From the University of Colorado at Boulder and “when pigs fly, climate models will capture all the missing details” department comes this oinker of a press release.
Islands facing a dry future
Today’s global climate models do not capture the effects of climate change on islands’ aridity

Island nations could be forgiven for feeling slighted. They already face the brunt of the effects of climate change: Rising sea levels, dwindling resources, threats to infrastructure and economic foundations. But to add insult to injury, thousands of these islands are too small to be accounted for in the global climate models (GCMs) used by scientists to measure the effects of climate change.
In a new study published in the journalNature Climate Change, a new way of modeling the effects of climate change on islands shows that previous analyses underestimated the number of islands that would become substantially more arid by mid century-73 percent, up from an estimate of 50 percent. That leaves the population of those islands–approximately 18 million people–in the position of being what CIRES Fellow Kris Karnauskas, the paper’s lead author, and his coauthors refer to as “computationally disenfranchised.”
It also means that what’s known about the effects of climate change on islands’ freshwater systems may have been woefully incomplete. GCMs show 50 percent of all small islands becoming wetter and 50 percent becoming drier, as far as rainfall goes. But those models by themselves don’t take into account what happens on the surface of these unaccounted-for islands and, in fact, Karnauskas and his coauthors found that 73 percent of islands will actually become more dry as a result of increased evaporation. “Islands are already dealing with sea level rise,” says Karnauskas, also a professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder. “But this shows that any rainwater they have is also vulnerable. The atmosphere is getting thirstier, and would like more of that freshwater back.”
The problem stems from the fact that GCMs aren’t all that fine-grained. These models divide the planet into a grid and each grid box is approximately 240 km by 210 km. That’s a pretty big space and if there’s a tiny island–or even an island chain like French Polynesia–alone in one of those grid boxes, it makes it impractical to include them in the model. “Think of pixels,” says Karnauskas. “If they’re too big to resolve the freckles on someone’s nose, you won’t be able to see those freckles. You have to have super fine pixels to resolve it, and frankly that’s not what global climate models were designed to do.”
The “pixels” of the GCMs are too big and scientists don’t have the computer resources yet to do something on a more refined scale. Take, for example, an island like Easter Island, which is 3,512 kilometres off the coast of Chile in the South Pacific. Easter Island is small and it’s the only spot of land in its GCM grid box. Essentially, it’s a freckle and the GCM can’t get down to that level of detail. So, in the current GCMs, Easter Island doesn’t exist–that whole grid square is just considered open ocean.
That’s the case with islands all over the globe and it’s a real problem when it comes to knowing what climate change will do to islands’ freshwater supplies. Unlike continents or larger islands, the effects of climate change on freshwater for these smaller, isolated islands aren’t being calculated. “Paper after paper in my field show changes in drought or aridity,” says Karnauskas. “But my eye always looks at the maps and graphs in those papers and I wonder why we can’t see islands. Using models, it turns out, is much less straightforward for islands than for places where there are big chunks of land.”
To understand how climate change will affect freshwater, scientists have to understand what’s happening with precipitation and evaporation. The first part is easier: Current GCMs can tell you all about precipitation over land or over the ocean. Even in a grid square like the one that’s home to Easter Island, they can estimate how much precipitation is likely falling from the sky.
But evaporation is another matter. When it comes to those same small islands, the models don’t show how much water is evaporating because those islands don’t exist in the models–it’s all ocean there. Nor can it be calculated using the amount evaporating off the ocean, as ocean evaporation follows different physical principles than water evaporating off land. Without knowing how much water is evaporating off these islands, there’s been no way to know exactly how the freshwater supplies are being affected. So Karnauskas and his former colleagues from the Woods Hole Institute in Massachusetts developed a way to get the information needed to know what’s happening on islands.
Karnauskas draws a diagram of a cube on a white board. “This is a 3-D picture of an ocean grid cell,” he explains. “Say there’s an island in here. The climate model doesn’t have the island but let’s go to the location where there ought to be an island and use the information on the model atmosphere from directly over that cell.” Essentially, they’re looking at the climate above the surface of the island to make an approximation of the island’s actual climate. They can do this because many of the islands are so small that climate above the island isn’t much different from climate above the ocean, especially averaged over a day or longer. That’s been verified even on islands as large as Maui, where data from weather stations at airports shows surprisingly little difference from data from weather stations moored hundreds of kilometers offshore.
“We called it the blind pig test,” explains Karnauskas with a grin. “If you were a blind pig flying in this area, would you know there was an island here? Could you feel a difference in the heat or the humidity?” A “successful” blind pig test means you can’t tell if you’re over land or over ocean. If that’s the case, scientists don’t need to know anything from the land itself to predict evaporation; they just need to know what’s happening in the atmosphere right near the surface. From that information, and some tools borrowed from the engineering field, they can glean how much water is evaporating and, thus, get a more accurate picture of the ratio of precipitation to evaporation in a particular area.
Karnauskas sees this work as extremely important, both for understanding climate change in these regions and in considering human health and safety. A vast majority of the people living on these remote island rely on rainwater as the source of their drinking water. And for those that already have health issues due to water quality, increased pressure on freshwater systems will only exacerbate the problem. Already someone from the Cook Islands, an archipelago in the South Pacific Ocean, saw mention of his research online and reached out for more details. “There’s an opportunity to get important information out there,” Karnauskas says. “This is a framework to provide more accurate information on what to expect.”
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“…because many of the islands are so small that climate above the island isn’t much different from climate above the ocean, especially averaged over a day or longer.
…That’s been verified even on islands as large as Maui, where data from weather stations at airports shows surprisingly little difference from data from weather stations moored hundreds of kilometers offshore.”.
That might be true for tiny flat atolls, but even they have differences between the ocean. Maui certainly has different weather inland than on the ocean, his statement is just flat wrong.
Apparently, this “climate scientist” never heard of orographic lifting related to wind patterns for islands, and how rainfall is mostly dependent on wind, not the climate of the island. .

Hawaii’s rainfall pattern is spectacularly diverse (above). Annual means range from 204 mm (8 inches) near the summit of Mauna Kea to 10,271 mm (404 inches) near Big Bog on the windward slope of Haleakalā, Maui. In general, high mean rainfall is found on the windward mountain slopes, and low rainfall prevails in leeward lowlands and on the upper slopes of the highest mountains.
When wind blows against the slopes of mountains, air is forced to rise (orographic lifting), producing orographic clouds and rain on the windward slopes. Because “trade winds” in Hawaii blow persistently from the ENE direction, the pattern of cloudy, wet conditions on the windward slopes is familiar to everyone in Hawaii. This simple relationship between wind direction and topography explains much of the pattern of rainfall in Hawaii. These windward mountain slopes receive abundant rainfall throughout the year.

Source: Giambelluca, T.W., Q. Chen, A.G. Frazier, J.P. Price, Y.-L. Chen, P.-S. Chu, J.K. Eischeid, and D.M. Delparte, 2013: Online Rainfall Atlas of Hawai‘i. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc. 94, 313-316, doi: 10.1175/BAMS-D-11-00228.1.
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Just as soon as those poor Fijians clear away all the moisture in the atmosphere they’ll be able to find the aridity underneath-
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-04-04/heavy-rain-causes-widespread-flooding-in-fiji/7298610
This is a shorter version of my comment published April 12th at 6:37 pm. Nothing wrong with the original, just annoying duplication of the starting section that has nnow been removed.
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The journal is called “Nature Climate Change” which tells you what their prejudice is right up front. They left just one thing out: the word “Anthropogenic” should also be added to the title so as to more accurately describe their aim. This being the case, it is not surprising that if a survey shows that climate in 50 percent of the islands will become wetter and in 50 percent it will become drier with climate change they want to stretch it to 73 percent getting drier by mid-century, not 50 percent as the survey shows. That is because small islands were not counted, they say, when that 50-50 split was determined. Bear in mind here two things: first, that 73 percent is a pure guesswork made necessary to get the paper into this journal. And second, but not least, global temperature has not increased since 1997. This last fact makes this particular journal only suitable for happenings before that fateful year of 1997. But let us follow them anyway. “…The… Islands are already dealing with sea level rise,” says professor Karnauskas, the lead author. That is not new because it has been going on for years and years. In the year 2008 it was determined in fact that global sea level rise had been linear for the previous eighty years, with a slope if 2.46 millimeters per year. Anything that has been linear this long is not about to change anytime soon. 2.46 millimeters a year works out to approximately ten inches per century. The global ocean and its islands just have to wait patiently for that ten-inch sea rise to reach them. And then, the good professor complains that: “… in the current GCMs, Easter Island doesn’t exist–that whole grid square is just considered open ocean…. That’s the case with islands all over the globe…” So true. What he is asking for is to further extend the capabilities of GCMs so he can better evaluate what is happening in the islands. I am not opposed to more and better research tools for scientists. I am simply opposed to financing such tools as a mission creep using the billions and trillions of global warming dollars that are illegitimately obtained by lying about the coming dangerous global warming. This well-organized theft of national treasure started with the Kyoto Protocol and continued with the Copenhagen and Paris conferences where huge chunks of western wealth were shifted to UN control without the people being fully informed of the consequences for their way of life. The boogey-man that was and is involved is greenhouse warming by carbon dioxide. It is not well known that most of the twenty-first century has been a hiatus period. During a hiatus period atmospheric carbon dioxide keeps increasing but global temperature does not. This goes against the Arrhenius greenhouse theory that is used by IPCC. The only greenhouse theory that correctly explains this observation is the Miskolczi greenhouse theory or MGT. According to MGT, carbon dioxide cannot warm the atmosphere because water vapor in the atmosphere blocks the greenhouse warming by carbon dioxide that supposedly is the cause all the warming those three conferences were about. GCM is almost childishly small project compared to those moneys collected to save the world but serves as an example of what is happening. The only legitimate use for a GCM is climate forecasting. Climate warming propaganda is good and has managed to attach “dangerous” to “climate change.” It used to be called simply “global warming.” But how did it become believable? Part of it is incessant propaganda and part of it is global temperature forecasts that give wrong information. Every single forecast since Hansen started it in 1988 has been wrong. In the direction of predicting more warming than we got. They have been at it for 27 years by now and there is no improvement compared to the very first fiasco from Hansen. During this time there have been numerous opportunities to cross check predictions with reality. It is fairly certain that this cannot happen by accident. There is no doubt about it now – the climate projections/predictions are so bad that their entire computer system should be shut down. This includes the CMIP5 system as well that produces those worthless horse whips that have nothing to do with reality.
Arno, good response. My thought is that if they keep saying that there is an increase in evaporation and the island will become arid, well what the heck is happening to all the evaporation in the ocean. How can you have dangerous evaporation only on the island and not in the ocean? WHAT? So the sea level rise will not be effected by the evaporation! If all this precipitation is leaving the planet then there should be no sea level rise, right? Or is this OL’ country boy missin’ somethin’. Can them thar smart fella’s and feller’s assist please.