Friday 27 June 2008

Climate models cop another battering

Do climate models include an allowance for the destruction of ozone over the tropical Atlantic Ocean?

Let's have some time to think about that.

Tick, tock, tick, tock, tick, tock...

...No.
Large amounts of ozone -- around 50% more than predicted by the world's state-of-the-art climate models -- are being destroyed in the lower atmosphere over the tropical Atlantic Ocean. This startling discovery was made by a team of scientists from the UK's National Centre for Atmospheric Science and Universities of York and Leeds. It has particular significance because ozone in the lower atmosphere acts as a greenhouse gas and its destruction also leads to the removal of the third most abundant greenhouse gas; methane.

The findings come after analysing the first year of measurements from the new Cape Verde Atmospheric Observatory, recently set up by British, German and Cape Verdean scientists on the island of São Vicente in the tropical Atlantic. Alerted by these Observatory data, the scientists flew a research aircraft up into the atmosphere to make ozone measurements at different heights and more widely across the tropical Atlantic. The results mirrored those made at the Observatory, indicating major ozone loss in this remote area.

So, what's causing this loss? Instruments developed at the University of Leeds, and stationed at the Observatory, detected the presence of the chemicals bromine and iodine oxide over the ocean for this region. These chemicals, produced by sea spray and emissions from phytoplankton (microscopic plants in the ocean), attack the ozone, breaking it down. As the ozone is destroyed, a chemical is produced that attacks and destroys the greenhouse gas methane. Up until now it has been impossible to monitor the atmosphere of this remote region over time because of its physical inaccessibility. Including this new chemistry in climate models will provide far more accurate estimates of ozone and methane in the atmosphere and improve future climate predictions.

Professor Alastair Lewis, Director of Atmospheric Composition at the National Centre for Atmospheric Science and a lead scientist in this study, said: "At the moment this is a good news story -- more ozone and methane being destroyed than we previously thought - but the tropical Atlantic cannot be taken for granted as a permanent 'sink' for ozone. The composition of the atmosphere is in fine balance here- it will only take a small increase in nitrogen oxides from fossil fuel combustion, carried here from Europe, West Africa or North America on the trade winds, to tip the balance from a sink to a source of ozone"

Professor John Plane, University of Leeds said: "This study provides a sharp reminder that to understand how the atmosphere really works, measurement and experiment are irreplaceable. The production of iodine and bromine mid-ocean implies that destruction of ozone over the oceans could be global".

Dr Lucy Carpenter, University of York and UK co-ordinator of the Observatory added: "This observatory is a terrific facility that will enable us to keep an eye on the chemical balance of the atmosphere and feed this information into global climate models to greatly improve predictions for this region in the future".
No matter that the world is cooling and that models are yet to get anything right even once. Let's spend trillions of dollars anyway.

How will the James Hansens and Al Gores and Nicholas Sterns and Tim Flannerys be viewed in years to come?

Not well, I suspect.

Probably in the same light as eugenics advocates.

(Nothing Follows)

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

models are yet to get anything right even once - oh yes, except for predicting a warming trend in response to increased CO2 (observed, despite your most fervent wishes), a cooling stratosphere in response to increased CO2 (observed), faster warming in the Arctic than anywhere else in response to increased CO2 (observed), and short-lived cooling in response to large volcanic eruptions (observed), among many other things.

Jack Lacton said...

Ahahahahahahaha

God you're thick, Fudgie.

You're getting worse by the day.

Comments you made a few months back at least were lucid but these days you're just whacked out.

Anonymous said...

Oh, what a scientifically convincing response.

Anonymous said...

Physicist Lubos Motls also commented on this:

http://motls.blogspot.com/2008/06/phytoplankton-surprisingly-destroys-lot.html

..and also comments on the incompetent attack of realclimate on the subject.