
THE HANDSTAND |
FEBRUARY-MARCH2010
|
ISIS Report 25/01/10
Getting
Sceptical about Global Warming Scepticism
John Cook rebuts the most common
sceptic arguments against global warming
A fully referenced and illustrated version of this article is posted on ISIS members
website, details here, and can
be downloaded here
Whos a
sceptic?
A Gallup poll finds only 58 percent of the general
public believe human activity is changing global
temperatures [1] That is in strong contrast to 97 percent
of actively publishingclimate scientists who say humans
are a significant contributor [2]. Why the
great divide between public opinion and scientific
experts? Unfortunately, there is no shortage of
misinformation and confusion surrounding the climate
debate. How does one penetrate the noise to get real
scientific evidence? When one scans the many
arguments of global warming skeptics [3], a common
pattern emerges. Each argument narrowly focuses on a
small piece of the puzzle while ignoring the broader
picture. This form of cherry picking often leads to
erroneous conclusions.
Human CO2 emissions insignificant compared
to natural emissions?
A typical example is the sceptic argument [4] "Human CO2 emissions are small compared to
natural emissions". The argument is as follows:
Land and vegetation emit 439 Gt of CO2
each year while oceans release 332 Gt. In contrast,
humans emit only 29 Gt of CO2 a year. How can
humans make an impact on climate when our CO2
emissions are so tiny compared to natural emissions?
While these numbers are correct, they dont tell
the full story. This argument fails to disclose that
nature both emits and absorbs carbon dioxide. Land
and vegetation make up a strong carbon sink, absorbing
450 Gt per year. Similarly, the ocean absorbs around 338
Gt per year. As a result, the net natural contribution is
less than zero .
Global carbon cycle
Numbers represent flux of carbon
dioxide in gigatonnes [5]
Is it arrogant to presume mere humans could possibly
influence the immense, uncontrollable forces of nature?
It's not a question of arrogance. It's simply a question
of numbers. Humans are emitting29 Gt CO2 a
year [6]; slightly less than half of that is absorbed by
the natural carbon sinks, so CO2 in the
atmosphere is increasing by 15 Gt per year [7].
Our activities in burning fossil fuels and changing land
use have upset the natural balance. The recent rate of
increase since the industrial revolution is unprecedented
. Furthermore, atmospheric CO2 is at its
highest level in 15 to 20 million years, as documented
most recently in ice core data [8].
CO2
levels (parts per million) over the past 10 000 years
Blue line derived from ice cores
obtained at Taylor Dome, Antarctica [9]; green
linederived from ice cores obtained at Law Dome, East
Antarctica [10]; red line from direct measurements at
Mauna Loa, Hawaii [11]
Theres no empirical evidence that CO2
causes global warming?
How do we know rising CO2 levels actually
cause warming? Sceptics often claim theres
no empirical evidence that humans cause warming [12].
But the evidence is there in the peer reviewed
literature, if they had bothered to look. If CO2
is causing a greenhouse effect, we expect to see less
infrared radiation escaping out to space at the
wavelengths that CO2 absorbs energy.
In 1970, NASA launched the IRIS satellite measuring
infrared spectra. In 1996, the Japanese Space Agency
launched the IMG satellite which recorded similar
observations. Both sets of data were compared to discern
any changes in outgoing radiation over the 26 year period
[13]. What they found was a drop in
outgoing radiation at the wavelength bands that
greenhouse gases such as CO2 and methane (CH4)
absorb energy . Thus the paper found "direct
experimental evidence for a significant increase in the
Earth's greenhouse effect". This result has
been confirmed using data from later satellites [14, 15].
Change in outgoing radiation spectrum from 1970 to
1996 due to trace gases
'Brightness temperature' indicates
equivalent blackbody temperature [13].
When greenhouse gases absorb infrared radiation, the
energy heats the atmosphere which in turn re-radiates
infrared radiation in all directions. Some makes its way
back to the earth's surface. Hence we expect to find more
infrared radiation heading downwards. Surface
measurements from 1973 to 2008 found an increasing trend
of infrared radiation returning to earth [16]. A
regional studyover the central Alpsfound that downward
infrared radiation is increasing due to the enhanced
greenhouse effect [17]. Taking this a step
further, an analysis of high resolution spectral data
allowed scientists to quantitatively attribute the
increase in downward radiation to each of several
greenhouse gases . The downward flux due to CO2
alone was 26 W m-2. The results led
the authors to conclude that [18] "this
experimental data should effectively end the argument by
skeptics that no experimental evidence exists for the
connection between greenhouse gas increases in the
atmosphere and global warming."
Spectrum of the greenhouse radiation measured
at the surface. Greenhouse effect from water vapour is
filtered out, showing the contributions of other
greenhouse gases [18].
An enhanced
greenhouse effect is being observed [19]. The planet
is accumulating heat due to increasing greenhouse gases.
This is the gorilla in the room for those searching for
other causes of global warming how do you account
for all the extra heat trapped by CO2?
Solar activity responsible for global warming?
The most common sceptics approach is to simply
ignore the CO2 effect and focus on other
potential causes, the most popular alternative being the
sun. After all, the sun supplies almost all of our
climates energy. This is the major theme of Martin
Durkins film The Great Global Warming
Swindle which uses a strong correlation between
solar activity and temperature to supposedly prove the
sun is the cause of global warming [20]. The graph
comparing sun to climate shown in the film stopped
mysteriously around 1980. Thats probably because,
unfortunately for the theory, any correlation between sun
and temperature ends around 1975. At this point, the
global climate warmed while solar activity showed a
cooling trend. Over the last 35 years while temperatures
have been rising, the sun has been going in the opposite
direction .
Annual global temperature change (thin light blue)
with 11 year moving average of temperature (thick dark
blue) [21].Annual total solar irradiance (TSI) (thin
light red) with 11 year moving average of TSI (thick dark
red). TSI from 1880 to 1978 reconstructed from sunspot
numbers [22]. TSI from 1979 to 2009 from satellites [23].
The globe is chilling not warming?
Its easy to focus on small pieces of the puzzle
when those pieces happen to be the regions we inhabit.
The cold spell that swept across Eurasia, England and
parts of North America through December 2009 and early
January 2010 led
to many to claim global warming has ended [24]. To
gain a proper perspective of this anomalous weather, we
need tostep back and look at the broader picture such as
a temperature map of all regions north of 30°N .
Map of temperature anomaly for December 2009
at roughly 1000 metres altitude for the region north of
30°N. Areas in orange and red correspond to strong warm
anomalies. Areas in blue and purple correspond to cool
anomalies (courtesy of National Snow and Ice Data
Center (courtesy NOAA/ESRL Physical Sciences Division
[25])
While Eurasia and North America are experiencing
unusually cold weather, other regions such as Greenland,
eastern Siberiaand the Arctic Ocean are experiencing
strong warmth. The hottest regions (more than 7 °C above
average) are over the Atlantic side of the Arctic,
including Baffin Bay and Davis Strait. Unsurprisingly,
sea ice extent was below average in this region.
These strong contrasts in temperature are the result
of a strongly negative phase of the Arctic Oscillation,
caused by opposing patterns of atmospheric pressure
between the polar regions and mid-latitudes. Duringa
negative phase, pressures are higher than normal over the
Arctic and lower than normal in mid-latitudes.In December
2009, the Arctic Oscillation index was the most negative
value since at least 1950.
An even broader picture is a global map of temperature
anomaly in the last week of December 2009. Here we see
that much of the planet is experiencing warmer
temperatures than usual, including North-east America,
Canada, North Africa, the Mediterranean, and south-west
Asia .
Map of global temperature anomalies, December
26 to January 1 [25]
Even surface temperature doesnt give you the
full picture of global warming. The land and
atmosphereare a small fraction of the Earth's climate.The
vast majority of heat build-up from global warming goes
into the oceans. When all the heat accumulating in the
oceans, atmosphere and energy required to melt ice sheets
and sea ice are tallied up, we find the planet has
accumulated 210 x 1021J over the past 35 years
. This is an average rate of 190 260 GW [27]. Considering
a typical nuclear power plant has an output of 1 GW,
imagine 190 000 nuclear power plants pouring their energy
output directly into our oceans.
Total Earth Heat Content from 1950. The energy
to melt ice sheets and sea ice is included in the Land +
Atmosphere portion [27]
John Cook studied physics at the University of
Queensland, Australia, and majored in solar physics in
his post-grad honours year. He runs the Skeptical Science
website www.skepticalscience.com,
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