Month: May 2017

Roy Spencer on ‘Santer takes on Pruitt’ 

Roy Spencer on ‘Santer takes on Pruitt’ 

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US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) chief Scott Pruitt

As Dr Roy Spencer points out: ‘You can’t build a case for human-caused warming by relying on natural warming! (But, they did anyway.)’

A new paper in Nature: Scientific Reports by Santer et al entitled Tropospheric Warming Over the Past Two Decades begins with this:

After a recent Senate confirmation hearing, Scott Pruitt the new Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency received a written question regarding observed warming estimates. In response, Mr. Pruitt claimed that over the past two decades satellite data indicates there has been a leveling off of warming. We test this claim here.

Now, exactly how does one scientifically test a claim of “leveling off of warming”?


First, the claim would have to have some unambiguous meaning which can be evaluated quantitatively. Does it mean that warming has decelerated in the last two decades, and is approaching zero? That would be my first interpretation of “leveling off”.

And by “two decades” did Pruitt mean exactly 20 years?

The wording is ambiguous. But the authors decided Pruitt meant “there has been zero warming” for exactly 20 years. They proceeded to evaluate this interpretation with a statistical analysis of the various satellite temperature datasets, as well as with climate models.

The result is a peer-reviewed study which took less than one month to sail through peer review.

Wow. If I only knew earlier that I could get peer-reviewed scientific papers by evaluating the silly climate claims made by politicians (Al Gore, Barack Obama, et al.) over the years.

Continued here.

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May 25, 2017 at 07:27AM

Now the coldest millennium in 8,000 years

Now the coldest millennium in 8,000 years

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Please, will someone show this graph to President Trump.


_____________________________________

Now the coldest millennium in 8,000 years

The reversion to a true ice age is almost overdue
By Ed Hoskins

The last millennium, 1000AD – 2000AD, has been the coldest millennium of the entire current Holocene interglacial.


Graph by Ed Hoskins

Each of the notable high points in the Holocene temperature record, (Holocene Climate Optimum – Minoan – Roman – Medieval – Modern), have been progressively colder than the previous high point.

For its first 7-8000 years the early Holocene, including its high point known as the “climate optimum”, temperatures have been virtually flat, with an average drop of only ~0.007 °C per millennium.

But the more recent Holocene since a “tipping point” at around 1000BC, 3000 years ago has seen temperature fall at about 20 times that earlier rate at about 0.14 °C per millennium .

The Holocene interglacial is already 10 – 11,000 years old and judging from the length of previous interglacial periods, the Holocene epoch should be drawing to its close: in this century, the next century or this millennium.

But the slight beneficial warming at the end of the 20th century to the Modern high point has been transmuted into the “Great Man-made Global Warming Scare”.

The recent warming since the end of the Little Ice Age has been wholly beneficial when compared to the devastating impacts arising from the relatively minor cooling of the Little Ice Age, which include:

• Decolonisation of Greenland
• Black death
• French revolution
• Failures of the Inca and Angkor Wat civilisations
• etc., etc.

As global temperatures have already been showing stagnation or cooling over the last nineteen years or more, the world should now fear the real and detrimental effects of cooling, rather than being hysterical about limited, beneficial or probably now non-existent further warming.

Warmer times are times of success and prosperity both for man-kind and the biosphere.

One should think of the Holocene interglacial epoch as a whole with its progressively cooler and cooler warm episodes:

• the Holocene Climate Optimum
• the Minoan warming
• the Roman warming
• the Medieval warm period
• recent modern warming, 1975 – 2000.

For example during the Roman warm period the climate was warmer and wetter so that the Northern Sahara was the breadbasket of the Roman empire .

According to the Ice Core records, each of these successive Holocene warm periods have been cooler than the one previously and a tipping point towards accelerated global cooling occurred at about 1000BC.

The coming end of the present Holocene interglacial will in due course again result in a mile high ice sheet over much of the Northern hemisphere. As the Holocene epoch is already about 11,000 years old, the reversion to a true ice age is almost overdue and would be the real climate catastrophe.

With the present reducing Solar activity, significantly reduced temperatures, at least to the level of another Little Ice Age are predicted for later this century .

Whether the present impending cooling will really lead on to a coming glacial ice age or not is still in question.

This point is more fully illustrated here:
http://ift.tt/1KDsx6V


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May 25, 2017 at 07:25AM

George Noory to appear live in Seattle

George Noory to appear live in Seattle

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And I’ll get to appear with him! Saturday evening, July 29, 2017
Click on video (below) to view George Noory’s invitation.





George Noory is host of Coast to Coast am, heard on more than 550 radio stations across the U.S and Canada.

The show will be held in Everett, Washington, just a few miles north of Seattle.

Click below for tickets and more information
Or call the box office at 425-258-6766

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The Historic Everett Theatre
2911 Colby Ave
Everett, Washington 98201
425-258-6766

 

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May 25, 2017 at 06:55AM

Estimating Cloud Feedback Using CERES Data

Estimating Cloud Feedback Using CERES Data

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Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

As usual, Dr. Judith Curry’s Week In Review – Science Edition contains interesting studies. I took a look at one entitled “Cloud feedback mechanisms and their representation in global climate models“, by Ceppi et al., hereinafter Ceppi2017. The paper looks at the changes in the radiative effects of clouds. From the paper:

The radiative impact of clouds is measured as the cloud-radiative effect (CRE), the difference between clear-sky and all-sky radiative flux at the top of atmosphere. Clouds reflect solar radiation (negative SW CRE, global-mean effect of −45 W m−2) and reduce outgoing terrestrial radiation (positive LW CRE, 27 W m−2), with an overall cooling effect estimated at −18 W m−2 (numbers from Henderson et al.[36]).

The Ceppi2017 Figure 1 shows that almost all of the models report that as the modeled surface warms, the modeled clouds change in such a way as to increase the modeled warming. On average, Figure 1 shows that for every degree C that the modeled surface warms, the modeled clouds add on another ~ 0.5 W/m2 of additional modeled forcing.

cloud feedback cepp1 fig 1

Figure 1. First figure in Cepp1017, as detailed in their caption.

Let me say that I find such a large positive cloud feedback to be very doubtful. Setting that aside for the moment, the Ceppi2017 authors have included a graphic showing the average change in the modeled cloud radiative effect from a number of models.

cloud feedback ceppi fig 3

Figure 2. Average modeled net cloud feedback, from Ceppi2017.

I thought, hmmm … I wondered how that compared to the CERES data. Here’s a look at the same thing, net cloud feedback … except theirs is modeled and the CERES satellite data below is observational.

net cloud feedback CERES

Figure 3. Average of 180 months of CERES data showing the relationship between changes in temperature and corresponding changes net cloud feedback. The calculations are done on a gridcell by gridcell basis, with the monthly gridcell climatology removed before the calculations.

Now, while the models kind of get it right, there are several problems with them. In the CERES data above, you can clearly see the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) as the yellow/green area above/below the equator in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans. In the models, it is only weakly visible in the Atlantic and is missing in the Pacific and Indian Oceans.

Next, the CERES data shows that much more of the planet has negative net feedback than the models claim. The entire southern extra-tropics shows negative cloud feedback, some of it quite strong.

Next, because theirs is an average of various models, it doesn’t capture the full variation in the net cloud feedback. In the real world, there are areas of both strong positive and strong negative feedback.

Finally, on average the CERES data shows that the net cloud feedback is negative. Now, we have to take the accuracy of that number with a grain of salt, in that we are looking at trends. Trends are a ratio, and ratios tend to distort averages. For example, the area-weighted average of the trends as shown in Figure 3 is -1.4 W/m2 per °C. A better measure is likely the area-weighted median of the trends, which is -0.5 W/m2 per °C.

Alternatively, we can look at the relationship on a global basis. Here’s a scatterplot of the monthly residual changes in CRE versus the monthly residual changes in temperature (after removing the global monthly climatology).

scatterplot cre vs temperature

Figure 4. Scatterplot of the monthly global CRE and temperature data.

This gives us a third estimate of the relationship between CRE and temperature. This one is between the other two; we have estimates of the cloud feedback factor of -1.4, -1.0 ± 0/3, and -0.5 W/m2 per °C

Whichever way we estimate it, however, the CERES data shows that the net effect of clouds is negative, not positive as the models claim. The average of the models’ estimates of cloud feedback is about plus one-half of a W/m2 per °C. The CERES data, on the other hand, gives a value of about minus one W/m2 per °C.

This is a net swing on the order of ~ 1.5 W/m2 per degree C between the model estimates and the CERES data … and thus a 1.5 W/m2 reduction in the estimated climate sensitivity.

==============

Let me say in closing that I don’t think that “climate sensitivity” is a real thing. I say this because of ample evidence that the climate is a governed system, with a variety of thermoregulatory climate phenomena that work together to constrain the global temperature to a very narrow range (e.g. ± 0.3°C variation over the entire 20th Century). When such a system is in a steady state like that of the earth, the temperature is essentially decoupled from the “forcing” (the changes in downwelling radiation). And because it is decoupled, there is no such thing as “climate sensitivity”.

My best to all,

w.

My Usual Note: When you comment, please QUOTE THE EXACT WORDS YOU ARE DISCUSSING, so we can all understand the exact subject of your response.

Further Reading: Here are a few of my previous posts on the subject of the regulation of global temperature by emergent phenomena:

The Thermostat Hypothesis 2009-06-14

This was my original post on the subject, in 2009. Abstract: The Thermostat Hypothesis is that tropical clouds and thunderstorms actively regulate the temperature of the earth. This keeps the earth at an equilibrium temperature.

The Details Are In The Devil 2010-12-13

I love thought experiments. They allow us to understand complex systems that don’t fit into the laboratory. They have been an invaluable tool in the scientific inventory for centuries. Here’s my thought experiment for today. Imagine a room. In a room dirt collects, as you might imagine. In my household…

It’s Not About Feedback 2011-08-14

The current climate paradigm believed by most scientists in the field can be likened to the movement of balls on a pool table. Figure 1. Pool balls on a level table. Response is directly proportional to applied force (double the force, double the distance). There are no “preferred” positions—every position…

Emergent Climate Phenomena 2013-02-07

In a recent post, I described how the El Nino/La Nina alteration operates as a giant pump. Whenever the Pacific Ocean gets too warm across its surface, the Nino/Nina pump kicks in and removes the warm water from the Pacific, pumping it first west and thence poleward. I also wrote…

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May 25, 2017 at 05:42AM