By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
What is science for? Its end and object is to stretch out a fumbling hand for the truth by a humble and eternally-unsatisfied attempt to constrain uncertainties.
The scientific method is hungry curiosity, followed by acute observation, followed by careful measurement, followed by the meticulous application of pre-existing theory to the results, followed by the detailed drafting and reviewed publication of a hypothesis, followed by other scientists’ attempts to overturn the hypothesis, which is either discarded or slowly accorded credence to the extent that it has survived the process of error elimination.
In the physical sciences, absolute proof – which mathematicians call demonstration – is very seldom available. In mathematics, the art that is the language and the queen of the sciences, demonstration is more often available, particularly in number theory, the branch of discrete mathematics that concerns itself chiefly with the integers. Die ganze Zahl schuf der liebe Gott, said Kronecker. Alles übrige ist Menschenwerk.
One of the reasons why the Thermageddonite superstition has been so successful until recently is that just about the only formal demonstration that nine-tenths of the population recall – and even then hazily – is that in the Euclidean and hyperbolic planes the square (or semicircle) on the hypotenuse of a right triangle is equal to the sum of the squares (or semicircles) on the other two sides.
Now, the problem with the theorem of Pythagoras is that it is unquestionably true. For those who agree with the philosopher Schopenhauer that Euclid’s demonstration is “a triumph of perversity”, here is the admirably clear proof by dissection attributed to the fifth-century Hindu mathematican Aryabhatta.
However one looks at the theorem, the wretched thing is objectively true. There are hundreds of distinct demonstrations of it. It is true whether or not you or I or anyone else wants it to be true or believes it to be true or knows it to be true. In the language of theology, it is intrinsice honestum. It is right in itself.
I submit that it is the theorem of Pythagoras that has allowed the Thermageddonites to succeed when, scientifically speaking, they should simply have been laughed at.
For the truth of that venerable theorem has misled generations who have been given some acquaintance with the sciences but little or none with the philosophy of science into believing that every scientific finding is definitive, unalterable, unchallengeable and unquestionable.
Yes, liberating greenhouse gases by combustion will cause some warming – all other things being equal. Yes, we are liberating greenhouse gases by combustion. These things have been established beyond reasonable doubt. But what has not been established is the crucial quantitative question how much warming we may cause.
That simple fact has been relentlessly and artfully concealed from the population, who have been sedulously deluded into believing that “the science is certain” and that anyone who questions how much warming we may cause is by implication also challenging the well-established experimental results showing that greenhouse gases cause warming.
It is worth briefly considering the how much question – or, as the climate scientists call it, the question of climate sensitivity.
In response to my recent posting pointing out that on the RSS satellite record there has been no global warming for 17 years 10 months, a commenter, one Stacey, asked:
“Please could you … demonstrate the actual climate sensitivity in respect of the last 30 years due the increase in CO2 in the atmosphere? My guess is that it’s zero. :-)”
“Stacey” is adopting a sound, scientific approach, beginning with that vital first step: curiosity. Socrates used to say that the first step on the road to knowledge was an awareness of one’s own ignorance. And what is curiosity, the wellspring of the sciences, if not an awareness of one’s own ignorance coupled with a determination to do something about it?
“Stacey” offers the hypothesis, that climate sensitivity to CO2 over the past 30 years has been zero, and asks whether she is right.
So let us examine the hypothesis. We begin with the observation that in the climate there appear to be quasi-periodicities of about 60 years in global temperature – roughly 30 years’ tendency to warm followed by 30 years’ tendency to cool – and that these cycles are tied to, and may be caused by, the great ocean oscillations, of which the most influential seems to be the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.
Therefore, in order to cancel these naturally-occurring cycles, it is necessary either to take periods that are multiples of 60 years in length or to take periods that straddle a phase-transition from one 30-year phase of the PDO to another.
Usefully, the most recent phase-transition in the PDO was in about the year 2000, so that the past 30 years will have been about equally influenced first by a warming phase of the PDO and then by a cooling phase. That removes the most obvious potential natural distortion of our attempt to determine climate sensitivity from what has actually occurred.
Next, measurement. How much global warming was there in the past 30 years? For this, we shall take the mean of the global mean surface temperature anomalies on all five principal datasets – GISS, HadCRUT4, NCDC, RSS, and UAH.
We now make the assumption, for the sake of beginning somewhere, that all of the global warming over this 30-year period was attributable to us.
As the CO2 record on the chart shows, CO2 concentration rose by 54 ppmv over the 30-year period. We shall assume that all that increase in concentration was anthropogenic. If so, official theory suggests it caused 0.78 Watts per square meter of radiative forcing.
We shall also assume that over the period CO2 represented 70% of all anthropogenic forcings, so that the total anthropogenic forcing was 1.11 Watts per square meter. This assumption is derived from the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report.
We shall further assume that none of the warming was committed but unrealized warming from before 1984, or that, if there was some, it was approximately balanced by uncommitted warming generated over the 30-year period but not yet apparent in the temperature record.
Now we can divide the measured temperature change of 0.48 Cº by the total anthropogenic forcing of 1.11 Watts per square meter to obtain the transient-sensitivity parameter λt where t = 30 years, which is 0.43 Cº per Watt per square meter.
However, the instantaneous, Planck or zero-feedback sensitivity parameter λ0, which is the mean of the first derivatives across all latitudes of the fundamental equation of radiative transfer at the characteristic-emission altitude, where incoming and outgoing radiative fluxes balance, is just 0.31 Cº per Watt per square meter (IPCC, 2007, p. 631 fn.).
Next, some handy equations, that you will not find in most textbooks, will help us to determine the system gain Gt, the closed-loop feedback gain gt, and the feedback-sum ft directly from the Planck sensitivity parameter λ0 and the transient-sensitivity parameter λt:
The transient system gain Gt, which is the factor by which the direct warming from anthropogenic forcings is multiplied to allow for the action of feedbacks over the 30-year period, is simply 0.43 / 0.31, or 1.39, showing that short-acting feedbacks have increased the direct warming by almost two-fifths.
The loop gain gt, which is the product of the sum of the short-acting feedbacks and the Planck parameter, is 1 – 0.31/0.43, or 0.28.
Then the feedback sum ft, the sum of all short-acting feedbacks over the period, is 1/0.31 – 1/0.43, or 0.9 Watts per square meter per Celsius degree of warming over the period.
The IPCC’s current central estimate is that at equilibrium, when all short-acting and long-acting feedbacks have acted, the feedback sum is just 1.5 Watts per square meter per Cº (IPCC, 2013, table 9.43, red dot at top right). This is a substantial reduction from the 2.1 Watts per square meter per Cº (blue dot at top right) central estimate implicit in IPCC (2007).
From that current estimate of the equilibrium feedback-sum f∞, which is the sum of all feedbacks acting over the thousands of years till the climate has established a new equilibrium following perturbation by a forcing, the equilibrium system gain G∞ may be determined, using the Bode system-gain equation:
From the Bode equation, the equilibrium system gain G∞ is [1 – 0.31(1.5)]–1, or 1.87. In short, the IPCC’s current implicit central estimate is that feedbacks increase the direct forcing-driven warming by seven-eighths.
The central estimate of Charney sensitivity implicit in the IPCC’s current central estimate of the feedback sum is given by
Thus, the IPCC’s current central estimate of Charney sensitivity to a doubling of CO2 concentration ought to be (5.35 ln 2)(0.31)(1.87), or 2.1 Cº. So the 3.2 Cº that is the current central estimate of the CMIP5 model ensemble is too big by at least half.
The eventual warming as a result of the anthropogenic forcings of the past 30 years will be (1.11)(0.31)(1.87) = 0.64 Cº, of which 0.48 Cº, or three-quarters, has already occurred, leaving just 0.16 Cº warming committed but unrealized over the period. Yet the IPCC says there is about four times that amount of committed but unrealized warming in the pipeline.
Now, all that is set out above is mainstream climate science. It is possible that we caused some of the warming of the past 30 years. It is possible, though by no means certain, that we caused at least half of it.
Why, then, can we not be more precise in deriving a climate-sensitivity estimate from the temperature change and CO2 concentration change we have seen over the past 20 years?
The answer – though you will very seldom hear it from the Church of Thermageddon – is that there are far too many unknowns. The biggest outright lie in the IPCC’s 2013, 2007, and 2001 reports is the notion that we can determine with any confidence the fraction of global warming over recent decades that is attributable to us.
In 2001 the IPCC said it was 66% confident we had caused most of the warming since 1950; in 2001, 90% confident; in 2013, 95-99% confident. All of these confidence values are direct lies. For there is no dataset from whose values any such supposed confidence levels can be determined by any recognizable statistical process.
It is a measure of the contempt in which today’s scientific elite holds the rest of the population that the IPCC, as the elite’s soi-disant spokesman on climate change, could have made and persisted in and doubled down upon these particular lies. It knows it can get away with them, for scientists have abdicated, forfeiting their high priesthood to far-left politicians and profiteering environmental protection rackets.
We do not know enough about the climate to say in what direction, let alone by how much, the climate would be changing in the absence of any anthropogenic influence. We do not know the forcing from CO2 or any other greenhouse gas to a sufficient precision. The official value of the CO2 forcing was cut by a massive 15% in 2001.
We do not know the value of the Planck parameter to any great precision. We thought we did: then the actual mean surface temperature of the Moon was measured, and was found to be 40% adrift from the official value that had been determined on the basis of the lunar sensitivity parameter, and had been confidently published on official government websites.
We do not know what fraction of manmade warming is attributable to each of the greenhouse gases. We do not know the magnitude or even the sign of the forcing from our emissions of soot to the atmosphere.
We certainly do not know the values of the individual temperature feedbacks to anything like the narrow error bars falsely claimed by the IPCC. We do not even know the sign of the cloud feedback, and the IPCC has recently been forced to reduce the value of that feedback drastically.
Then there are the major non-radiative transports: evaporation and convection up, advection across, and precipitation and subsidence down.
We cannot predict the behavior of the oceans – indeed, we cannot even measure changes in their heat content with sufficient resolution to give a meaningful result.
We cannot predict el Niño and la Niña events. Look how many enviro-left news media predicted a record-busting event this year. They predicted it because they wanted it.
They needed it, desperately, to bring the Great Pause to an end and reduce the humiliation that the less dishonest among them are beginning to feel now that the laymen like me at whom they have viciously snapped and sneered for so long are – so far, at any rate – closer to the mark than they and their expensive but useless models.
For it would take only a very small reduction in each of the assumed values on the basis of which the IPCC makes its predictions to reach a climate sensitivity far less than the models’ currently-claimed central estimate of 3.2 Cº per CO2 doubling. And there are powerful theoretical reasons why some of those values must have been greatly overstated, though there is no space to consider them here.
My own best estimate, for what little it is worth, is that a doubling of CO2 concentration would warm the world by about 1 Cº, if that. The IPCC is heading – albeit far too slowly – towards the same answer. It has cut the CO2 forcing; it has accepted that the next-biggest anthropogenic forcing, from methane, has been vastly overestimated; it has slashed the feedback-sum and consequently the equilibrium system gain; it has all but halved its near-term predictions of global warming.
However, the honest answer to Stacey’s question about what climate sensitivity is indicated by the temperature record of the past 30 years is, “We do not know”.
But you will never hear that honesty on the lips of the Thermageddonites, as they furtively and profitably cement in place the last of the thousand interlinked supranational bureaucracies that are the silent sinews of what – if they get their way in Paris in December next year – will be an all-powerful world government founded upon the greatest lie ever told, the lie of certainty in a cloud of unknowing, elected by none, loved by few, feared by all, and answerable only to itself.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
@my dear lord
I was not making any exact predictions
in fact, I just added the forward 5 year only for illustration……
I AM saying we are globally cooling now, and there is no such thing as a “pause”
In nature there no “pause”. We are on a natural curve, so it is either cooling or it is warming.
You must change that mantra and go with what the data are saying, now…….
You also simply ignore the fact that recording- and calibration procedures have greatly improved during the past 5 decades. e.g. recording is now done automatically with multiple probes. Indeed, I have challenged [anyone] to show me a re-calibration certificate of a thermometer dated before 1945
Perhaps you have one of those certificates that I do not know of?
So, really, let us agree to use no data collected before 1964. Where would that leave us? [I think] exactly where I showed you:
http://blogs.24.com/henryp/files/2013/02/henryspooltableNEWc.pdf
3 x rsquared greater than 0.96, means it [i.e. the correlation] will pass any statistical test for significance.
finally, I am at loss with my last equation, for minima, which [apparently] leaves no room for any AGW, unless you have an idea how to put it in whilst still maintaining 100% correlation?
The IPCC will never accept a 1C doubling sensitivity. It is too low for setting the prices of carbon offsets. More, the IPCC is an arm of the UN which takes a direct 2% skim off it carbon development mechanism (CDM) game, basically a phony “authentication” of emissions “reductions.”
You can bother with all the science you want. It’s about the money.
Donald Rumsfeld got a lot of derision for the above quote. In time however most sensible folks came around to the realization that he was right. The things we don’t know that we don’t know are the ones we can’t prepare for and, therefore, come around to bite us in the rear.
M’Lord,
I’d assert that the central climate fallacy is that an average of temperatures has any meaning at all, and the secondary fallacy is that temperatures say much of use about HEAT.
http://chiefio.wordpress.com/2011/07/01/intrinsic-extrinsic-intensive-extensive/
Since temperature is an intrinsic ( intensive ) property, an average of it is void of meaning.
Period. Full stop. End of it all.
Yet folks bang on endlessly about this data set (that is an average of temperatures) or that data set (that is an average of temperatures) or the Global AVERAGE Temperature; all the while blissfully ignorant of the fact that they are entirely void of meaning at the most basic level of physics.
That, then, leads to confounding this ‘temperature’ average with some notion of what is happening with HEAT. Repeat after me: “Temperature IS NOT HEAT.” Period. Full stop.
Now I do it too. Just as you do. Just as we all do. Because it is so easy to do, and everyone else is doing it… but it is, at the very core, a fallacy.
Recently someone said that the tops of clouds were cold so were not important in heat transport / radiation to space. Completely confounding temperature (cold) with heat ( IR to space) transfer. The reality is that the calories / lb of water that condensed in the cold altitude were in fact dumped to the near zero K of space, though at a low temperature.
Well, that’s my rant… Meanwhile, back at your posting:
The usual elegant turn of phrase. The expected sharp whit and clear mind. Yet…
Frankly, having tutored many a dolt though math in High School, I must assert that most of them don’t have a clue what they studied and past oh so long ago. Ask them who Pythagoras was or how to demonstrate the thesis and you will get blank stares, even from the bright ones. (Maybe things are different in the UK. Mum was from England, and she was a bit brighter than average on this side of the pond…) So I wonder how much it really taints their vision. Frankly, I think they largely just thinks “I’m a bit slow, and those folks are smart, so they must be right.” Ignoring the fact that all people are prone to error and all of us are a bit stupid at times.
Finally, on the question of the 30 year vs 17 (14, 15, 16, …) year halt of warming:
There are more than just 60 year cycles. The lunar tidal ocean mixing cycle has an 18 year component (Saros) and an every third time (so about 54 year) return of the same bit of ocean / land under it cycle:
http://chiefio.wordpress.com/2013/01/24/why-weather-has-a-60-year-lunar-beat/
and there are longer cycles out to 1500, 5000, and about 23000 years as various lunar wanderings stir the ocean differently. To only allow for the 60 (ish) year range is a bit limiting…
We get ENSO / El Nino steps up during long warming cycles. Then we get ENSO / La Nina steps down during long cooling phases. Right now, the warming has ended and we are in transition. The next phase is a long series of La Nina steps down. As that 1500 ish (or 1800 / 1200 year nodes with average about 1500 years) cycle swaps phase.
It is, really, all ‘wheels within wheels” and to only account for one of them is a, while an improvement over most, not quite complete.
My final bone of contention is just this: You average a bunch of data sets as though they were of similar merit. I know, I know… it’s a nice ploy to avoid being accused of playing favorites or of cherry picking… but really: NCDC, Hadley, and GISS are all largely just different perversions layered on top of the actual data. GHCN lays beneath them all. It is the only real “data set”. The rest are Data Food Products made via dodgy manipulation of GHCN. So by using them (and worse, averaging the three of them together and thus giving their manipulation more weight / merit) you validate them. They are fundamentally broken and are ‘economical with the truth’ of global temperature data, IMHO.
OK, enough of a rant. With all that said: Your posting is a pleasant read, and has a stronger awareness of the needs of the political / position game than I will ever have. I suspect you are well aware of everything I’ve said, but have balanced it against the needs of reality…. And it was fun to read….
Christopher Monckton of Brenchley: Mr Weinstein says I should not have assumed that recent warming was largely manmade. I made no such assumption: I said it was a possibility.
Please forgive my nitpicking a rather nice essay and comments, but you did indeed “make the assumption”, as you clearly stated, for the purposes of deriving its logical and mathematical consequences (We now make the assumption, for the sake of beginning somewhere, that all of the global warming over this 30-year period was attributable to us. ) Having written the proposition as an assumption, you did not write it as an “assertion” (literally a proposition asserted to be true), nor did you write any of the conclusions as “assertions”. The one unambiguous assertion is: However, the honest answer to Stacey’s question about what climate sensitivity is indicated by the temperature record of the past 30 years is, “We do not know”.
These are not errors and mistakes, the claims of certainty by the warmistas. This is intentional obfuscation. They are not innocent misguided lambs, they are wolves.
H. Grouse…Science comes with qualifiers. Statements need to be examined in light of those qualifiers. The one you missed? “All things being equal…”
Unfortunately we no longer live in a society which operates on the basis of fact and reason. We live in a society that operates more like George Orwell’s 1984. It is a society where 2+2=5 because the government says so. If you don’t agree you will be tortured until you do agree. The government routinely changes history to support their agenda. They can make the record colder in the past as well as warmer in the present to exaggerate the warming trend. If you don’t agree with the claims of the alarmists you are written off as a quack. The torture hasn’t started yet, but some of the alarmists have suggested that those who don’t subscribe to CAGW be sent to re-education camps. The torture may start soon enough.
Great couple of articles the last few days,Lord Monckton. One silly(?) question though. How do you get lamdas,infinties,etc. to show up when typing.I understand the formulas and such,however learned them 35 years ago with pen and paper.I never did catch onto computer lingo.
And commieBob…BINGO. That is why,IMHO,curiosty must be the driving factor in science,however,it must be for the truth,not some pre-concieved idea or scam.We may never find it,but if we stop looking for it,we are pooched.
This may be M’Lord’s best post ever. The quality of the comments proves the point.
stan stendera says at August 3, 2014 at 1:55 pm…
Speak openly, please.
The comments are varied, true, and…
It is my failing that half the comments are mis-formatted…
But my intention was to be helpful.
“My own best estimate, for what little it is worth, is that a doubling of CO2 concentration would warm the world by about 1 Cº, if that.”
I think that’s a pretty darn good guess, but let’s not forget that while it is generally accepted that TCR is less than ECS that is not necessarily the case. Feedbacks over the long haul could still turn out to be net negative such that even if TCR ends up being greater than 1 K, ECS could still end up being less than 1 K.
H Grouse says:
August 3, 2014 at 11:57 am
“Then you need to explain why in the past 17 years an 10 months the increase of 35 ppm (10%) has had no effect.”
—————
H Grouse, the simple explanation is, if I may, is that the author’s claim that an increase in CO2 ppm, be it 35 ppm or greater, ….. “will cause some warming” is based solely on the mathematical calculations via use of the physical IR absorption/emission properties of the CO2 molecule … and thus the mathematically calculated “warming” for a 35 ppm increase in CO2 is an insignificantly small number and is therefore non-measurable by use of present day instruments.
And if said calculated increase is non-measurable then it is permissible to claim it “had no effect”.
And if the truth be told, one can not actually measure the “warming” effect of the current 400 ppm of CO2 via use of present day instruments.
And neither is anyone capable of actually measuring the “warming” effect of a daytime increase of 400 ppm of H2O vapor (humidity) via use of present day instruments.
Said “warming” effect can be calculated ….. but it can not be measured via a thermometer.
Patience, the Paris conference at the end of 2015 will be an unexpected cracker.
The following is an honest and I summary of the state of climate science as expressed by three serious scientists :-
“Our knowledge of the causes of climatic change is still highly imperfect. It is not a field in which many people can dwell comfortably for a long time because it is almost entirely speculative…. No completely acceptable explanation of climatic change has ever been presented, and it is also clear that no one process acting alone can explain all scales of climatic change….. We are dealing with an immensely complex series of of interrelated systems: the solar system, the oceans and the land. It is thus unlikely that any simple hypothesis or model of climatic change will have very wide applicability…… It is clearly impossible at the present state of knowledge to make any safe prognosis of the climatic developments of the future. Because of the complexity of the atmospheric system and the large number of possible causes, it is difficult to assess and quantify the role that man has played, though certain mechanisms of man-induced climatic changes on a global ( as opposed to a micro-climatic scale) can be recognised.
Quoted from Anderson, Parker and Goudie ; Global Environments through the Quarternary.- Oxford University Press, 2007)
Justthinkin says:
August 3, 2014 at 1:53 pm
Great couple of articles the last few days,Lord Monckton. One silly(?) question though. How do you get lamdas,infinties,etc. to show up when typing.
See if you get some help at the WUWT Test area here:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/test-2/
Corallary of the h1 could be ‘There are known knowns and then there are our knowns. We hope everyone listens to our version’.
You stated “……for scientists have abdicated, forfeiting their high priesthood to far left politicians and profiteering environmental protection rackets” and I agree. I hope that others feel as I do, that the title of “scientist” is a privilege , no an honor, and we need to remember those who prostituted that honor for money and perverted fame. I for one have a list of these political whores, and will never, never consider them as scientists, and thus diminish the work I have done to proudly claim that title. I hope for an accounting at some future date, but until then I will not address them or consider them scientist .
Thank you for you lucid post.
I’m sure many here may recall this:
“I know you think you understand what you thought I said,
but I’m not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.”
Perhaps, in the “Climate Change” discussion, the Alarmist/Warmists could use:
“We know you think you understand what we think we know,
but we are not sure you realize that what we think we know is not what we know.”
Or something like that.
milodonharlani says:
August 3, 2014 at 12:13 pm
“Such a small increase is negligible, as indeed is 100 ppm, when considered against the 40,000 ppm of water vapor in the tropics.”
——————
Right you are, milodonharlani .
Likewise, the “warming” effect of the current 400 ppm of CO2 is negligible when considered against the average 15,000 to 30,000 ppm of H2O vapor (humidity) that is per se resident in the near-surface atmosphere of the temperate zones.
Lord Monckton
For an article that is all about proof, I find the statement “Yes, liberating greenhouse gases by combustion will cause some warming – all other things being equal.” to be very strange.
First it is necessary to define what you mean, and the terms being used. Second, is it even possible for all things to remain equal given that you are consuming something by burning it, in the course of which oxygen from the atmosphere is being absorbed, resulting in the release of some oxygenated gas and water and heat? Third, where is the proof as to the correctness of that statement, or is the reader to take it as true on trust just because the theorem of Pythagoras is intrinsice honestum. It is right in itself.
As you know, when man first started burning CO2 in large quantities, say as from the late 1940s, it appears that the globe cooled, not warmed.
As you know, these past 17 years 10 months during which time about 30 to 33% of all manmade CO2 emissions has taken place, it appears that the globe has not warmed at all.
Both of these facts suggest that may be the statement “…liberating greenhouse gases by combustion will cause some warming – all other things being equal…” may not be correct
Of course, you may wish to argue that all other things were not equal in the two examples that I cite. If so, please identify those things and please detail how those things played out, not only during the periods of the two examples cited by me, but during the last 1200 or so years.
But I suspect that you (and indeed anyone) will be unable to detail how all other things may have changed over that period. That being the case, we simply do not know, for example, whether the reason why there has been no observed warming these past 17 years 10 months is because all other things have not remained equal (and have instead managed to cancel out the warming that would otherwise have taken place), or whether all other things have in fact remained equal, and the reason why there has been no warming is simply because ‘liberating greenhouse gases by combustion does not cause some warming’
PS. I agree with the title of the article.
PPS. I am not saying that liberating greenhouse gases by combustion does not cause some warming, merely I am questioning the proof behind the correctness of such assertion.
Simple analytics and curve fitting aside, fact is that the bulk of scientific studies (not just modeling, but analysis of past climates) suggest climate sensitivity in the range of 2-5 C:
http://www.skepticalscience.com/climate-sensitivity.htm
Yes, there is a lot of uncertainty, and Monckton is entitled to his opinion of 1 C or less (based on some oversimplified math), but it is a gamble at this point, and I don’t think it’s prudent to wishfully hope for the low end.
Samuel C Cogar says:
August 3, 2014 at 2:08 pm
” therefore non-measurable by use of present day instruments.”
…
Wait a minute (or 17+ years) , how about these “instruments?”
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/uah/from:1997/plot/uah/from:1997/trend
But there are also unknown unknowns, the ones we don’t know we don’t know.
==========
the history of science shows that with every answer, we get two new questions. eventually, as you learn more about a subject, you discover how little you actually know.
climate science has so few questions because they have discovered so few answers. in time, as answers are discovered, there will be many questions raised.
Strange how that atmospheric CO2 works. Since the first half of the 80s, it caused two substantial upward shifts in mean global temperature (about +0.2 degrees on each occasion), both occurring abruptly within the time span of a year and both times just at the transition between strong, solitary El Niños and the directly succeeding strong La Niñas – the world simply not cooling adequately with the cold ENSO events. Otherwise, nothing. Major action in two specific years, 1988 and 1998. No action whatsoever in the other 30.
http://i1172.photobucket.com/albums/r565/Keyell/NINOvsglOIv2_zps5be10b66.png
http://i1172.photobucket.com/albums/r565/Keyell/GWexplained_zps566ab681.png
Going back to 1970, there are three years of major upward shifts. And 40 years of nothing.
Now how is that CO2 climate sensitivity supposed to work again? Like that?