Wrong reason, right decision

by Lene Johansen on January 12, 2008

in Blog

Climate change is used to justify the most insane political decisions, but for once it is used for a sensible decision. Although there is no direct link between climate change and the drought in Australia, the Aussies have decided to give plants bred with molecular plant breeding techniques (a.k.a. GMO's in politically correct greenspeak) a chance. The problem in Australia is that irrigation has led to droughts and high salinity, but we can blame global warming. As long as they give plant biotech a chance, I really don't care what reason they give.

The Week in Washington

by William Yeatman on January 11, 2008

The U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced on Monday that it would not meet a January 9th court-ordered deadline to decide whether to list the polar bear as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. But a decision could be made in the next month or two.

The biggest booster within the Bush Administration to list the polar bear is Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne, with strong support from Interior's number two, Lynn Scarlett. The obstacle is that bear populations are not threatened and in fact have increased dramatically since 1950, partly or even largely as a result of less hunting.

The basis for listing the bear comes from computer models that predict that global warming will cause widespread melting of the Arctic sea ice in the summer. Polar bears are strong swimmers, but need some sea ice in order to get to their major food source, seals.  The general circulation models used were not designed to have predictive capacity and in fact do not have predictive capacity. However, under the peculiar rules of the Endangered Species Act, these models may have to be deferred to as the best scientific evidence available.

If Secretary Kempthorne gets his way, the polar bear listing will become a powerful tool to stop hydrocabon energy use. Every proposal to build something that would increase greenhouse gas emissions that comes before a local zoning or planning commission could be challenged on the grounds that greenhouse gas emissions increase global warming, which in turn threatens the survival of polar bears. If the planning or zoning body went ahead and approved the permit, then it would likely be challenged in federal court.

Past experience suggests that the Endangered Species Act has such unlimited regulatory reach that most federal judges would decide that it requires them to rule against almost any alleged threat to a protected species.

This is clearly a train wreck in the making, and it can only be hoped that responsible adults in the administration decide to rely on the real science and therefore to squash Kempthorne's effort.

With the Interior Department failing to meet Wednesday's deadline to decide whether to list the polar bear as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act, environmental groups say they are ready to take the federal government to court over the matter.

It’s terrible. We all know that global warming threatens the planet’s future. Everything is getting worse. More people are dying. Or they are supposed to be. It just isn’t working out. It must be an oil company conspiracy!

Reports the Times of London:

GREEN scientists have been accused of overstating the dangers of climate change by researchers who found that the number of people killed each year by weather-related disasters is falling.

Their report suggests that a central plank in the global warming argument – that it will result in a big increase in deaths from weather-related disasters – is undermined by the facts. It shows deaths in such disasters peaked in the 1920s and have been declining ever since.

Average annual deaths from weather-related events in the period 1990-2006 – considered by scientists to be when global warming has been most intense – were down by 87% on the 1900-89 average. The mortality rate from catastrophes, measured in deaths per million people, dropped by 93%.

The report by the Civil Society Coalition on Climate Change, a grouping of 41 mainly free-market bodies, comes on the eve of an international meeting on climate change in Bali.

Indur Goklany, a US-based expert on weather-related catastrophes, charted global deaths through the 20th century from “extreme” weather events.

Compared with the peak rate of deaths from weather-related events in the 1920s of nearly 500,000 a year, the death toll during the period 2000-06 averaged 19,900. “The United Nations has got the issues and their relative importance backward,” Goklany said.

The number of deaths had fallen sharply because of better warning systems, improved flood defences and other measures. Poor countries remained most vulnerable.

Woe, oh woe. Life is getting better … .

 

Paul Chesser, Climate Strategies Watch 

My colleague from the John Locke Foundation, economist Roy Cordato, explains today at National Review Online an energy tax that is part of a bill sponsored by Sens. John McCain and Joe Lieberman:

The EPA has estimated what the McCain energy tax would mean to consumers. Since the bill’s provisions are phased in, the full cost of the tax would not be felt for a number of years. But in a letter to Senator McCain dated July 2007, the EPA estimated that the tax will be about $.26 cents in current dollars per gallon of gasoline by 2030 and $.68 cents per gallon by 2050. For electricity, the EPA estimates that the McCain energy tax would increase individual’s electric bills by 22 percent in 2030 and 25 percent in 2050.

Roy thinks voters in Michigan ought to be especially interested in this McCain proposal.

Kiss My … Face

by Julie Walsh on January 10, 2008

From the January 1st issue of Vegetarian Times:

benevolent BALMS

You'll do more than pay lip service to saving the planet with your purchase of Lip Action. One dollar of each $3.49 sale of Kiss My Face's Lip Action line of lip balms supports the Alliance for Climate Protection, founded by Nobel Peace Prize-winner Al Gore. With eco-aware names like Berry Warm and Glacial Mint, the SPF 15 balms shield against the blast of UV rays while aloe and cocoa butter help smooth and soothe. kissmyface.com

 

It looks like the $210 million-dollar-funded agenda is hard up for cash!

Scientists have discovered that glaciers survived for hundreds of thousands of years during an era when crocodiles roamed the Arctic, reports Roger Highfield.

From Pat Michaels, World Climate Report

Remember the good old days when “fingerprinting” was in vogue as the way to demonstrate a human impact on global climate? The idea was to show that observed temperature changes throughout the atmosphere match well the temperature changes predicted by climate models to occur there. One of the most prominent, and ultimately disproven, attempts was made by Ben Santer and colleagues, back in 1996. Santer et al. published an article in Nature magazine titled “A search for the human influences on the thermal structure of the atmosphere” in which they concluded that “Our results suggest that the similarities between observed and model-predicted changes in the zonal-mean vertical patterns of temperature change over 1963-1987 are unlikely to have resulted from natural internally generated variability of the climate system.” In other words, there must be a human influence on the observed changes. However, we (Michaels and Knappenberger, 1996) published a subsequent Comment in Nature, titled “Human effect on global climate?” describing how the correspondence between the observed patterns of vertical temperature change in the atmosphere and those projected by climate models broke down if a longer time period were considered. In other words, if the comparison was extended from 1958 to 1995 (instead of Santer et al.’s 1963 to 1987) the correspondence between model and observations became much less obvious. We concluded “Such a result… cannot be considered to be a ‘fingerprint’ of greenhouse-gas-induced climate change.” (See here for more details)

Now, 12 years later, another study appears in Nature magazine that suggests that there is a poor correspondence between the observed patterns of vertical temperature change and those predicted to occur by climate models over the high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. This time, Rune Graversen and colleagues from the Department of Meteorology at Sweden’s Stockholm University, conclude in their article “Vertical structure of recent Arctic warming” that variations in atmospheric heat transport from the lower latitudes into the northern high latitudes (via atmospheric circulation patterns) are largely responsible for the enhanced warming of the Arctic atmosphere. This leaves less temperature change there ascribable to our current understanding of anthropogenic global warming.

In fact, the climate model-predicted human ‘fingerprint’ doesn’t match very well at all the observed patterns of temperature change that have taken place in the Arctic atmosphere over the past several decades.

Figure 1 shows how climate models predict that the vertical temperatures in the atmosphere will evolve as more and more CO2 is added to the air. Notice that in the northern high latitudes (to the right in Figure 1), warming takes place at a greater rate at the surface than aloft—this pattern of temperature change is fundamentally different than that expected to occur elsewhere, most notably in the Tropics where more warming is predicted to occur in the middle atmosphere than occurs at the surface (not that things are working out very well there either–see here for our coverage of the latest on the model failings in the Tropics). In the Arctic, the warming is supposed to be enhanced at the surface as a result of a positive feedback loop in which a little initial warming melts some snow and sea ice, which reduces the reflectivity of the surface, allowing it to absorb more incoming solar radiation, which warms it further, leading to more snow and ice melting, and so on and so forth. Much of this feedback involves near surface processes which do not greatly effect conditions higher up in the atmosphere due to the lack of convection in the Arctic (as opposed to the Tropics where convection mixes surface changes up into the atmosphere).


Figure 1. Climate model projections of the zonal averages of the changes in vertical temperatures expected under Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) scenario A1B for the years listed above each figure compared with the average from 1980-1999 (source: IPCC, AR4, Figure 10.7)

However, when Graversen et al. computed the observed vertical temperature changes which took place from 1979-2001, they found a pattern that was completely different from the one projected by climate models. Figure 2 (top) shows that instead of more warming occurring at the surface in the high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, more warming has been occurring aloft. This is completely opposite to how most climate models run with increasing CO2 concentrations predict conditions to evolve (and for that matter, the observed patterns in the lower latitudes were opposite the model projections as well, again, see here for more on this mismatch).

This suggests that something other than CO2 and CO2-related feedbacks (at least as we currently understand them) are playing a large role in the region’s recent temperature trends. Graversen et al. propose that the culprit is the variability of the amount of mid-level heat exchange that takes place in the atmosphere between the lower latitudes and the Arctic. They support this idea by showing how variations in heat exchange are closely related to subsequent patterns of mid-tropospheric temperature variations—the more heat exchange across 60ºN, the greater the temperature anomalies in the mid-atmosphere in the Arctic and vice versa. Furthermore, Graversen et al. report that the amount of heat exchange has been generally trending upwards over the past 20 years or so.

Using the observed relationships between heat exchange and temperature patterns, coupled with the time series of heat exchange, the authors can construct vertical temperature changes that are expected to have occurred in response to the variation in heat exchange. What they find is that the observed pattern of temperature change and the ones they calculate to result from heat exchange variations closely match (Figure 2 bottom). This is an indication that their explanation holds water. However, they freely admit that other processes could be involved as well, including changes in cloud cover and increases in moisture (which may accompany the increased heat exchange). Together, in some combination, Graversen et al. believe that these processes are largely responsible for the observed changes in the temperature patterns in the Arctic since 1979. Note that these variations must be 1) largely natural, and/or 2) poorly captured by climate models, because otherwise the observed changes and modeled changes would be in better agreement.


Figure 2. (top) Observed temperature trends in the northern extratropics during the warm season (April – October) over the years 1979-2001. (bottom) The warming trends expected from the variability in the heat exchange between the low latitude and the high latitudes during the same period. Note that north is to the left in this Figure (From Graversen et al., 2008).

Graverson and colleagues are quick to point out that just because the temperature changes in the Arctic observed over the past 20 some odd years do not well match climate model projections doesn’t meant that they always won’t. Perhaps the near surface CO2-induced processes will eventually begin to dominate the processes of natural variability, or perhaps the climate models may one day be better able to handle heat exchange-related processes. But until that ever happens, pointing to ongoing climate change in the Arctic and yelling ‘fire!’ or, in this case ‘humans!’ seems scientifically a bit premature.

Note (added Jan. 4, 2008): The folks over at RealClimate make the interesting observation that the modeled behavior of the vertical temperature trends over the Arctic during the warm season bears a different character than with the trends over the whole year (as is depicted in our Figure 1). Using the output from the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) model run for the period 1979-2001 and for the Northern Hemisphere warm season (Figure 3), there appears to be a much better match with the observations than is implied by Graversen et al.’s write-up in Nature (although clearly there remains something seriously amiss in the lower latitudes).


Figure 3. The vertical temperature trends during the Northern Hemipshere warm season (May-October) for the period 1979-2001 as produced by the NASA GISS climate model run with all forcings. Note that north is to the right (source: http://data.giss.nasa.gov/modelE/transient/Rc_pj.1.11.html).

Reference:

Graversen, R.G., et al., 2008. Vertical structure of recent Arctic warming. Nature, 541, 53-57.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2007. Fourth Assessment Report, http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/ar4-wg1.htm

Michaels, P.J., and P.C. Knappenberger, 1996. Human effect on global climate? Nature, 384, 522–523.

Santer, B.D. et al., 1996. A Search for Human Influences on the Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere. Nature , 382, 39–45.

Santer et al., 1996. Reply to: Human effect on climate? Nature, 384, 524.

A Spot Check of Global Warming

by Julie Walsh on January 10, 2008

in Blog

Last week I asked if there were any good weather omens to look for. I raised a question originally posed by Roger A. Pielke Jr., a professor of environmental studies at the University of Colorado: Are there any indicators in the next 1, 5 or 10 years that would be inconsistent with the consensus view on climate change?

Lab readers contributed some ideas (and much invective), but I think the most useful one came from a climate scientist who wrote directly to Dr. Pielke and suggested comparing what has happened since 2000 with the predictions made by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

It's not who you think. One report identifies a toymaker and cruise operator among firms most at risk for not telling shareholders enough.