And this excuse makes 30. Dueling press releases on 'the pause', blaming Pacific Trade Winds on 'Atlantic warming'

Eurekalert_dueling PR_tradewindsPreviously, we had 29 excuses for “the pause” now we have 30.

When a paper is published by multiple authors, the universities of those authors often produce separate press releases to highlight the paper. Today, two separate press releases about the same paper showed up right next to each other in Eurekalert, as seen in the screen cap. Problem is though, one paper PR (from the University of New South Wales) places blame squarely on global warming, the other (from the University of Hawaii), only gives it a contributory mention. UNSW also expects a “sudden acceleration of global average surface temperatures”, but there’s no mention of that in the UH press release. Looking at the differences, it isn’t hard to spot the bias towards alarmism at UNSW.

Both press releases are presented in entirety below. Commentary follows.

From the University of New South Wales 

Atlantic warming turbocharges Pacific trade winds

Record breaking trade winds may have led to hiatus in global surface average temperatures

New research has found rapid warming of the Atlantic Ocean, likely caused by global warming, has turbocharged Pacific Equatorial trade winds. Currently the winds are at a level never before seen on observed records, which extend back to the 1860s.

The increase in these winds has caused eastern tropical Pacific cooling, amplified the Californian drought, accelerated sea level rise three times faster than the global average in the Western Pacific and has slowed the rise of global average surface temperatures since 2001.

It may even be responsible for making El Nino events less common over the past decade due to its cooling impact on ocean surface temperatures in the eastern Pacific.

“We were surprised to find the main cause of the Pacific climate trends of the past 20 years had its origin in the Atlantic Ocean,” said co-lead author Dr Shayne McGregor from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science (ARCCSS) at the University of New South Wales.

“It highlights how changes in the climate in one part of the world can have extensive impacts around the globe.”

The record-breaking increase in Pacific Equatorial trade winds over the past 20 years had, until now, baffled researchers.

Originally, this trade wind intensification was considered to be a response to Pacific decadal variability. However, the strength of the winds was much more powerful than expected due to the changes in Pacific sea surface temperature.

Another riddle was that previous research indicated that under global warming scenarios Pacific Equatorial Trade winds would slow down over the coming century.

The solution was found in the rapid warming of the Atlantic Ocean basin, which has created unexpected pressure differences between the Atlantic and Pacific. This has produced wind anomalies that have given Pacific Equatorial trade winds an additional big push.

“The rapid warming of the Atlantic Ocean created high pressure zones in the upper atmosphere over that basin and low pressure zones close to the surface of the ocean,” said Prof Axel Timmermann co-lead and corresponding author from the University of Hawaii.

“The rising air parcels, over the Atlantic eventually sink over the eastern tropical Pacific, thus creating higher surface pressure there. The enormous pressure see-saw with high pressure in the Pacific and low pressure in the Atlantic gave the Pacific trade winds an extra kick, amplifying their strength. It’s like giving a playground roundabout an extra push as it spins past.”

Many climate models appear to have underestimated the magnitude of the coupling between the two ocean basins, which may explain why they struggled to produce the recent increase in Pacific Equatorial trade wind trends.

While active, the stronger Equatorial trade winds have caused far greater overturning of ocean water in the West Pacific, pushing more atmospheric heat into the ocean, as shown by co-author and ARCCSS Chief Investigator Prof Matthew England earlier this year. This increased overturning appears to explain much of the recent slowdown in the rise of global average surface temperatures.

Importantly, the researchers don’t expect the current pressure difference between the two ocean basins to last. When it does end, they expect to see some rapid changes, including a sudden acceleration of global average surface temperatures.

“It will be difficult to predict when the Pacific cooling trend and its contribution to the global hiatus in surface temperatures will come to an end,” Prof England said.

“However, a large El Niño event is one candidate that has the potential to drive the system back to a more synchronized Atlantic/Pacific warming situation.”

###

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

Now from the University of Hawaii. Who says the Atlantic warming is “induced partly by greenhouse gasses”.

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

From the University of Hawaii ‑ SOEST 

Atlantic origin of recent Pacific trade wind, sea level and temperature trends

An Australian–US team of climate researchers has solved a puzzle that has challenged scientists for over a decade. Climate models predict that the equatorial Pacific trades should weaken with increasing greenhouse gases. Yet, since the early 1990s, satellites and climate stations reveal a rapid and unprecedented strengthening of the Pacific trade winds, accelerating sea level rise in the western Pacific and impacting both Pacific and global climate.

“The answer to the puzzle is that recent rapid Atlantic Ocean warming has affected climate in the Pacific,” say the scientists. Their findings from observations and modeling experiments are published in the August 3, 2014, online issue of Nature Climate Change.

“We were surprised to find that the main cause of the Pacific wind, temperature, and sea level trends over the past 20 years lies in the Atlantic Ocean,” says Shayne McGregor at the University of New South Wales and lead author of the study. “We saw that the rapid Atlantic surface warming observed since the early 1990s, induced partly by greenhouse gasses, has generated unusually low sea level pressure over the tropical Atlantic. This, in turn, produces an upward motion of the overlying air parcels. These parcels move westward aloft and then sink again in the eastern equatorial Pacific, where their sinking creates a high pressure system. The resulting Atlantic–Pacific pressure difference strengthens the Pacific trade winds.”

“Stronger trade winds in the equatorial Pacific also increase the upwelling of cold waters to the surface. The resulting near-surface cooling in the eastern Pacific amplifies the Atlantic–Pacific pressure seesaw, thus further intensifying the trade winds,” says Axel Timmermann, corresponding author of the study at the University of Hawaii International Pacific Research Center. He comments further, “It turns out that the current generation of climate models underestimates the extent of the Atlantic–Pacific coupling, which means that they cannot properly capture the observed eastern Pacific cooling, which has contributed significantly to the leveling off, or the hiatus, in global warming.”

In contrast to previous studies that explain the eastern Pacific cooling as resulting solely from natural climate variability, the international climate research team points to a climate feedback that has been overlooked, namely, that the recent Atlantic warming affects the atmospheric circulation over the Pacific, leading to an increased persistence of cold ocean conditions there.

“It will be difficult to predict when the Pacific cooling trend and its contribution to the global warming hiatus will come to an end. The natural variability of the Pacific, associated for instance with the El Niño-Southern Oscillation, is one candidate that could drive the system back to a more even Atlantic–Pacific warming situation,” says co-author Matthew England from the University of New South Wales.

“Our study documents that some of the largest tropical and subtropical climate trends of the past 20 years are all linked: Strengthening of the Pacific trade winds, acceleration of sea level rise in the western Pacific, eastern Pacific surface cooling, the global warming hiatus, and even the massive droughts in California,” explains co-author Malte Stuecker from the University of Hawaii Meteorology Department.

“We are just starting to grasp the scope of the impacts of this global atmospheric reorganization and of the out-of phase temperature trends in the Atlantic and Pacific regions,” adds Fei-Fei Jin, climate scientist also at the University of Hawaii Meteorology Department.

###

Citation

Shayne McGregor, Axel Timmermann, Malte F. Stuecker, Matthew H. England, Mark Merrifield, Fei-Fei Jin, and Yoshimitsu Chikamoto: Recent Walker Circulation strengthening and Pacific cooling amplified by Atlantic warming.Nature Climate Change http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2330.

Funding

Australian Research Council (ARC), including the ARC Centre of Excellence in Climate System Science. A.T. was supported through NSF grant No. 1049219. M.F.S. and F-F.J. were supported by US NSF grant ATM1034798, US Department of Energy grant DESC005110 and US NOAA grant NA10OAR4310200.

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

The only problem is, how would they explain similar but larger peaks in Atlantic Sea Surface Temperature, that have occurred before being “induced partly by greenhouse gasses”?

Amo_timeseries_1856-present
Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation index computed as the linearly detrended North Atlantic sea surface temperature anomalies 1856-2009.

The The Atlantic multidecadal oscillation (AMO) was identified by Schlesinger and Ramankutty in 1994 in An oscillation in the global climate system of period 65-70 years.

In that paper abstract, they claim the AMO has “obscured” the global warming signal:

In addition to the well-known warming of ~0.5 °C since the middle of the nineteenth century, global-mean surface temperature records1-4display substantial variability on timescales of a century or less. Accurate prediction of future temperature change requires an understanding of the causes of this variability; possibilities include external factors, such as increasing greenhouse-gas concentrations5-7 and anthropogenic sulphate aerosols8-10, and internal factors, both predictable (such as El Niño11) and unpredictable (noise12,13). Here we apply singular spectrum analysis14-20 to four global-mean temperature records1-4, and identify a temperature oscillation with a period of 65-70 years. Singular spectrum analysis of the surface temperature records for 11 geographical regions shows that the 65-70-year oscillation is the statistical result of 50-88-year oscillations for the North Atlantic Ocean and its bounding Northern Hemisphere continents. These oscillations have obscured the greenhouse warming signal in the North Atlantic and North America. Comparison with previous observations and model simulations suggests that the oscillation arises from predictable internal variability of the ocean-atmosphere system.

Personally, I don’t think any of these climate scientists have a clue as to what they are talking about, much less what drives the climate in cycles.

 

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mpainter
August 3, 2014 5:04 pm

I nominate this excuse #30 as the “turbo-charged trade wind” excuse after the UNSW header.

Bill Marsh
Editor
August 3, 2014 5:08 pm

“In contrast to previous studies that explain the eastern Pacific cooling as resulting solely from natural climate variability, the international climate research team points to a climate feedback that has been overlooked, namely, that the recent Atlantic warming affects the atmospheric circulation over the Pacific, leading to an increased persistence of cold ocean conditions there.”
======================================
So, that isn’t ‘natural’?

BallBounces
August 3, 2014 5:09 pm

Climate science is certainly giving chiropractic medicine a boost. Like chiropractic, all AGW maladies may be cured with adjustments done by the right specialist.

mike
August 3, 2014 5:10 pm

Personally, I’ve always found the Deltoid blog to be the “canary in the coal mine” when it comes to judging the degree to which the hive intends to commit promotional, agit-prop hype-resources to any given, tenured-hack’s “profession-of-the-true-faith”. Likewise, I’ve always found the Deltoid blog’s motor-mouth clap-trap to be a good leading-indicator of the the severity of the public beat-down the hive intends to administer to any given heretic, naturally, but also to those ostensible good-comrades who are, technically-speaking, orthodox in their views, but exhibit an insufficient scare-mongering zeal in their street-theater panic-attacks.
So let me just check out what the ‘toids are sayin’ about the above two papers. YIKES!!! I can’t believe what’s happened to Deltoid-land! I mean, like, the Deltoid blog has degenerated into a last-gasp, bezonian (yep!–got that one from the Thesaurus), bozo-nian (made that one up!), “bill”-and-“Lionel” creep-show! I mean, like, Deltoid is currently in a vegetative state so complete, so utterly devoid-toid of “meaty’ thought, “red-blooded” passion, and “sinewy” speech, that it would not be out of place on the menu of some militant-vegan, flatulence-spewing hive-eatery, even!
And for those who might think that the above imagery is just a tiny bit forced, I’m throwin’ in a freebie poem to sweeten the deal:
Conspiracy
Ideations
Conjure up such
Odd creations
For example
In Oz we’re told
By tin-foil capped
Deniers bold
There dwells a crank
Cyborg fusspot
Who’s half hive-flake
And half hive-bot
Who’s e’re good for
A blog-post rant
Craft from purest
Party-line cant
Spiced with a “snark”
That only works
With zit-magnet
Dumb-kid hive-dorks
*********************
You know I get
A little “Hot”
With this whole damn
Koch brothers’ lot
Who seem to see
Naught improper
With dreamin’ up
Such a “Whopper”!
P. S. I see “bill” is now ensconced at HotWhopper–the perfect match! Speaking of which, I’ve been doing some scholarly research on bill’s career-contribution, blog-killer (RIP Deltoid) gibe-droppings, the results of which I’d like to now offer up to a crowd-sourced peer-review. In particular, I propose that all of bill’s comments can be assigned to one or more of the following three categories:
-“me-too!”, little-phony big-talk
-one-line-wonder, mouthy-dork zinger-wanking
-bill-just-being-a-fugly-f#ckstick-again
Leave any categories out that anyone can see?

Bruce Cobb
August 3, 2014 5:12 pm

I don’t know about the trade winds, but the excuse machine seems to be turbo-charged.

philincalifornia
August 3, 2014 5:20 pm

Never was there so much mental masturbation by so many to assuage so much cognitive dissonance

August 3, 2014 5:21 pm

Trade Winds! That’s the ticket.
No it’s really just Headlines! That’s the way to control the discussion – and keep the sleeping masses asleep with a never-ending drone of sciency-sounding silliness.
Question: Was the pause predicted by any of these so-called experts? You know, something like “Trade Winds Likely to Cause a Pause in Man-Made Global Warming!” perhaps a few to five years before the pause? No? Hmmmm.
Science. Not what it once was.

Bill H
August 3, 2014 5:29 pm

SO now the normal ebb and flow of the ocean due to jet streams is not a causes of warm water distribution? The trade winds checked in with the CAGW scientists and spread their warming instead of creating an El Nino?
Would someone please explain to me HOW this natural wind checked in and said ‘Hi im here and I am caused by man made global warming’… without a shred of empirical evidence…?
I am so confused…..

Latitude
August 3, 2014 5:30 pm

You guys are missing the one I think is the funniest…..
“accelerated sea level rise three times faster than the global average in the Western Pacific”
http://image.made-in-china.com/2f0j00KeNTPWQnZhku/Water-Slide-Hill-Side-WS-038-.jpg

Admin
August 3, 2014 5:33 pm

Similar to dueling pressing releases is dueling reporting.
This is my favorite example of dueling reporting of the same event, the opening Ivanpah Solar Plant.
One says the opening a success, the other a failure. Same day. Same event.

Success

“Huge Ivanpah solar power plant, owned by Google and Oakland company, opens as industry booms”
Failure
“California solar plant greeted with fanfare, doubts about future”

robert Northrop
August 3, 2014 5:44 pm

“Bad CO2 Rising”
I see bad co2 rising.
I see trouble on the way.
I see earthquakes and lightning.
I see bad times today.
Don’t go around tonight,
Well, it’s bound to take your life,
There’s bad co2 on the rise.
I hear hurricanes a-blowin’.
I know the end is comin’ soon.
I feel rivers overflowin’.
I hear the voice of rage and ruin.
Don’t go around tonight,
Well, it’s bound to take your life,
There’s bad co2 on the rise.
Alright!
Hope you got your things together.
Hope you are quite prepared to die.
Looks like we’re in for nasty weather.
One eye is taken for an eye.
Well, don’t go round tonight,
Well, it’s bound to take your life,
There’s bad co2 on the rise.
Don’t come around tonight,
Well, it’s bound to take your life,
There’s bad co2 on the rise.

August 3, 2014 6:05 pm

Hockey Schtick says:
August 3, 2014 at 3:18 pm
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>.
Interesting comments by Trenberth. At least he’s not mad enough that he has to force the journal editor to resign! Bu the really funny quote in Revkin’s article comes from the next scientist quoted after Trenberth. Carl Wunsch of Harvard quotes one of his own colleagues and says:
Just because it is published in Nature or Science doesn’t mean it’s wrong.

RACookPE1978
Editor
August 3, 2014 6:06 pm

charles the moderator says:
August 3, 2014 at 5:33 pm

Similar to dueling pressing releases is dueling reporting.
This is my favorite example of dueling reporting of the same event, the opening Ivanpah Solar Plant.
One says the opening a success, the other a failure. Same day. Same event.

From your link above:

“Sprawling across 3,500 acres (1,400 hectares) in the Mojave desert near the California-Nevada border, the $2.2 billion Ivanpah solar thermal power plant has more than 300,000 mirrors that reflect sunlight onto boilers housed in the top of three towers, each of which is 150 feet (45 meters) taller than the Statue of Liberty.
The sun heats water inside the towers, creating steam that moves turbines and produces enough emissions-free electricity to power 140,000 homes, or about 392-megawatts.”

And, for 1/5 of the price of this 392 MegaWatt solar reflector plant, able to receive solar power only 6 hours per average day but covering 3,500 acres with sun-baked glass, I can build a dual-cycle regenerative heat-exchange fed gas turbine that will turn out 550 MegaWatts of constant power every hour of every day on just 15 acres. And build it in less time at only 1/5 the cost of this solar “wonder” rammed down our throats by the Obama administration and its new medias.

Bill H
August 3, 2014 6:13 pm

http://www.goes.noaa.gov/goes-w.html
I wonder if these typhoons are having an effect…. all five of them… Impressive line-up

handjive
August 3, 2014 6:25 pm

#31?
“NEW YORK: Ants may be cooling the Earth by helping trap carbon dioxide from the environment, a new study claimed.”
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/environment/global-warming/Can-ants-save-Earth-from-global-warming/articleshow/39547238.cms

The Other Phil
August 3, 2014 6:39 pm

Let’s make sure I’ve got this right.
They built models of the climate, which predicted that warming would cause Pacific trade winds to slow.
They observed high winds, rather than the expected slower winds in the Pacific, so they investigated to determine what caused that, and they concluded it was caused by… global warming.
So if the Pacific winds had slowed down, this would have been confirmation that their models were right and global warming was causing it.
In fact, Pacific winds picked up, and the cause is … global warming.
Winds slow.., global warming
Winds fast…global warming
Got it.
I don’t know how anyone can question them.

August 3, 2014 6:42 pm

The warming actually causes cooling temperatures, once again.
There is only so much BS that a smart climate scientist can stand I imagine. At some point, they have to turn on each other.

Arno Arrak
August 3, 2014 6:55 pm

Looked at their paper. It is a mish-mash attempting to tie in the climates in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans with the U.S. climate in between. It is not clear why they think this can be done. Paper has some nice graphics but these are not much help. The only interesting thing I noticed is that they show eastern and central Pacific temperatures completely in La Nina mode. That probably kills the expected El Nino that is supposed to save the warmists from the hiatus any time now. It is a false hope of course because the La Nina that will follow it will take it all back.

Admin
August 3, 2014 7:04 pm

University NSW is on my list of “notable” Aussie schools… 🙂 – http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/05/18/a-queenslanders-guide-to-australian-universities/

Rud Istvan
August 3, 2014 7:06 pm

Anyone who ever commanded on a battlefield, or a training simulation of one, recognizes what this is. Emerging Panic amongst the troops, with a possible rout soon to follow. The formation lines are now visibly breaking.
It must be really tough on the CAGW faithful that Mother Nature’s pause (plus Antarctic sea ice, lack of increasing weather extremes, rediscovery of Darwin’s Voyage of the Beagle insight aboutnthengrowth of coral atolls,…) now shows how stupidly wrong they are. Expect panic signs to increase. Great fun to watch from the other side.

SIGINT EX
August 3, 2014 7:13 pm

From Brothers Jimi and Dylan:
“All Along The Watchtower”
“There must be some kind of way out of here,”
Said the joker to the thief,
“There’s too much confusion, I can’t get no relief.
Business men – they drink my wine
Plowmen dig my earth
None will level on the wine
Nobody of it is worth.”
“No reason to get excited,”
The thief – he kindly spoke,
“There are many here among us
Who feel that life is but a joke
But you and I we’ve been through that
And this is not our fate
So let us not talk falsely now
The hour’s getting late.”
All along the watchtower
Princess kept the view
While all the women came
And went bare-foot servants too
Outside in the cold distance
A wild cat did growl
Two riders were approaching
And the wind began to howl, hey.
😀

August 3, 2014 7:16 pm

I am so glad I went to the Uni of Sydney. But that was a long time ago, when we (the Geoscience Group) were grappling with the hypothesis of Continental Drift and Plate Tectonics. Needless to say I am still a skeptic in that regard, given the number of continental rocks found in the oceans plus many other anomalies that don’t fit the hypothesis. Unfortunately, anyone in my profession that questioned this dogma would be facing ridicule and the sack.
🙂

Alan Robertson
August 3, 2014 7:20 pm

I’m reluctant to say “Good job, Andrew Revkin” ( NYT’s Dot Earth) lest he draw even more fire from the climate fearosphere, but he didn’t hesitate to show that the study is controversial.

August 3, 2014 7:22 pm

Co2 causes WarmColdDroughtFlood everywhere always and some places never.
Got it?

King of Cool
August 3, 2014 7:37 pm

So,
“the increase in these winds has caused eastern tropical Pacific cooling, amplified the Californian drought, accelerated sea level rise three times faster than the global average in the Western Pacific and has slowed the rise of global average surface temperatures since 2001?”
Surely then this must also be the cause of the increasing Antarctic sea ice and the severe cold snaps and the bumper ski-ing conditions in SE Australia?
“Parts of Australia’s southeast have shivered through their coldest August morning in over 50 years. If there was ever a day to stay in bed that bit longer it was Sunday, with overnight temperatures plunging below zero across New South Wales, Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory.
In New South Wales Narrandera in the Riverina dropped to minus five which is nine below average and the coldest August morning in 40 years. Those in Cooma awoke to a very frosty morning with a low of -10.6 degrees while at Perisher Valley it dropped to a bone chilling -13.
Sydney didn’t escape the chill with the western suburbs of Campbelltown, Camden and Richmond all dropping below zero. The city itself had a minimum of just 5.5 degrees, the coldest in four years.
Canberra chilled to minus six making it coldest morning in over a year. In Victoria, Ballarat chilled to -4.6 degrees which was the coldest August morning in 51 years and the coldest of any month in 12 years. At 7:30am it was only 1.4 degrees in Melbourne which is the coldest morning since 1998. At the same time Avalon was sitting on -3.2, the coldest in 17 years.”

(Weatherzone Sunday 03 Aug)
Could it also possibly be the reason that the Ebola virus has reached the USA, Brazil performed badly in the World Cup and Mischa Barton’s career has hit the skids?
Calling Professor Chris Turney from the University of NSW. We need a rapid turbo charged expedition to mid Atlantic to do some urgent on the spot research. Don’t think there are any penguins there but some scientific tourists could be enticed to photograph the plentiful hump back whales and bottlenose dolphins. And there could be a popular view to give Antarctica a miss this year.

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