Guest essay by Jim Steele,
Director emeritus Sierra Nevada Field Campus, San Francisco State University and author of Landscapes & Cycles: An Environmentalist’s Journey to Climate Skepticism
In part one, I wrote “In the simplest of terms, every study that has attributed the recent warming of the 1980s and 90s to rising CO2 has been based on the difference between their models’ reconstruction of “natural climate change” with their models’ output of “natural climate change plus CO2.” However the persistent failure of their models to reproduce how “natural climate changed before,” means any attribution of warming due to CO2 is at best unreliable and at worse a graphic fairy tale.”
Like failed modeling results illustrated in Part 1, scientists at the University of East Anglia’s Climatic Research Unit published Attribution Of Polar Warming To Human Influence1. Again their models failed to account for the heat during Arctic’s earlier natural warming (black line), a warming climate scientists called “the most spectacular event of the century”. Their “natural models” grossly underestimated the 40s peak warming by ~0.8° C (blue line) and when CO2 and sulfates were added the warming event was cooled further (red line). So how much do we trust models’ attribution when they get climate change half wrong?
Over millennial time spans, researchers reported similar failures reconstructing the Medieval Warm Period writing, “Inter-model differences and model/reconstruction comparisons suggest that simulations of the Medieval Climate Anomaly either fail to reproduce the mechanisms of climate response to changes in external forcing, or that anomalies during this period are largely influenced by internal variability.“2 Modeling also fails at smaller regional levels with superior data coverage, such as California. As Dr. Phillip Duffy, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, wrote “Neither the nature of climate trends in California nor their causes are well understood.”3
Sidestepping such failures, alarmists note models can generate random unforced warming events about every 150 years and that last a decade or so. And so they suggest early Arctic warming was a random event caused by “internal variability” that can’t be modeled. But there was less than a 13% chance that random warming happened in the 30s, and that random warming could have equally contributed to the 80s and 90s, meaning CO2 contributed little. And that arguments does not alter the fact that CO2-driven climate models fail to reproduce natural climate change of the past.
Alarmist believe CO2 is the “control knob” of climate change and Dr. James Hansen, who studied climate on lifeless planets devoid of oceans, proselytizes that belief. On other planets the “radiative balance” is the critical climate variable. But that narrow focus has biased Hansen and his disciples who have underestimated the power of ocean oscillations. Fortunately here on earth, there is a growing awareness that natural ocean oscillations persist for many decades and control how heat is stored, redistributed and ventilated. Those oscillations increasingly appear to be the most powerful “climate control knobs” and many advocates of CO2 warming now blame the cool phases of these ocean oscillations for “masking” or “hiding” hypothesized heat. But natural ocean oscillations have also raised temperatures, and regards to understanding both 20th century warming events in the Arctic, ocean oscillations offer the superior explanation.
From latitudes 40° North or South to the poles, the earth increasingly ventilates more heat than it absorbs. Climate change at those higher latitudes is dominated by variations in the transport of surplus tropical heat. Scientists estimate “Without these heat transports the atmosphere would have an equator-pole surface air temperature difference of 100° C, which is more than twice the present value of 40°C.”4 Equally important, surplus equatorial heat is generated by the sun, with a very small and dubious contribution from CO2. As reported by the IPCC in the Physical Science Basis, “In the humid equatorial regions, where there is so much water vapour in the air that the greenhouse effect is very large, adding a small additional amount of CO2 or water vapour has only a small direct impact on downward infrared radiation. However, in the cold, dry polar regions, the effect of a small increase in CO2 or water vapour is much greater.”
However both 20th century Arctic warming events are associated with greater volumes of warm water intruding into the Arctic driven by the warm phases of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation and the Arctic/North Atlantic Oscillation. And as would be expected, the poleward range of southerly marine organisms has ebbed and flowed accordingly.
In a 2013 peer-reviewed paper,5 scientists examined the migration of marine organisms into the Arctic reporting, “The fauna of the southern North Sea exhibits clear changes. Particularly conspicuous is the increase of Mediterranean fish species and the occurrence of sardine eggs and larvae. There is no doubt, that these observations are associated with the climate change which has been shown to occur since several decades, and which, over the last years, has had important consequences for fisheries: decrease of catches, northwards shift of fishing grounds, adaptation to fisheries for different species. …particularly interesting questions are: will climate change continue and, also, shifts and changes of fish stocks, how long will this last, and which are the consequences, if this trend reverses?”
Sounds familiar, but the above quote was written by Aurich in 1953. Like the earlier warming event and migrations, the most recent northward advance of small fish such as sardines, anchovies and herring correlate very well with the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation and the current distribution of fish from southerly waters is “almost identical to that described by Aurich for 1951.”5 After the earlier warm event those fish retreated and were absent from the North Sea surveys during the 1970s and 90s. So the next few decades should provide the evidence needed to settle much of the climate debate. If natural cycles are indeed the climate control knob, the next 2 decades should witness a cool phase of the AMO and the retreat of southerly marine organisms. And the current scientific consensus that the upper 300 meters of the oceans have been cooling since 2003 bodes well for natural cycles prediction.13
To support dubious climate model attributions, the scientific literature has been increasingly spammed with papers creating the second greatest climate myth: migrating organisms are evidence of CO2 driven warming. However their arguments fail to account for the myriad of confounding factors affecting the biosphere. The same biological evidence used to instill CO2 fear, is also consistent with interpretations attributing landscape changes and/or natural climate cycles that modulate heat transport to the poles. If marine organisms migrated similarly pre-1950s when CO2 was an insignificant player, then the most parsimonious explanation is identical migrations today are driven by the same natural forces.
Good science demands we examine how climate changed naturally in the past, not to uncritically dismiss the possibility of CO2–caused warming, but to understand to what degree present climate change is driven by historical cycles. Only by thoroughly examining climate history can we estimate natural contributions and evaluate earth’s sensitivity to rising CO2. This is most critical because climate history is now repeating itself.
However those eager to blame rising CO2 have downplayed natural oscillations. Alarmists recently published Global Imprint Of Climate Change On Marine Life,” which press releases hyped in the media. Alarmist websites like ClimateProgress ranted, “The research is more confirmation that “global change is real and has been real for a long time. It’s not something in the distant future. It is well underway.”
The truth is natural cycles are well underway, as they always have been. And that dynamic is being hijacked.
The “Global Imprint” analyses suffered from the same shortcomings uncovered in inflated claims that 97% of the scientists agree about climate change. The authors similarly surveyed on-line abstracts from which they extracted only papers suggesting ecological changes were driven by climate change. Their filter effectively removed all analyses examining other confounding factors. Furthermore most of the papers in their compilation only studied responses during the warm phases of natural ocean cycles beginning in the 70s, after most marine organisms had retreated south. Thus their meta-analyses totally obscured the cyclic warming and cooling that accompanied those migrations during the 20th century. From their carefully filtered database, they claimed, “81–83% of all observations for distribution, phenology, community composition, abundance, demography and calcification across taxa and ocean basins were consistent with the expected impacts of climate change.”8
But like the “97% consensus” methodology, their 83% disguised the fact that the vast majority of species were non-responders. Of the 857 species examined, only 279 (or 33%) changed distribution. Sixty-seven percent had no response and therefore “were not included because failure to detect a change in distribution may have several causes, including barriers to dispersal, poor sampling resolution or the dominance of alternative drivers of change.” Changes in distribution also has several caused but again their data selection guaranteed a statistical bias. If all the 857 species were accounted for, a mere 27% behaved in a manner “consistent” with CO2 theory. More importantly most of those species were also behaving in a manner consistent with natural cycles.
It was not surprising to see the IPCC’s Camille Parmesan co-authored this paper. As I have documented before Parmesan has “inaccurately” blamed CO2 warming for extinctions due to lost habitat from urban sprawl, hijacked conservation success to argue poleward movement of butterflies was caused by climate change, and blamed CO2 and extreme weather for a population extinction caused by logging while neighboring natural populations thrived. Now she again hijacks marine migrations caused by natural climate oscillations as “proof” of global warming. And both the “Global Imprint” lead author and Parmesan co-authored a paper contradicting scientific consensus, arguing “Species’ extinctions have already been linked to recent climate change; the golden toad is iconic.”15
In contrast to the fearful “science via press release,” the peer-reviewed literature is filled with evidence that supports a more parsimonious natural cycles explanation. In 1997 fishery biologists (not climate scientists) discovered the climate changing Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) after realizing that every 20 to 30 years salmon abundance shifted between Alaska and Oregon. When the PDO entered it positive phase around 1976, biologists observed northward migrations of plankton, fish and bottom dwelling organisms. Likewise temperatures increased. Climate scientists also reported “when the PDO value changed from dominantly negative to dominantly positive values, a sudden temperature increase across Alaska was observed.”6 After the 1997 El Nino, the PDO began to trend back to its negative cool phase. Sea surface temperature anomalies reverted “to that seen throughout the North Pacific before 1976.”14 Bering Sea ice began to increase reaching record extent in 2012 and Alaska became one of the most rapidly cooling locations on earth as the average for Alaskan weather stations experienced a extraordinary temperature drop of 1.3° C for the decade.6
As eastern Pacific temperature trends from Alaska to the Southern California Bight reversed, species of fish that had once moved northward are now retreating southward. Researchers in the Southern California Bight reported that above all other environmental factors, the changes in fish abundance has correlated best with the PDO regime shifts.7 Such evidence prompted Monterrey Bay Aquariums chief scientist to warn that “These large-scale, naturally occurring variations must be taken into account when considering human-induced climate change and the management of ocean living resources.”8 After all it was the shifting PDO that disrupted Monterrey’s fishing industry as described by John Steinbeck in Cannery Row.
In the Atlantic, poleward intrusions of warm water driven by natural cycles have similarly altered sea ice and the distribution of marine organisms. Satellite pictures (below) clearly show that the recent loss of winter Arctic ice has occurred along the pathway by which warmer waters enter the Barents Sea, deep inside the Arctic Circle, while simultaneously air temperatures far to the south remain cold enough to maintain a frozen Hudson Bay. Before those warm water intrusions facilitated the loss of sea ice, air temperatures in the 80s and 90s reported a slight cooling trend contradicting CO2 theory.12
Much of the warming in the Arctic in the 20s and 40s, as well as in recent decades was likely due to increased ventilation of ocean heat after sea ice was reduced by intruding warm water and the altered atmospheric circulation. A comparison of Danish Sea ice records from August 1937 with satellite pictures from August 2013, illustrate very similar losses of Arctic ice. As would be expected, a slightly greater proportion of thicker sea ice formed during the Little Ice Age would likely remain during the first warming event compared to recent decades. The slightly warmer Arctic temperatures of the recent decade can be attributed to a greater loss of thicker multiyear ice that is ventilating more ocean heat. But past performance never guarantees the future. Scientific opinions and predictions must be validated by experimentation or future observations. If indeed natural cycles are the real climate control knobs, the next 15 to 20 years will settled the debate. While alarmists predict total loss of ice by 2030 (and earlier predictions have already failed), believers in the power of natural cycles expect Arctic sea ice to rebound by 2030. Until then the science is far from settled. And claims that the science is settled just one more of the great climate myths. (Part 3 will look at the chimeras created by averaging and meta-analyses)
Literature Cited
Gillett et al (2008), Attribution Of Polar Warming To Human Influence. Nature Geoscience Vol 1
www.nature.com/naturegeoscience
González-Rouco et al (2011), Medieval Climate Anomaly To Little Ice Age Transition As Simulated
By Current Climate Models. PAGES news, Vol 19.
Duffy, P.B., et al., (2006), Interpreting Recent Temperature Trends in California. Eos, Vol. 88.
Liu, Z., and M. Alexander (2007), Atmospheric Bridge, Oceanic Tunnel, And Global Climatic
Teleconnections, Rev. Geophys., Vol. 45, RG2005, doi:10.1029/2005RG000172.
Alheit et al (2013), Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) Modulates Dynamics Of Small Pelagic
Fishes And Ecosystem Regime Shifts In The Eastern North And Central Atlantic. Journal of Marine Systems, vol. 133.
Wendler,G., et al. (2012) The First Decade of the New Century: A Cooling Trend for Most of Alaska. The Open Atmospheric Science Journal, 2012, 6, 111-116
Jarvis, E. , et al., (2004), Comparison of Recreational Fish Catch Trends to Environment‑species Relationships and Fishery‑independent Data in the Southern California Bight, 1980-2000. Recreational Fish Catch Trends, CalCOFI Rep., Vol. 45.
Poloczanska et al (2013), Global Imprint Of Climate Change On Marine LIfe. Nature Climate Change Vol. 3.
Chavez et al.(2003) From Anchovies to Sardines and Back: Multidecadal Change in the Pacific Ocean. Science, vol. 299.
Bengtsson, L., et al., (2004) The Early Twentieth-Century Warming in the Arctic—A Possible Mechanism. Journal of Climate, vol. 445-458.
Rigor, I.G., J.M. Wallace, and R.L. Colony (2002), Response of Sea Ice to the Arctic Oscillation, J. Climate, v. 15, no. 18, pp. 2648 – 2668.
Kahl, J., et al., (1993) Absence of evidence for greenhouse warming over the Arctic Ocean in the past 40 years. Nature, vol. 361, p. 335‑337, doi:10.1038/361335a0
Xue,Y., et al., (2012) A Comparative Analysis of Upper-Ocean Heat Content Variability from an Ensemble of Operational Ocean Reanalyses. Journal of Climate, vol 25, 6905-6929.
Peterson, W., and Schwing, F., (2003) A new climate regime in northeast pacific ecosystems. Geophysical Research Letters, vol. 30, doi:10.1029/2003GL017528.
Parmesan, C., et al. (2011) Overstretching attribution. Nature Climate Change, vol. 1, April 2011
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Very nice post. A new hypothesis for global warming is being revealed at http://joannenova.com.au. The latest installment is at URL: “http://joannenova.com.au/2014/06/big-news-viii-new-solar-model-predicts-imminent-global-cooling/. I assume that I am preaching to the choir; however, if you have not checked this site out please do.
Terry Oldberg:
I know that entering the rabbit hole is a mistake but I am going to do it again.
In your post at June 27, 2014 at 7:21 am you said
And I replied
You have now said at June 27, 2014 at 9:27 am
That only makes sense if my thermostat is not a “control system”. So, what do you think it is?
And, importantly, your post at June 27, 2014 at 9:27 am contains the statement which says my thermostat is not a “control system” but forgets to provide the requested information concerning next week’s lottery numbers. I could use the money.
Richard
Terry Oldberg;
Over the past 50 years, the theoretical physicist Ronald Christensen (and colleagues of his that include me) have built a number of statistically validated optimal decoders of messages from the future for application in controlling systems. The success of these decoders demonstrates the feasibility of moving information from the future to the present.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Sure you have. Here is my prediction for the future based entirely on events of the past. Continue to promote this absolute drivel and you will suffer the same fate as proponents of the iron sun and other complete kooks.
(The sooner the better I might add)
davidmhoffer
Your argument is based upon the ad hominem argument thus being logically invalida.
davidmhoffer.
I note that you’ve responded with another ad hominem argument. As you are unwilling or unable to present a logically valid argument, no logically valid purpose would be served in prolonging this conversation.
Here we go again – another construct with a basic starting point that tries to deny CO2 causes warming.
Other factors ? Yes of course. It a very complex system.
However Jim Steele, getting back to CO2, if it is of so little consequence, tell us what happens if you reduce the concentration in the atmosphere. Presumably little changes ?
BTW, are we going to have a posting on the May NOAA data ?
“The combined average temperature over global land and ocean surfaces for May 2014 was record highest for this month, at 0.74°C (1.33°F) above the 20th century average of 14.8°C (58.6°F).”
http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/sotc/global/2014/5
Then when the temperature standstill came along they played up natural oscillations! Wow!
Hansen made his congress speech in 1988.
The IPCC was set up in 1988.
Steven Hare coined the term “Pacific Decadal Oscillation” (PDO) in 1996.
At this time the activists were pushing hard. Maurice Strong et al pushed the co2 genie to the max.
davidmhoffer:
Look back and see that circle of light. It is where you entered the rabbit hole. Go back and get our now or Oldberg will trap you in his version of the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party. It has happened to me in the past.
Richard
richardscourtney
The process that you characterize as “the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party” is what most of us call “logic.”
James Abbott:
Your post at June 27, 2014 at 10:16 am yet again demonstrates your inability to read. It starts saying
No, James. I suggest that you ask Mummy to read the article to you and to explain it because it does not say what you claim you think it does.
Richard
For those interested in the previous Arctic Warm Period here are a few abstracts and the IPCC.
And here are a few reports and articles.
richardscourtney
You claim that “…your post at June 27, 2014 at 9:27 am contains the statement which says my thermostat is not a ‘control system'” What I actually say is “I did not claim that the thermostat in your living room contains a time machine. Thus, the conclusion of your argument is based upon a false premise.” What I actually say is inconsistent with your characterization of it.
Your attempt at refutation seems to be of the form of a strawman argument. You attribute to me the claim that your thermostat contains a time machine and refute this claim by the observation that the existence of a time machine violates relativity theory. However, this attempt fails for at no point have I claimed that your thermostat contains a time machine.
richardscourtney says:
June 27, 2014 at 10:28 am
davidmhoffer:
Look back and see that circle of light. It is where you entered the rabbit hole. Go back and get our now or Oldberg will trap you in his version of the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party. It has happened to me in the past.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Nah. I’ve said my two cents. He’s already complaining that it is an ad hominem argument and thus illogical. He’s entirely predictable, and without any knowledge of the future on my part to do it. And I’ve made my prediction which is that he will either fall silent, or promote his drivel to the point that he gets banned.
Note to Oldeberg: That’s not an ad hominem attack, it is a prediction!
The appearance of global change can be the mathematical result of summing regional changes. The changes exist, but they are not “global” in the sense that something comes in to change all the regions but some more than others.
The Earth is a gigantic heat redistribution engine. If it weren’t, at perigee (Jan), the closest position to the sun, we would be hugely hotter than at apogee (July), the furthest from the sun, and the Southern Hemisphere would be the hotter place: our 3% orbital eccentricity results in a 6.8% difference in SI, which at TOA would be a 22.8 W/m2 power difference (av whole Earth, 24 hour day). In fact, the Northern Hemisphere is about 2C warmer on average than the Southern, due to different land-ice-water ratios (and their different heat capacities, thermal properties etc.).
The assumption of global temperatures meaning something in the 30 year-time frame is that there is an efficient and continuous heat redistribution system in operation that smooths out any variation in heat content and location within a 15 year period. If that is not true, then at times the atmosphere will warm or cool because SI energy is more dominant in that part of the world than the other. If as Trenberth as heat can unexpectedly bypass the atmosphere and land and ice and go deep, it can come out of the deep unexpectedly. Another assumption that has no empirical evidence – otherwise Trenberth could not pull this alleged rabbit out of his hat as an “explanation” for The Pause.
@ur momisugly James Abbott
Why do you misconstrue what is written. I have never denied that CO2 is a greenhouse gas or that its levels have risen. I do question the degree of climate sensitivity to CO2, and I adamantly assert and document that we have not witnessed any catastrophic ecological disruptions caused that can be attributed to rising.To be good stewards of the environment we must understand its complexities but as shown above alarmists try attribute everything to CO2.
I wrote, “Good science demands we examine how climate changed naturally in the past, not to uncritically dismiss the possibility of CO2–caused warming, but to understand to what degree present climate change is driven by historical cycles. Only by thoroughly examining climate history can we estimate natural contributions and evaluate earth’s sensitivity to rising CO2. This is most critical because climate history is now repeating itself.”
I have presented an explanation for Arctic warm events and poleward migrations that the best CO2 models have failed to simulate.
If you are truly trying to advance the science, perhaps you can provide us with a better explanation as to why models fail to recreate the early Arctic warming, as well as underestimated the recent loss of Arctic Ice while overestimating the loss of Antarctic ice which continues to grow. The effects of natural cycles and warm water intrusions parsimoniously explains all those CO2-driven model failures as discussed in Why Antarctic Sea Ice Is the Better Climate Change Indicator
http://landscapesandcycles.net/antarctic-sea-ice–climate-change-indicator.html
Terry Oldberg:
Read your illogical twaddle at June 27, 2014 at 10:47 am and try to work out for yourself how many self-contradictions it contains.
I have no intention of replying to any more of your ravings.
Richard
More about earlier poleward migrations
Drinkwater, K. (2006) The regime shift of the 1920s and 1930s in the North Atlantic. Progress in Oceanography vol. 68, p.134–151.
During the 1920s and 1930s, there was a dramatic warming of the northern North Atlantic Ocean. Warmer-than normal sea temperatures, reduced sea ice conditions and enhanced Atlantic inflow in northern regions continued through to the 1950s and 1960s, with the timing of the decline to colder temperatures varying with location. Ecosystem changes associated with the warm period included a general northward movement of fish. Boreal species of fish such as cod, haddock and herring expanded farther north while colder-water species such as capelin and polar cod retreated northward. The maximum recorded movement involved cod, which spread approximately 1200 km northward along West Greenland. Migration patterns of ‘‘warmer water’’ species also changed with earlier arrivals and later departures. New spawning sites were observed farther north for several species or stocks while for others the relative contribution from northern spawning sites increased. Some southern species of fish that were unknown in northern areas prior to the warming event became occasional, and in some cases, frequent visitors. Higher recruitment and growth led to increased biomass of important commercial species such as cod and herring in many regions of the northern North Atlantic. Benthos associated with Atlantic waters spread northward off Western Svalbard and eastward into the eastern Barents Sea. Based on increased phytoplankton and zooplankton production in several areas, it is argued that bottom-up processes were the primary cause of these changes. The warming in the 1920s and 1930s is considered to constitute the most significant regime shift experienced in the North Atlantic in the 20th century.
jim Steele
I think you need to re-read your own words.
You said
“any attribution of warming due to CO2 is at best unreliable and at worse a graphic fairy tale”
That’s pretty one sided I would suggest.
The process that you characterize as “the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party” is what most of us call “logic.”
Richard, I do believe that Terry has nicely summed up his problem!
@ur momisugly James Abbott You cut my sentence in half to twist your point, smear tactics reminiscent of Slandering Sou. My argument is that we can not use model attribution studies to blame CO2 if those models fail to reproduce natural climate change. By most published accounts climate scientists consider the warming events from the 20s to 40s as natural and CO2 was insignificant.
So read the whole sentence.”However the persistent failure of their models to reproduce how “natural climate changed before,” means any attribution of warming due to CO2 is at best unreliable and at worse a graphic fairy tale.”
Do you deny the models failures??
I still await your constructive criticisms that provide a better scientific explanation from which a more informative debate could ensue.
I remember something from a few years back concerning IPCC’s Dr. Mojib Latif. Indeed the next 15 years should settle the debate.
Here is Latif again in quotes. He later challenged the Daily Mail’s interpretation of what he meant.
He did say previously….
What I want to know is this – why is he concerned about asking “nasty questions”? He and the delegates should be jumping with joy. But as you know this is not what it’s all about.
jim Steele
The point still stands. You clearly state, derived from your view on the models, that
“any attribution of warming due to CO2 is at best unreliable and at worse a graphic fairy tale.”
That is a completely unscientific and unbalanced statement and when such appears in a paper it tends to undermine everything else in it.
You go on to ask
“I still await your constructive criticisms that provide a better scientific explanation from which a more informative debate could ensue.”
A few points on that:
Given the complexity of the system it is often difficult to explain local or regional changes and that gets even harder looking further back as obviously the records tend to become more fragmented and less reliable. Even now we are seeing record high ice area in the satellite record around Antarctica. That is a regional observation which on the face of it shouts “cooling” but cannot be extrapolated globally – Arctic sea ice is running well below average and NOAA has just reported a record warm global ocean temperature for May. So looking back at the stated Arctic warming in the decades before WW2 is not going to tell us a lot about global temperature.
Globally, the changes observed prior to the mid C20th, and those “observed” using proxies back for one or two millennia, can be accommodated within natural variation forcing but the post-1960s warming is outside the range seen in that period.
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Features/GlobalWarming/page3.php
The warming seen in the last half century or so is also consistent with that which would be expected by the rising concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere. Natural forcing operating on a global scale may have contributed part of the warming, but cannot account for it all.
There is a lot yet to learn about our climate system so your statement of absolutes is not credible. Its as daft as saying that ALL recently observed climate change and extreme weather is down to CO2 induced warming. Clearly its not.
The trick is to try and draw out the underlying trend from the natural variations. The super El Nino of 1998 so much used and abused to try and show that warming stopped then is nevertheless a key reference point. We are currently close to record warm land/ocean globally yet with still broadly ENSO-neutral conditions and a fairly quiet Sun.
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/enso_advisory/ensodisc.html
” So the next few decades should provide the evidence needed to settle much of the climate debate. If natural cycles are indeed the climate control knob, the next 2 decades should witness a cool phase of the AMO”
I would say that the AMO will see a continued warm phase, because we can expect more negative North Atlantic/Arctic Oscillation conditions with weaker solar activity, and it is under negative the NAO/AO phase that poleward ocean transport is increased. The AMO should be inverse to the solar cycles, like through previous warm AMO phases:
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/esrl-amo/every:13/normalise/plot/sidc-ssn/from:1850/scale:0.5/normalise
During the dominantly positive period of NAO/AO preceding 1995, UAH shows the Arctic ocean cooling: http://snag.gy/mfOI7.jpg
No IPPC models predict any increase of negative NAO/AO states with increases in GHG forcing, and most predict increasingly positive NAO/AO conditions with increases in GHG forcing:
http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch10s10-3-5-6.html
Arctic amplification doesn’t exist, the polar opposite does.
James Abbott says:
June 27, 2014 at 12:44 pm
“Arctic sea ice is running well below average…”
No.It’s not “well below”, and we’ve only got about 20 years of good records.
“…and NOAA has just reported a record warm global ocean temperature for May.”
Again, a measurement which has only been available with any reasonable quality for a short time (about a decade since ARGO came on line) and the temperature change is quite small, on the order of hundredths of a degree.
“…but the post-1960s warming is outside the range seen in that period.”
No, it isn’t. It’s an almost precise duplication of the pattern which existed well before CO2 concentration could have had any effect. Proxy records are of dubious quality, they cannot capture sharp movements, and the error bars are huge.
“The warming seen in the last half century or so is also consistent with that which would be expected by the rising concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere.”
The current 18 year-and-running halt in temperatures is inconsistent with the hypothesis that atmospheric CO2 is a dominant control knob.
“We are currently close to record warm land/ocean globally yet with still broadly ENSO-neutral conditions and a fairly quiet Sun.”
The time constants are long, and it takes time. But, the current trend is down.
James Abbott:
re your post at June 27, 2014 at 12:44 pm.
Global warming stopped more than 17 years ago. Face that reality. Accept that reality. Embrace that reality. It is reality.
If you can manage to do that then you will have started your deprogramming.
Richard
Bart – looks like you will find a way round any data set to try and prove a pre-determined position.
richardscourtney – reality is that the current pause has lasted 12 years, not 17 and good scientific principles say that assuming there will be no further warming after such a relatively short time is untenable.
As to your “deprogramming” jibe, as I have posted before it is only in the last decade or so that the polarised skeptic/warmist debate has become so entrenched and on a quasi religious basis. There was no such nonsense back in the late 1970s/early 1980s when we studied atmospheric physics at university.