  The second equation describes the hydration equilibrium between dissolved CO2 and carbonic acid. The third equation describes the first dissociation constant of H2CO3 and bicarbonate. The last equation describes the relationship between carbonate and bicarbonate. They don’t look drastically different than the modified versions I was using in the original essay.

The fundamental difference lies in the concentration of hydrogen atoms which is not visible in my original set.  I was focused on the relationship between how concentrations of the carbonic substance influence the concentrations of the others.  So I removed the hydrogen Ion concentration and inferred it from the change in in concentration of the respective dissociated Ions. I inadvertently set the value of my equilibrium equations to a hydrogen ion concentration of 1. To speak more plainly I didn’t realize I was performing my calculations in a system with an assumed pH of 0.  I apologize for my mistake.

The very heart of the issue, and the core of my skepticism with most climatological finger pointing is the lack of data. There are no preindustrial pH measurements (more on this later). Without pre-industrial pH or for that matter any one of the other chemical species we cannot easily determine the equilibrium concentrations of any of the ions. It is also feasible to find a reasonable approximation through some fairly tedious algebra, which I attempted, found a close approximation but likely missed a step in the 3-6 pages of mixed success and derivations. It resolves to a cubic function, from which a root can be found and a second set of equations solved.  I will even set up the equations for those who want to play with them.

image

If we assume the major contributor to hydrogen ion concentration is atmospheric CO2, and if all resultant ions are tied to this then for each H2CO3 that dissociates, the concentration of hydrogen will increased by a total value of x1 which is the same increase in HCO3 concentration. For each subsequent dissociation of HCO3 the concentration of CO3 and hydrogen ions will increase by a total of x2. Thus the total hydrogen will be equal to the initial value plus x1 and x2, x1 and x2 can be negative.  The zeroes in the ion concentration designate an initial starting point and the t designates the target period to solve for, enjoy.

That being said we can much more easily approximate a comparable solution by making one more assumption.  If the first dissociation is the dominant factor in the production of hydrogen ions, which it is ka1=2.5*10-4and ka2=4.69*10-11, then we can assume that the x2 contribution to hydrogen ions is essentially 0.  This gives us a beautiful quadratic which is very easily solved as seen in equation 7 and then 8.

image

Had I read through the entirety of the Wikipedia and seen the line at the end suggesting that solution I would have saved a few headaches, and trees. I did however come to the same conclusion independently

Under these conditions we can see the relative changes in concentration of the various ionic species. As more CO2 enters the system carbonic acid goes up, hydrogen ion concentration goes up and bicarbonate ions increase at the same rate.

However referencing the carbonate ion concentration, as the relative change in hydrogen ions is much larger than the change in bicarbonate, thus carbonate levels will drop. For example if I doubled the concentration of hydrogen ions, the concentration of carbonate ions will necessarily drop by half to maintain the equilibrium. An increase in concentration of 1*10^-8.2 hydrogen ions is relatively larger than the same increase at a base concentration in the range of 1*10^-4.

So what does this prove? Sadly nothing. This system of equations only describes sterile, filtered seawater in a flask and holds about the same significance on the results as spherical chickens in a vaccuum.

2. What is the model missing?

Unfortunately there are a large number of factors which are simply not accounted for in a flask hypothesis. There is of course the change in relative concentrations of important chemical species from things like biological function, sequestration, or other natural phenomena. These factors mean the flask model only applies at the boundary layer, a hypothetical infinitely thin slice that represents the boundary between the oceans and the atmosphere.

Phytoplankton will consume oceanic CO2 for photosynthesis. Other microscopic organisms will produce different compounds resulting from various metabolic pathways. Many of which can influence pH, such as ammonia, acetic acid, urea and uric acid or even CO2. Larger organisms such as fish are well known to produce ammonia which is exchanged through the gills.  Microorganisms and their various proteins, fall to the bottom of the ocean as they die. Permanently sequestering some of the CO2 in various proteins and tissues.

Two recent papers were published on OA and the change of pH.  The most recent published paper from December found

“[the] observed annual variability (~0.3 units) and diurnal variability (~0.1 units) in coastal ocean acidity are both similar in magnitude to long-term global ocean projections (~0.2 units) associated with increasing atmospheric CO”1.

This corresponds well with a paper published in 2011 from Scripps that found that even in the generally stable open ocean where pH tracks well with the CO2 hypothesis

“Our observations confirm an annual mean variability in pH at CCE-1 of nearly 0.1, suggest an inter-annual variability of ~0.02 pH, and capture episodic change” and even went further in their abstract stating “The effect of Ocean Acidification (OA) on marine biota is quasi-predictable at best”2.

A third paper Found much the same

“It is important to place these [OA] changes within the context of pH in the present-day ocean, which is not constant; it varies systematically with season, depth and along productivity gradients. Yet this natural variability in pH has rarely been considered in assessments of the effect of ocean acidification on marine microbes.”3

And my personal favorite quote:

“Therefore, an appropriate null hypothesis may be, until evidence is obtained to the contrary, that major biogeochemical processes in the oceans other than calcification will not be fundamentally different under future higher CO2/lower pH conditions“3

Thus while the model depicting OA as a function of CO2 may be relatively accurate, in some sites the interannual variability exceeds predicted changes and most impact studies seem to neglect this. To be clear dramatic variability of the carbonate system endorses the OA theory and its purported negative impacts.

There is however one more issue with the OA hypothesis, and it stems from the same equilibrium equations used for its validation. Up until this point we have proceeded with the assumption that atmospheric CO2 concentration is causing the changes in hydrogen ion concentration. However natural biological, geological, and chemical sources induce a far greater change in hydrogen ion concentration or pH on inter-annual timescales. An increase in hydrogen ion concentration, assuming a large enough carbonate source, will produce an increased equilibrium value for atmospheric CO2.

Thus any factor which increases the mean of biological activity, will necessarily increase the mean of CO2 in the atmosphere. Any increase in mean CO2, through this mechanism, will result in a relative decrease of radiocarbon (C14) in the atmosphere due to the marine reservoir effect. A mean change in biological activity can be brought about through increases in total solar irradiance, global mean temperature increases, or other unknown factors

Not only is it almost impossible to determine the true effect of anthropogenic emissions on OA, it becomes very difficult to separate anthropogenic carbon sources from oceanic ones in regards to the isotopic concentration in the atmosphere. Without good data on this variance the calculations for global carbon balances may be biased. The same conclusion was found in this 2013 paper

“we detected a mean difference between the boundary layer and 5 m pCO2 of 13 ± 1 µatm. Temperature gradients accounted for only 11% of this pCO2 gradient in the top meters of the ocean; thus, pointing to a heterogeneous biological activity underneath the air-sea boundary layer as the main factor controlling the top meters pCO2 variability. Observations of pCO2 just beneath the air-sea boundary layer should be further investigated in order to estimate possible biases in calculating global air-sea CO2 fluxes.”4

This is not to say such factors invalidate the theory of OA or anthropogenic emissions, it simply means that they have not been investigated sufficiently to rule them out.

3. What about demonstrable harm?

One of the other criticisms found in the rebuttal related to my statements regarding demonstration of harm. Specifically I stated that if they want to claim there is some sort of harm imposed by OA they need to perform an experiment, and they hadn’t. In the rebuttal there is a list of experiments theoretically showing harm as the result of increased CO2.  I highly recommend reviewing them if you get a chance.

I clearly should have clarified my statement. It’s not that no experiment regarding CO2 and OA had been performed, I had already gone through the abstracts of most of his citations, I took issue with their validity.  I already addressed in the previous section inherent ecological variability, but there are far more problems with this series of studies than simple ecological variance.

First within a water column there is a pH variance and pH sensitive organisms such as Ophiothrix Fragilis choose to live within their pH optimum. From Dupont et al

During the period of May to September, the pH in gullmars fjord decreases with depth (ranging from 8.33 and 7.97), but never falls below 8.03 in the upper 30m where ophiothrix fragilis larvae are concentrated”

In this case they tested conditions at a pH of 8.1, 7.9 and 7.7 assuming a delta pH of -.2 and -.4. From their quote regarding the natural habitat of the species, again ignoring ecological variability, the lowest value they should have been testing is a pH of about 7.93.You cannot forcibly change the pH in a controlled system with a sensitive organism and claim significant results when the natural environment has variability that exceeds the control parameters for the experiment.

Secondly in almost all cases the studies evaluated the organisms over a very short time span, typically 6-8 weeks. This is not the same as evaluating a stable colony, nor is it akin to studying the adaptability of a species to a change in conditions. For calcifiers the ability to regulate pH at the site of calcification is important to their ability to calcify. The time to ramp up synthesis of required compounds to maintain a high pH at calcification sites may exceed the period of study.  While calcification rates may decrease this is not the same as shell dissolution as was alluded to in the NOAA video.

A study evaluating the ability of 18 different organisms to calcify under varying pCO2 conditions found that in 10 cases, when the solution was under saturated with aragonite calcification rates dropped. For 7 of the species calcification rates actually increased with moderate pCO2 and for 3 of the 7 they received the highest calcification rate at a pCO2 reflecting 2856ppm. The study concluded

“whatever the specific mechanisms involved, our results suggest that the impact of pCO2 on marine calcification is more varied than previously thought”6

Simply put you cannot take a system which neglects: temporal, generational, ecological and habitat based variables and apply those results, no matter how significant, to a system which does experience these effects. Like I mentioned before, there have been no studies performed which demonstrate harm from OA.

Furthermore this ignores the fact that calcifiers originally evolved under very high pCO2 >6000ppm conditions. In the rebuttal this point was conceded with a response that adaptation and evolution to such rapidly changing conditions is not possible.  While I could not find the referenced work. I would contend that it is factually incorrect. While the time necessary for the evolution of an entirely new species would likely exceed the period of time over which OA is going to occur, a response to the changing chemistry, which marine calcifiers already have to handle yearly variation is not unlikely.

It is certainly not unprecedented. The finches of the Galapagos have been shown to alter beak sizing as a response to drought or competition.

“From 1972 to 2001,Geospiza Fortis (medium ground finch) and Geospiza Scandens (cactus finch) changed several times in body size and two beak traits. Natural selection occurred frequently in both species and varied from unidirectional to oscillating, episodic to gradual. Hybridization occurred repeatedly though rarely, resulting in elevated phenotypic variances in G. Scandens and a change in beak shape.”7

We also learned of the effect of cars on a species of swallow in southwestern Nebraska, influencing the length of their wings in less than 30 years8. There is of course the incidence of the bacteria, discovered in 1975 evolving a unique enzyme to digest nylon, which wasn’t invented until 1935. There is even evidence of fish size, change and reproductive maturity varying as a result of our fishing regulations.

Frankly neither the pH range nor the time frame for OA seems to be outside natural variation. There is also ample evidence that more significant physiological changes can happen in shorter time frames. At the end of the day, before we get all hot and bothered by OA we need to sit back and acknowledge that the species in contention not only show a wider reaction range than is commonly presented, but that whatever their method for calcification is, they simply need to increase the metabolic rates, or the mean metabolic rate of the species through natural selection, to adapt to changing oceanic conditions.

4. Clearly There Must be Some Amazing Data Supporting the Hypothesis.

In the first essay I mentioned several points of contentions with the OA hypothesis. I have addressed my core mistakes and gone into the details and quibbles I have with the rebuttal. But there was one point I made in the original essay which was never touched on in the rebuttal. There is almost no data backing up the OA hypothesis.

As a refresher course on the history of pH; it was conceived of originally in 1909.  It was later revised in 1924 to accommodate measurement by electrochemical cells. It wasn’t until 1936 that the first commercial pH meters were available.  In the 1970’s the first portable pH meter was released. So if all of the major development in pH meters occurred in the 1900’s and the concept of pH wasn’t even thought up until 1909 how do we get the following graphic

image

From Wikipedia :Estimated change in sea water pH caused by human created CO2 between the 1700s and the 1990s, from the Global Ocean Data Analysis Project (GLODAP) and the World Ocean Atlas

An engineer showed me that graphic during a debate over the summer regarding CO2 and OA.  I love it, it’s a beautiful graphic, and it is entirely farcical. Luckily the tag on Wikipedia mentions that it is the estimated sea change. Unfortunately most people don’t understand the difference between a calculated value and a measured one as demonstrated by the first table on the Wikipedia page for ocean acidification. Note the field result stated next to pre-industrial levels, luckily this has been amended to reflect this is not in the citation given.

To really understand how strong of an argument there is for OA we have to look at the data. The very first worldwide composite of pH data for the oceans came from the GLODAP project. The goal was to establish a climatology for the world’s oceans.  This is not an easy endeavor and I do respect the attempt but the result is frankly untrustworthy.  While it did define an oceanic pH value in the 1990’s it did so with some gaping holes in its analysis.

Wikipedia describes some of the missing areas as the arctic ocean, the Caribbean sea, the Mediterranean sea and maritime southeast Asia.  However on their own website they state

“Anthropogenic CO2 was estimated for the Indian (Sabine et al. 1999), Pacific (Sabine et al. 2002), and Atlantic (Lee et al. 2003) basins individually as the data were synthesized.”

More specifically the entire purpose of the analysis was to estimate the amount of stored anthropogenic carbon. They estimate the uncertainty on this value to be 16% of the total inventory.

With a large part of the ocean completely unsampled, and certainly lacking regular pH measurement effort, what other data is available then? The short answer is none. Unfortunately pH measurements and instrumentation require constant calibration which is not easily performed in long autonomous measurements.  The 2009 document from the scientific committee on oceanic research states

“If one is to get a detailed picture of ocean acid base chemistry, they need to be measured precisely with a low uncertainty, but to date such low uncertainties have not been demonstrated for oceanic pH measurements”9

The core of my skepticism in AGW and more specifically the catastrophic elements is always questionable data. This is no different for ocean acidification and the purported claims.

5. Conclusions

After finishing my research and corrections, I was certainly able to corroborate the numerical consensus regarding pH changes as a function of CO2 concentration.  However the correction did little to curb my skepticism of an anthropogenic ocean acidification hypothesis and the purported harms. There are simply too many false assumptions required for the idea to play out through its mathematical model.

The same problems arise between small and large ballistics modeling.  For lower speeds and shorter distances it is easy to neglect air resistance and get an approximate answer. But for longer distances or higher velocities we end up having to take into account air resistance. The current approach to modeling OA and organism adaptability is akin to trying to understand flight while neglecting lift and concluding it is impossible.

There is direct contrarian evidence to the idea that marine pH is dependent on CO2. pH changes regularly in the ocean, to a greater magnitude than the anticipated effect of CO2 and in a shorter period of time. The ability of an organism to adapt to changing conditions is a huge variable between species, and the ability to adapt over a period of time has not been studied.

Beyond these factors there simply has not been a solid organized long term study of oceanic pH to validate any of the claims. As is frequent in climate science we see gorgeous model visualizations rather than actual data, and we see claims rather than facts.

Outside of these significant factors there is another aspect of OA which frankly needs more research. The fact that pH changes in response to biological activity, begs the question whether humankind is fully to blame for the increase in atmospheric CO2. Any factor that increases the activity of marine life, must necessarily increase the rate of flux of marine CO2 into the atmosphere.

References

1. “Dramatic Variability of the Carbonate System at a Temperate Coastal Ocean Site (Beaufort, North Carolina) is Regulated by Physical and Biogeochemical Processes on Multiple Timescales,” by Zackary I. Johnson, Benjamin J. Wheeler, Sara K. Blinebry, Christina M. Carlson, Christopher S. Ward, Dana E. Hunt. PLOS ONE, Dec. 17, 2013. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0085117

2.Hofmann GE, Smith JE, Johnson KS, Send U, Levin LA, et al. (2011) High-Frequency Dynamics of Ocean pH: A Multi-Ecosystem Comparison. PLoS ONE 6(12): e28983. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0028983

3. Joint, Ian, Scott C. Doney, and David M. Karl. “Will Ocean Acidification Affect Marine Microbes?” The ISME Journal (2010): n. pag. Print.

4. Calleja, Maria Ll., Carlos M. Duarte, Marta Álvarez, Raquel Vaquer-Sunyer, Susana Agustí, and Gerhard J. Hernd. “Prevalence of Strong Vertical CO2 and O2 Variability in the Top Meters of the Ocean.” Global Biogeochemical Cycles 27.3 (2013): 941-49. Print.

5. Dupont, S., J. Havenhand, W. Thorndyke, L. Peck, and M. Thorndyke. “Near-future Level of CO2-driven Ocean Acidification Radically Affects Larval Survival and Development in the Brittlestar Ophiothrix Fragilis.” Marine Ecology Progress Series 373 (2008): 285-94. Print.

6. Ries, J. B., A. L. Cohen, and D. C. McCorkle. “Marine Calcifiers Exhibit Mixed Responses to CO2-induced Ocean Acidification.” Geology 37.12 (2009): 1131-134. Print.

7.Grant, Peter R., and Rosemary Grant. “Unpredictable Evolution in a 30-Year Study of Darwin’s Finches.” Science 296.5568 (2002): 707-11. Print.

8. Brown, Charles R., and Mary B. Brown. “Where Has All The Roadkill Gone.” Current Biology 23.6 (2013): 233-34. Print.

9.  Report of Ocean Acidification and Oxygen Working Group. Scientific Committee on Oceanic Research, 2009. Web. 24 Jan. 2014. http://www.scor-int.org/OBO2009/A&O_Report.pdf

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Latitude
April 27, 2014 8:15 am

Henry Clark says:
April 27, 2014 at 8:03 am
measured change in the C-13 to C-12 ratio of carbon in atmospheric CO2, since that isotope ratio is low in fossil fuels, providing a relative signature
===========
Spencer Part2: More CO2 Peculiarities – The C13/C12 Isotope Ratio
BOTTOM LINE: If the C13/C12 relationship during NATURAL inter-annual variability is the same as that found for the trends, how can people claim that the trend signal is MANMADE??
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2008/01/28/spencer-pt2-more-co2-peculiarities-the-c13c12-isotope-ratio/

richard
April 27, 2014 8:35 am

I wonder how they acidified it and lakes already have a lower pH.
“During the acid rain issues in the 1980s, a lake basin in Wisconsin was deliberately acidified
(with EPA and NSF funding) to a pH of 4.7 then allowed to recover. “Some species were
decimated and others thrived, but the sum-total of life in the lake stayed the same.” This is a
level of acidification 1,000 X the worst-case scenario for the oceans”

April 27, 2014 8:35 am

“Thus any factor which increases the mean of biological activity, will necessarily increase the mean of CO2 in the atmosphere. Any increase in mean CO2, through this mechanism, will result in a relative decrease of radiocarbon (C14) in the atmosphere due to the marine reservoir effect. A mean change in biological activity can be brought about through increases in total solar irradiance, global mean temperature increases, or other unknown factors
Not only is it almost impossible to determine the true effect of anthropogenic emissions on OA, it becomes very difficult to separate anthropogenic carbon sources from oceanic ones in regards to the isotopic concentration in the atmosphere.”
I and others have been making just that point in relation to the isotope ratio aspect for some time.
It also seems to support the views of Murry Salby.
Any comment from Ferdinand Engelbeen ?
He has been a prolific supporter here of the isotope ratio diagnosis for anthropogenic influence on atmospheric CO2.

April 27, 2014 8:38 am

Where are the whale farts in all of this? (sorry didn’t get much sleep last night)

Jack Hydrazine
April 27, 2014 8:57 am

CO2 levels were much higher back in the age of dinosaurs. Why didn’t the sea life back then die of ocean acidification?

David A
April 27, 2014 8:57 am

Steven, if you have not please check out this NIPCC report.
http://www.nipccreport.org/reports/ccr2b/pdf/Chapter-6-Aquatic-Life.pdf It s a very long and detailed well referenced report.
Of particular interest to you, and well supporting your research s this section…
6.3 Ocean “Acidification”
6.3.1 Introduction
6.3.2 Effects on Marine Plants
6.3.3 Effects on Marine Animals
This is one small section, (200 plus pages fully documented.) of a much larger report.
BTW Mr. Mosher, perhaps you should read this. It may begin to answer some questions you had on another post.

April 27, 2014 9:02 am

but the synopsis is there is no real way to determine if the increase in atmospheric CO2 is mostly anthropogenic
I can tell you at least one thing. All of the CO2 that has been emitted by the millions of air plane trips over the last 100 years has not gone into the deep ocean.
As well, the following three people with doctors degrees agree that man is responsible for most of the increase in CO2.
Dr. Spencer:
http://www.drroyspencer.com/2014/04/skeptical-arguments-that-dont-hold-water/
“7. WARMING CAUSES CO2 TO RISE, NOT THE OTHER WAY AROUND The rate of rise in atmospheric CO2 is currently 2 ppm/yr, a rate which is 100 times as fast as any time in the 300,000 year Vostok ice core record. And we know our consumption of fossil fuels is emitting CO2 200 times as fast! So, where is the 100x as fast rise in today’s temperature causing this CO2 rise? C’mon people, think. But not to worry…CO2 is the elixir of life…let’s embrace more of it!”
Dr. Latour did not agree with much of what Dr. Spencer wrote, but he did agree here:
http://www.drroyspencer.com/2014/04/skeptical-arguments-that-dont-hold-water/#comment-111993
Pierre R Latour says:
April 26, 2014 at 3:28 PM
“7. Your assertion fossil fuel combustion adds CO2 to atmosphere is correct.”
Dr. Lindzen
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/02148/RSL-HouseOfCommons_2148505a.pdf
page 18
“On the matter of global climate change, APS notes that virtually all
reputable scientists agree with the following observations:
Carbon dioxide is increasing in the atmosphere due to human activity;
Carbon dioxide is an excellent infrared absorber, and therefore, its
increasing presence in the atmosphere contributes to global warming;
The first two items refer to the trivial agreement.”
However that does not address the big issue. Again quoting from Dr. Lindzen:
“It is not about whether CO2 is increasing: it clearly is. It is not about whether the increase in CO2, by itself, will lead to some warming: it should. The debate is simply over the matter of how much warming the increase in CO2 can lead to, and the connection of such warming to the innumerable claimed catastrophes. The evidence is that the increase in CO2 will lead to very little warming, and that the connection of this minimal warming (or even significant warming) to the purported catastrophes is also minimal.”

Alcheson
April 27, 2014 9:08 am

NIce article Steve. but I think you forgot one big elephant in the data. H2CO3 + CaCO3 -> 2HCO3.
There are gigatons of carbonate sources in the oceans, the oceans buffer. Thus the statement
“For example if I doubled the concentration of hydrogen ions, the concentration of carbonate ions will necessarily drop by half to maintain the equilibrium.” Is not correct!. You get even more HCO3 in the ocean when you add CO2 than you calculate due to increased dissolution of CaCO3. Therfore the CO3 doesn NOT drop to half when you double H+. It does in a sterile flask with NO CaCO3 buffer sources, but the ocean is different.
Q: In the lab, how does one dissolve CaCO3 into solution which has very low solubility in pure water?
A: Bubble in CO2!
And when you do this, total CO3 ion concentration does not decrease, it increases.

michael hart
April 27, 2014 9:10 am

ferdberple says:
April 27, 2014 at 7:30 am
Now take your gallon of muriatic acid and pour it into the container of sea water – if you dare. The cloud of yellow gas you will release is chlorine.

I strongly doubt that, Fred. If there was anything already in seawater to oxidise significant amounts of chloride ions to chlorine then it would already have done so because of the salt present. It would also have first oxidised the organic compounds and inorganic ions such as bromide to bromine. You might get tiny amounts formed due to photochemical oxidation (UV sunlight and oxygen, ozone), but not “clouds of yellow gas.”

george e. smith
April 27, 2014 9:30 am

When people say that some component of the atmosphere is 400 ppm…..” by volume”…..just how do they separately measure the volume of that component and the volume of the rest of the sample ??
Given that the volume of the atmosphere is not fixed, and the Temperature and pressure also depend on where the sample was collected, I can’t see what earthly use, such a measure is.
How long has it been, since it was proven, that matter comes in atoms and molecules; each with a fixed amount of material, mass, size, and properties?
So why do they not simply count the molecules or atoms of each species in the sample and be done with it.
When somebody tells me that CO2 is present in the atmosphere at 400 ppm; that to me means that one in every 2500 molecules in a sample of atmosphere is a CO2 molecule.
Any other measure is poppycock.
CO2 absorbs LWIR radiation, by having A LONE MOLECULE of CO2 absorb A PHOTON of EM radiation, in some small spectral range near 15 microns (or other bands); and that one molecule of CO2 is not even cognizant that another molecule identical to it, even exists. It cares not how much volume it is in, whether 1 cc, or 1 liter, or 1 cubic km. It does care about its immediate neighborhood, as far as how close it is to other species, and how often and how fast, it gets to bang into something else, which are manifested in pressure and Temperature, but it is unaware of how much volume the atmosphere occupies; it is on its own, when it comes to grabbing a photon of EM radiant energy.

wws
April 27, 2014 9:47 am

Excellent article – it’s a shame that in each case, one person has to make an incredible contribution of labor and thought just to prove, once again, the *every* area of climate alarmism is, at its core, nothing but political BS piled on top of unsubstantiated claims based on wishful thinking, not evidence.

April 27, 2014 9:51 am

” There are no preindustrial pH measurements (more on this later). Without pre-industrial pH or for that matter any one of the other chemical species we cannot easily determine the equilibrium concentrations of any of the ions.”
More simply put: what is the “optimum value” and are we moving towards it or away from it due to factors that we can control as compared to factors we can’t.
Climate alarmists assume we are moving away from optimum and that we can change the things that humans are doing in a manner that mitigates any damage we are doing. Apart from zero interest by climate alarmists in finding the optimum, all the models I have seen have grossly overestimated the effect of human causes CO2, and thus show their authors have so far failed to accurately model a complex system even as they insist we must act.
Indeed, while the climate models never seem to converge back to post hoc reality, the prescriptions of alarmists far more reliably converge on a few common socialist factors: bigger government, less liberty, less personal prosperity, fewer choices. This gives the appearance of an agenda more than a line of research.

george e. smith
April 27, 2014 9:54 am

“””””…..Dr. Lindzen
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/02148/RSL-HouseOfCommons_2148505a.pdf
page 18
“On the matter of global climate change, APS notes that virtually all
reputable scientists agree with the following observations:
Carbon dioxide is increasing in the atmosphere due to human activity;
Carbon dioxide is an excellent infrared absorber, and therefore, its
increasing presence in the atmosphere contributes to global warming; …..”””””
I consider myself a scientist having made my living doing science for more than 55 years; and I’m also reputable; having never been arrested for any scientific malfeasance; or other kind.
And I’m a fan of Dr. lindzen but I would never say what the good professor has said in that quote.
No I’m not wildly in disagreement; I just want to change one single word.
For “global” warming, read “atmospheric” warming.
I have no idea how the atmosphere might “warm” the globe, but it might.
Certainly not by conductive or convective “heat” transfer; because the second law of thermodynamics prohibits that (free net flow of heat from cold to hot).
And the operation of feedback processes due to water vapor and clouds, would seem to interfere with EM radiative warming of the surface, by the atmosphere.
Other than that I agree with Lindzen’s conclusion; is it (if it is), enough to worry about ??
Not for me !!

April 27, 2014 9:55 am

Stephen Wilde says:
April 27, 2014 at 8:35 am
Any comment from Ferdinand Engelbeen ?
Here we come…
First, an essential point:
All reactions in the oceans are equilibrium reactions. If one of the concentrations change, all other concentrations will change too. In the case of more CO2 in the atmosphere, that gives an increase of CO2 in the surface waters en hence more total dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC = CO2 + bicarbonate + carbonate) in the ocean surface layers plus some more H+ ions, which makes that the pH slightly lowers.
If the opposite happens: for some reason the pH lowers, then the equilibrium reactions are pushed from carbonate to bicarbonate and from bicarbonate to CO2. Thus pushing more CO2 into the atmosphere. But that also means that the total inorganic carbon (DIC) in the ocean top layer will DEcrease.
The same for increased biolife: an increase in biolife will reduce DIC, as part of the planktonic shells, fish releases,… will sink out of the surface layer at the cost of CO2 and its derivatives in the ocean waters.
Thus it is quite easy to detect what the direction of the CO2 flux is: if it is out of the oceans by pH or biolife, DIC will decrease over time. If it is CO2 out of the atmosphere entering the oceans, DIC will increase over time with decreasing pH. We have a lot of sporadic measurements of DIC over time, but fortunately also a few longer-term series, representing most of the NH Atlantic and Pacific oceans:
http://www.biogeosciences.net/9/2509/2012/bg-9-2509-2012.pdf Fig 5. of the 18-year Bermuda series and
http://www.pnas.org/content/106/30/12235.full.pdf Fig.1 for the Hawaii series. The latter doesn’t show DIC, but as the mean pCO2 of the atmosphere is above the pCO2 of the ocean surface, the flux is from atmosphere into the oceans.
That is the also case for the “average” difference in pCO2 between atmosphere and oceans all over the world. See:
http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/pubs/outstand/feel2331/exchange.shtml and following pages.
Then the 13C/12C ratio: the δ13C level of the atmosphere pre-Industrial was -6.4 per mil. Sinds the Industrial revolution that dropped to -8 per mil in lockstep with human emissions. The δ13C level of the deep oceans is between 0-1 per mil, while the surface is between 1-5 per mil. The difference is from the biological pump which increases the δ13C of the surface by dropping out low-13C organics into the deep waters. Thus any important release of oceanic CO2 would INcrease the δ13C level of the atmosphere, while we see a steady decrease as well as in the atmosphere as in the ocean surface waters. See:
http://www.ferdinand-engelbeen.be/klimaat/klim_img/sponges.gif
Last but not least, humans currently emit twice the amount of CO2 as measured as increase in the atmosphere. The uptake by the biosphere is known (about 1 GtC/year), based on the oxygen balance. Almost all of the difference (some 3.5 GtC/year) goes into the oceans, because all other known sinks are either much smaller or much slower.
Thus sorry, the oceans as cause of the CO2 increase in the atmosphere is simply out of reality…

Pamela Gray
April 27, 2014 9:59 am

Apparently I don’t need no stinkin calculations for ballistics. I seem instead to have an instinct for the trajectory of a .22 bullet coming from a 40 grain cartridge out to 300 yds. 10 for 10. And at 400? 4 out of 10. With nothing but a $25 dollar scope on a used Marlin .22 rifle. Not bad for aiming at nothing but a spot in the sky with the target somewhere below my visual picture. Don’t ask me how I do it. I have no idea. Other than I find the target, barely visible in my scope, then raise the gun for elevation instinctively. And fire. Moments later the microphone sends back a ping.

george e. smith
April 27, 2014 10:10 am

I forgot to add, that I don’t fully grasp the full significance of Steven’s essay (IANAC), but I appreciate the effort he put into it.
And I’m not the least bit worried about CO2 dissolving in the ocean. What are the white cliffs of Dover made out of ?? We’ve got the same stuff in Santa Cruz County.

Jimbo
April 27, 2014 10:21 am

Some people assert that ‘ocean acidification’ is happening so fast that crustaceans are doomed. I only find this in fish tanks which are pumped to the high heavens over short periods of time to see the results. That is unrealistic and we are talking about 86 years to 2100.
Here is a crustacean – less than 30 years.

Abstract
Dormant eggs record rapid evolution
Nature 401:446. 1999
Natural selection can lead to rapid changes in organisms, which can in turn influence ecosystem processes. A key factor in the functioning of lake ecosystems is the rate at which primary producers are eaten, and major consumers, such as the zooplankton Daphnia, can be subject to strong selection pressures when phytoplankton assemblages change. Lake Constance in central Europe experienced a period of eutrophication (the biological effects of an input of plant nutrients) during the 1960s-70s, which caused an increase in the abundance of nutritionally poor or even toxic cyanobacteria. By hatching long-dormant eggs of Daphnia galeata found in lake sediments, we show that the mean resistance of Daphnia genotypes to dietary cyanobacteria increased significantly during this eutrophication. This rapid evolution of resistance has implications for the ways that ecosystems respond to nutrient enrichment through the impact of grazers on primary production.
Hairston, N.G., Jr., W. Lampert, C.E. Cáceres, C.L. Holtmeier, L.J. Weider, U. Gaedke, J.M. Fischer, J.A. Fox, D.M. Post.
http://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/~post/abstracts.html

Plus.

Abstract – 2000
Rapid Evolution of Reproductive Isolation in the Wild: Evidence from Introduced Salmon
Colonization of new environments should promote rapid speciation as a by-product of adaptation to divergent selective regimes. Although this process of ecological speciation is known to have occurred over millennia or centuries, nothing is known about how quickly reproductive isolation actually evolves when new environments are first colonized. Using DNA microsatellites, population-specific natural tags, and phenotypic variation, we tested for reproductive isolation between two adjacent salmon populations of a common ancestry that colonized divergent reproductive environments (a river and a lake beach). We found evidence for the evolution of reproductive isolation after fewer than 13 generations.
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/290/5491/516.short
—————-
Abstract – 2003
Rapid Evolution of Egg Size in Captive Salmon
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/299/5613/1738.short

Hoser
April 27, 2014 10:22 am

You were going down a fruitful path with biological responses, and then you left it. People forget about biology, and that’s often where chemists and physicists go awry when they deal with processes on Earth. All too often they incorrectly avoid “soft” sciences. Nitrogen fixation by cyanobacteria increases alkalinity in the ocean and other bodies of water. Have a look here
http://www.princeton.edu/sigman/publications/pdf/KarlBiogeochemistry2002.pdf
and the reference within that document here
Moore B, Whitley E & Webster TA (1921) Studies of photo-synthesis in marine algae –
1. Fixation of carbon and nitrogen from inorganic sources in sea water. 2. Increase of
alkalinity of sea water as a measure of photo-synthesis. Proc. Roy. Soc. Lond. B 92: 51–58
If there is an abundance of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorous, a wide variety of photosynthetic organisms will flourish. However, when nutrients are limiting, often a limited number of species or one will dominate when those species have an ability to acquire the limiting nutrient. They may dominate when they have a clear survival advantage over the others. Cyanobacteria can be recognized in lakes as light green mats of algae floating on or near the surface. They appear when N is limiting, because they can fix nitrogen.
Bodies of water at high elevation often have low alkalinity (depending on geology), but as it passes through and over various rock and soil formations, and into more biologically active areas, the alkalinity increases. It is not uncommon for high elevation mountain lakes to have pH in the high 5 to low 6 range. But of course, here the alkalinity is very low, because it never had a chance to develop. The relatively low pH values are not due to acid rain. At lower elevation, the alkalinity increases and water pH rises to a more common low 7 range.

milodonharlani
April 27, 2014 10:40 am

Demonstrating yet again the value of blog review of scientific papers, superior at least in the case of climatology to peer review by pals.

April 27, 2014 10:57 am

David Riser says:
April 27, 2014 at 8:13 am
“Henry,
While you skirt the issue, my point is that its a bit early in the understanding to say that it is reasonable to assume that CO2 in the atmosphere is driven by burning fossil fuels.

What would it take to guess that the CO2 increase in the atmosphere over the 20th century was probably primarily unrelated to civilization’s CO2 emissions meanwhile?
Among aspects:
a) You’d have to guess that the CO2 emissions of civilization’s fossil fuel usage being of around the right magnitude for the measured net increase in atmospheric CO2 is probably just coincidental. If it was unconnected, it might be 10 or 100 times less, for instance, but that’s not what is seen.
b) If believing modern CO2 change in the atmosphere was about all driven by warming (as it has to come from some cause, if not believing it from fossil fuel burning), you’d correspondingly expect and need CO2 history to match temperature history.
Yet you couldn’t even possibly fully match CO2 to surface temperature, from how CO2 has gone up rapidly during global temperatures being flat (or rather actually declining) since 1998, to the actual history of temperatures as in http://hidethedecline.eu . You could try a little more with ocean heat content, but sea level change is a better indicator than CAGW-movement-source unverifiable OHC claims, while not having a pattern matching CO2 history.
Admittedly, commonly shown CO2 reconstructions based on ice cores do seem to be wrong, so the debate can’t be conclusively concluded by just linking http://www.climate4you.com/images/GISP2%20TemperatureSince10700%20BP%20with%20CO2%20from%20EPICA%20DomeC.gif (which, if the official CO2 reconstruction wasn’t false, would be indirectly showing a small change of near 20 ppm CO2 occurring after slow ocean warming lagging the surface temperature variation).
However, what would be more convincing for a present-CO2-is-predominately-just-due-to-temperature argument has not been shown:
That would be CO2 reconstructions showing CO2 ppm to be higher than now’s 400 ppm every time when temperatures were higher than now.
That includes in the Holocene Climate Optimum, for example, as there is no question whatsoever that the Holocene Climate Optimum definitely included long periods warmer than now (as implied by everything from proxy temperature reconstructions to fossilized arctic vegetation amounts, to higher sea levels back then).
Then I’d have to look at the reconstruction and aim to evaluate it versus very contradictory other reconstructions, but it would be supportive evidence at least.
Stomatal reconstructions do definitely exist which come relatively closer to the above than the ice core data. Ones coming close enough, though, throughout history, may be quite a different matter.
David Riser says:
April 27, 2014 at 8:13 am
“That is all I was trying to say.”
To prove that recent CO2 increase has been primarily manmade, to a degree of proof describable as utterly absolute, would take more effort than I’m willing to put out. I think arguing against the CO2 increase being primarily manmade is a weak argument and a distraction from how skeptics have much better ones, as well as not what an objective individual would guess as most probable (although, admittedly, there could indeed be more justifiable to investigate from a pure science perspective).
But I don’t quite care enough about convincing people on that, so I probably won’t continue this debate much longer myself. The more important bigger picture (which we no doubt agree upon) is that CO2 is not the alarmist’s catastrophe anyway.

Village Idiot
April 27, 2014 11:17 am

Bullet proof stuff, Prof. Burnett. Maybe when you get a few spare minutes you could do some work on whether CO2 is actually a greenhouse gas. Or whether there is such a thing as a greenhouse gas. We have to gee back to basics and check the work of all these corrupt “climate scientists”

April 27, 2014 11:24 am

Latitude says:
April 27, 2014 at 8:15 am
Spencer Part2: More CO2 Peculiarities – The C13/C12 Isotope Ratio
BOTTOM LINE: If the C13/C12 relationship during NATURAL inter-annual variability is the same as that found for the trends, how can people claim that the trend signal is MANMADE??
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2008/01/28/spencer-pt2-more-co2-peculiarities-the-c13c12-isotope-ratio/

I’ll credit you for linking an interesting argument, although there is another side to it as seen in quite a series of comments by Ferdinand Engelbeen in that thread itself. Probably I’m not going to put in enough time on that matter to do it proper justice myself; most of my posting activity in most threads is otherwise directed.
Still, aside from the C13/C12 ratio being only one part of this matter, the following is noteworthy:
Observe that article was by Dr. Roy Spencer, published back in January 2008.
Just 2 days ago, more recently, he published an article at http://www.drroyspencer.com/2014/04/skeptical-arguments-that-dont-hold-water/ which included him implying that the recent increase in CO2 is very much not just due to temperature increase. His specific choice of argument for that was suboptimal, since I suspect the ice core data doesn’t capture the full variation. Still, at least as of 2014, as the prior link implies, apparently Dr. Spencer himself believes that CO2 increase over the past century is not plausibly primarily just due to temperature increase.
In aspects of (1) believing that CO2 increase over the past century was probably primarily human-caused and (2) meanwhile, though, being an utter opponent of the CAGW movement’s claims of catastrophe from it, I am in agreement with Dr. Spencer.

Latitude
April 27, 2014 11:35 am

Hoser says:
April 27, 2014 at 10:22 am
You were going down a fruitful path with biological responses, and then you left it. People forget about biology,
======
Hoser, I agree 100%….
Look a farming practices (fertilizer, irrigation, c4’s, etc), bacteria, etc…and you can find 100% of that c12
chemistry is easy…biology is hard…..chemical biology is impossible

Jimbo
April 27, 2014 11:39 am

PH can vary dramatically in just hours reaching levels expected for 2100. It’s that bad.

Abstract – 2011
Will ocean acidification affect marine microbes?
……….Useful comparisons can be made with microbes in other aquatic environments that readily accommodate very large and rapid pH change. For example, in many freshwater lakes, pH changes that are orders of magnitude greater than those projected for the twenty second century oceans can occur over periods of hours. Marine and freshwater assemblages have always experienced variable pH conditions. Therefore, an appropriate null hypothesis may be, until evidence is obtained to the contrary, that major biogeochemical processes in the oceans other than calcification will not be fundamentally different under future higher CO2/lower pH conditions.
http://www.nature.com/ismej/journal/v5/n1/full/ismej201079a.html
———————–
Abstract – December 19, 2011
Gretchen E. Hofmann et al
High-Frequency Dynamics of Ocean pH: A Multi-Ecosystem Comparison
………. These observations reveal a continuum of month-long pH variability with standard deviations from 0.004 to 0.277 and ranges spanning 0.024 to 1.430 pH units. The nature of the observed variability was also highly site-dependent, with characteristic diel, semi-diurnal, and stochastic patterns of varying amplitudes. These biome-specific pH signatures disclose current levels of exposure to both high and low dissolved CO2, often demonstrating that resident organisms are already experiencing pH regimes that are not predicted until 2100……..
…..and (2) in some cases, seawater in these sites reaches extremes in pH, sometimes daily, that are often considered to only occur in open ocean systems well into the future [46]. …..
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028983
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0028983