Saturday, 1 December 2007

CO2 as cause of global warming shown to be more and more bogus every day

It seems that we can't get through a week these days without yet another piece of research coming out that plunges yet another stake in the heart of CO2-as-cause climate science.

In this paper released on November 28, former Climate Believer turned Climate Blasphemer Dr David Evans explains why the evidence that CO2 causes global warming is not almost totally debunked.

Evans starts his Mises.org post thus:
I devoted six years to carbon accounting, building models for the Australian government to estimate carbon emissions from land use change and forestry. When I started that job in 1999 the evidence that carbon emissions caused global warming seemed pretty conclusive, but since then new evidence has weakened that case. I am now skeptical.
The following is Evans' paper:

Current Summary of Crucial Evidence


Background
A paper I wrote that briefly describes the history of why we used to believe that carbon emissions caused global warming, and how we got to where we are now in the debate:

Ice Core Data Reverses — 2003
First crucial point, 2003. We've all seen Al Gore’s movie. It was the early, low resolution ice core data first gathered in 1985 that convinced the world that CO2 was the culprit: CO2 levels and temperature marched in rose and fell in lockstep over the last half a million years, to the resolution of the old ice core data (results from 1985 – 2000, data points over a thousand years apart). It was ASSUMED (bad assumption # 1) that CO2 levels controlled the world’s temperature.

After further research, new high resolution ice core results (data points only a few hundred years apart) in 2000 – 2003 allowed us to distinguish which came first, the temperature rises or the CO2 rises. We found that temperature changes preceded CO2 changes by an average of 800 years. So temperature caused the CO2 levels, and not the other way around as previously assumed. The world should have started back-pedalling away from blaming carbon emissions in 2003.

Greenhouse Signature Missing — 2007
Second crucial point, August 2007. There are several possible causes of global warming, and they each warm the atmosphere at different latitudes and altitudes — that is, each cause will produces a distinct pattern of hot spots in the atmosphere, or “signature”. The greenhouse signature is very distinct from the others: warming due to greenhouse would cause most warming in the tropics at about 10 km up in the atmosphere:



As of August 2007 we’ve measured where the warming is occurring in a fair bit of detail, using satellites and balloons. The observed signature is nothing like the greenhouse signature — the distinct greenhouse signature is entirely missing:



There is
no hotspot in the tropics at 10 km up, so now we know that greenhouse warming is not the (main) cause of global warming — so we know that carbon emissions are not the (main) cause of global warming.

Of course these observations need to be repeated by other researchers before we can be completely sure, but they are made by top-notch researchers and reported in top-of-the-line peer-reviewed journals so at this stage they look solid. This article from August 2007 is a hard read, but the results are new, it is the most accessible on the web so far, and is much easier to understand than the raw scientific papers.

Where the IPCC Models Went Wrong — 2007
So why did we go wrong? Another set of recent observations show why the UN climate models got it wrong.

Doubling atmospheric CO2 from the pre-industrial level of 280ppm up to 560ppm (which is roughly were the IPCC says we will be in 2100) is calculated to raise the world’s air temperature by 1.2C in the absence of feedbacks such as convection and clouds. This is what you would get if the air was in a flask in a laboratory. Everyone roughly agrees with that calculated result.

But the modellers ASSUMED (bad assumption # 2) that increased warming would cause more rainfall, which would cause more clouds high up in the atmosphere — and since high clouds have a net warming effect, this would cause more warming and thus more rainfall and so on. It is this positive feedback that causes the UN climate models to predict a temperature rise due to a rise in CO2 to 560ppm to be 2.5C - 4.7C (of which we have already experienced 0.7C).

But in September 2007 Spencer, who spent a few years observing the temperatures, clouds, and rainfall, reported that warming is actually associated with fewer high clouds. So the observed feedback is actually negative, so we won't even get the full 1.2C of greenhouse warming even if carbon levels double!

As Spencer says with such understatement: "Global warming theory says warming will generally be accompanied by more rainfall. Everyone just assumed that more rainfall means more high altitude clouds. That would be your first guess and, since we didn't have any data to suggest otherwise ...". Science is about observational evidence trumping theoretical calculations, which is exactly what is happening here.

Warming Already Waning
The only temperature data we can trust are satellite measurements, and they only go back to 1979. They show no warming in the southern hemisphere, and the warming trend in the northern hemisphere appears to have waned since 2001:



http://www.junkscience.com/MSU_Temps/RSSglobe.html
http://www.junkscience.com/MSU_Temps/RSSNHem.html
http://www.junkscience.com/MSU_Temps/RSSSHem.html

(Gratuitous advice for those whose jobs depend on the idea that carbon emissions cause global warming: Find another job to pay your mortgage and feed your kids!)

Three Stages of Knowledge and the IPCC
Our scientific understanding of global warming has gone through three stages:
  1. 1985 – 2003. Old ice core data led us strongly suspect that CO2 causes global warming.
  2. 2003 – 2007. New ice core data eliminated previous reason for suspecting CO2. No evidence to suspect or exonerate CO2.
  3. From Aug 2007: Know for sure that greenhouse is not causing global warming. CO2 no longer a suspect.
The IPCC 2007 report (the latest and greatest from the IPCC) is based on all scientific literature up to mid 2006. The Bali Conference is the bureaucratic response to that report. Too bad that the data has changed since then!

(Nothing Follows)

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Jack, is anyone running book on how long Dr Brendan Nelson is going to last at the helm?

If I could short him, I'd bet my house on it.

Anonymous said...

Another excellent post, Jack. You are a terrific resource on this topic.

--Krumhorn

Jack Lacton said...

Kaboom - leadership can bring the best out of people, often unexpectedly as it did with Howard. I'd therefore be careful before passing judgement on Nelson or, indeed, Rudd. Betting one's house at this stage seems a bit premature. Perhaps you can bet the dog's kennel instead and if you lose then he can sleep in the house.

Thanks, Krum, though I must admit that I have mixed feelings about being a terrific resource on what is undoubtedly the world's most boring subject...!

Anonymous said...

kaboom = Krumhorn = Jack Lacton?

This 'David Evans' guy is not a climate scientist. His PhD is in electrical engineering. Why would you believe him over all the scientists actually working in the field? Because his faith agrees with your faith. Science has nothing to do with it.

Jack Lacton said...

Um, anon. The guy wrote the climate modelling software for the Australian Greenhouse Office...

And you might have multiple personality disorder - all with an IQ of less than 80 - but I don't.

Anonymous said...

No, he didn't write climate modelling software. He wrote software which estimated emissions of CO2 from land use. Try understanding who your sources are before you idolise them.