What happened to Global Warming?
When I put my first above ground pool in around the late 90's we were able to open it in April and start swimming in May.
Now my pool is just opened and still not warm enough to swim in
I'd like some global warming back...
neither is yours.
You mean the ones the scientist now say is completely natural and is due to the simple physical interaction of the suns magnetic field with the Earth's magnetic field?
Why are you introducing non sequiturs?
So far it cannot. The experiment that Bill Nye did was a failure so they fixed the results.
And now the LA Times - http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/10/18/la-times-bans-letters-from-climate-skeptics/
One wonders why they fear debate.
That has all been explained. I'll just repeat it again.
In addition to CO2, China also releases enormous quantities of aerosols, which mitigate the temperature rise. When China would emit "cleaner" energy and the aerosols make way to clear skies, the full effect of CO2 comes into play. So far, the aerosols masked part of the potential warming of the CO2.
The sun was slightly cooler than expected. This is not much, but it adds to the other effect.
The El Nino transported heat down into the deeper ocean and brought colder waters up. This was a very large emount of energy that went down. This cools the atmosphere. This is the mitigation effect of the ocean, which takes more time to heat up than the ocean. Climatologists cannot help it that this is not a nice and straightforward effect... it may not be much on a global scale, but it adds up to the other effect. Unfortunately we'll have to wait for a long time before the heating effect of the deeper ocean will be noticed - it'll be noticed by less cooling from the El Nino, in other words, the following "depressed levels" like the one we're discussing right now will be warmer than the current.
I'll just ignore the small contribution of a few volcanoes that erupted since nobody believes it. But even a 0.1 degree lower temperature by a few volcanoes will help depress temperature even more, and add to the current "depressed" levels.
And the atmosphere accounts for just 2% of the total heat capacity of the earth's climate system - why do you "deny" the extra evidence that comes from the heating of the ocean and the ice caps ? The ocean warms slower than the atmosphere... it just slows everything down by a fwe decades.
I wish it were a simpler relation, like we inject 20% more CO2 into the atmopshere and that then the oceans would also heat up instantly and that then we would reach a new equilibrium for global temperatures right away. Then maybe we wouldn't have this discussion.
This is why the term "denialist" gets used. Facts just don't seem to matter...
You are actually saying that ozone holes and ozone depletion are due to magnetic fields and not CFCs? Citation needed please. Literally every source I can see online tells me the magnetic fields have nothing to do with ozone depletion. The Montreal Protocol must've been a big waste of time in your opinion and the subsequent slowing of ozone depletion in the decades following merely a coincidence.
Show me where the IPCC report states that CO2 is a driving factor. Don't get snarky while demonstrating you didn't actually research the topic.
Go ahead. We'll still be here I'm sure.
Here's a link to the IPCC report to get you started.
http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/publications_and_data_reports.shtml
here is some analysis of the latest draft from the 2013 report: http://reason.com/archives/2013/12/18/ugly-climate-models
Perhaps while you're at it you can show a single time in history where CO2 levels climbed before a temperature increase or fell before a temperature decrease. Seems like thst would be easy to find.
Heck, since you're being such an ass, perhaps you could explain what non political sources you used to derive your opinion. I don't have a problem with scientists. I have a problem with left wing ideologues misrepresenting science to justify policies that grant them more power and enrich their cronies.
The end of the last ice age was preceded by a rise in CO2...
I'm really curious why you don't appreciate the very high correlation between CO2 and Temperature that's been observed throughout the ages.
You are stating that CO2 is controlled by temperature.
However, CO2 is controlled by a lot more. It's also controlled by life, by activity of volcanous, by the amount of weathering.
The latter factors introduce a lot of variability in the CO2 and should result in a much lower correlation between CO2 and T then is observed throughout the ages.
The evidence is not direct because very old paleo-data lack time resolution, but it's the mechanism that always makes sense.
The observations are such:
- increased weathering -> CO2 removal -> ice ages.
- a million years of volcanism -> CO2 buildup -> greenhouse earth.
- Azolla event -> CO2 depletion -> cooling of the climate.
- Levels of CO2 higher than 300 ppm: never an ice age, levels of CO2 less than 300 ppm: glacial period.
- Levels of CO2 higher than 800 ppm or so: no ice on the entire planet.
- Uneven warming: the poles warm a lot more than the equator.
This sequence of events can explain EVERYTHING we've observed in the past and also in the present.
The only thing that "deviates" is a 200 year lag at a few points in the Antarctic. Well that's:
- hardly siginificant on a geological time scale
- it's so short that it can be a mitigating effect from the ice sheet and ocean, which lag the warming, which is even visible at this very moment...
The sun cannot really explain this. It slowly gets hotter over hundreds of millions of years. According you a temperature-driven mechanism, CO2 should slowly increase in time because of the temperature rise of the sun. Except the CO2 levels didn't rise but dropped, and in actuality also the temperatures on Earth dropped significantly in the last 50 million years, and for the last 20 million years we're in a prolonged glacial period. All of this is evidence against the sun being a dominant factor in the observed long trend of climate change.
There is no known alternative mechanism other than CO2 that links temperature rise/fall with a variety of sources such as volcanism, weathering, and also the actions of life, which happened "suddenly" at many more-or-less random points in the Earth's past and are closely correlated to global climate change and minor/major extinctions.
To explain the observations you need a mechanism that correlates these things.
[source] -> [mechanism] -> [result]
Volcanism -> CO2 increases -> temperature rises
Weathering -> CO2 decreases -> temperature drops
Azolla event -> CO2 decreases -> temperature drops
The CO2 mechanism can explain this.
What other mechanism is there to correlate temperature with such a diverse set of sources ???
To be honest I still don't understand why people believe that temperature would precede CO2. Of course I understand that sometimes a deep current may surface, and I understand that temperature influences solubility which has a small effect on CO2 (a very small effect), and I understand that the ocean and ice caps can mitigate a temperature rise for a while ... but for the rest ... I just don't get it.
Is it really all based on the temp/CO2 records from Antarctica? I've tried to explain how those can be in agreement with CO2 / Temperature.
Or are there other sources of evidence as well?
And there were laboratory experiments that showed that CO2 traps infrared radiation (of the wavelengths that are typically emitted by the earths' surface and by the oceans).
Are there experiments that I do not know of, that show that CO2 is actually transparent to radiation?
Look, you keep making claims that are either unsupported or unrelated to our discussion (volcanic eruptions, btw, lower global temperatures, this isn't even a disputed fact).
You can take ice core samples from Greenland or Norway or the Antarctic and you'll see the same pattern.
Hell, I even gave you the link to the IPCC report. How hard would it be, if you are so certain, to find a finding in the report that states that the consensus of the climatology community is that human generated CO2 production is the primary cause of warming temperatures?
The only consensus is that humans are probably having an impact on global temperatures. That is a belief I subscribe to. It's leftists that cling to the CO2 thing and here in 66 pages we have yet to see where that belief even originated. It didn't originate from the IPCC. It comes from left wing advocacy groups.
Are you serious, Geo? Maybe it's because people can read numbers, letters and even friendly graphs derived from them?
You seem like a really nice person. I mean that. But you have a level of cognitive dissonance that makes discussions on topics where you've made up your mind pointless.
But let me try one last time: EVEN the climatologists, even the hard core sites like RealClimate.orgundersatnd that CO2 rising comes AFTER temperatures go up and starts to decline AFTER temperatures start to decline. This isn't a disputed fact (other than you and others that are really invested in CO2 being the cause of our woes).
CO2, because it is a green house gas, does have some unknown affect on the temperature but it isn't the driving force. But since you won't believe data from the IPCC or NASA or climatology sites, here is the relevant part from RealClimate.org which is a site dedicated to warning people about climate change:
In other words, CO2 does not initiate the warmings, but acts as an amplifier once they are underway. From model estimates, CO2 (along with other greenhouse gases CH4 and N2O) causes about half of the full glacial-to-interglacial warming. So, in summary, the lag of CO2 behind temperature doesn’t tell us much about global warming. [But it may give us a very interesting clue about why CO2 rises at the ends of ice ages. The 800-year lag is about the amount of time required to flush out the deep ocean through natural ocean currents. So CO2 might be stored in the deep ocean during ice ages, and then get released when the climate warms.] -Guest Contributor: Jeff SeveringhausProfessor of GeosciencesScripps Institution of OceanographyUniversity of California, San Diego. Via RealClimate.org
In other words, CO2 does not initiate the warmings, but acts as an amplifier once they are underway. From model estimates, CO2 (along with other greenhouse gases CH4 and N2O) causes about half of the full glacial-to-interglacial warming.
So, in summary, the lag of CO2 behind temperature doesn’t tell us much about global warming. [But it may give us a very interesting clue about why CO2 rises at the ends of ice ages. The 800-year lag is about the amount of time required to flush out the deep ocean through natural ocean currents. So CO2 might be stored in the deep ocean during ice ages, and then get released when the climate warms.]
-Guest Contributor: Jeff SeveringhausProfessor of GeosciencesScripps Institution of OceanographyUniversity of California, San Diego.
Via RealClimate.org
In other words, CO2 is not what initiates climate change. Warmer temperatures free up carbon traps which release CO2 into the atmosphere. Since CO2 is a green house gas it has some N level of affect but given that global temperatures don't seem to care about CO2 concentrations very much that N level is apparently very small.
What I find baffling is the snark from people who don't even know the what the "scientific consensus" is. There's not only no scientific consensus that CO2 is what is causing our warmer temperatures over the past century, you'd be hard pressed to find even a significant minority of scientists who have that belief.
If those who are predisposed to hand more power to government would get more of their data from science-related sites and less from left-wing political blogs, they'd be able to engage in more thoughtful discourse on it. Instead, leftists seem to rely on shutting out opposing views because they get invested in their ideology without bothering to read the papers in question.
There's no excuse for an "alarmist" not to have at least read the IPCC report. It was written for lay people. Instead, too many people just parrot the opinions of left-wing blogs/sites.
I'm not attacking the rest of your argument (I think you in general know what you are talking about), but for the love of god please stop quoting that number...0.4% is not an insignificant amount and should not be treated as such...you can argue all you want whether CO2 in and of itself is a good greenhouse gas but I assure you the "low" concentration is not relevant....as an example:
"It [the ozone layer] contains relatively high concentrations of ozone (O3), although it is still very small with regard to ordinary oxygen, and is less than ten parts per million, the average ozone concentration in Earth's atmosphere being only about 0.6 parts per million."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozone_layer
That's 0.00006%...I think we can all agree that amount of ozone is not "insignificant" seeing as it blocks the vast majority of medium frequency UV light...when you keep quoting the concentration of CO2, you imply that its "low" concentration renders it insignificant, and that logical fallacy undermines the rest of your argument regardless of its soundness...no need to give your critics unnecessary ammo...
You're just embarrassing yourself now...
http://www.climatechange2013.org/images/uploads/WGI_AR5_SPM_brochure.pdf
Page 11. Section C. Drivers of Climate Change:
"Total radiative forcing is positive, and has led to an uptake of energy by the climate system. The largest contribution to total radiative forcing is caused by the increase in the atmospheric concentration of CO2 since 1750."
The section you quoted is referring to THE ICE AGE. Not our current situation.
What I find baffling is how someone could possibly type this - it's like you inhabit an alternate universe. It's fine if you believe CO2 is not a significant driver. But your comments about the scientific consensus on the subject are ridiculous.
The reason I get snarky is because people go through these obstinate circular arguments ad nauseum while clearly making very little effort to do a proper reading on the topic AND claiming others are the ones not doing the reading.... Meanwhile, November smashed temperature records globally (land and ocean):http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/sotc/global/2013/11/
I really have to agree with that....
Re ice-core data and CO2 vs warming the only 'fly in the ointment' is whether records from specifically cold regions can be a true and accurate representation of what happens/happened at the hot 'end'...ie. equator. A clearer indication would surely be had by a more representative 'component' of the geological time-line.
There's no reason why the CO2 ice recording coming after heating [at the poles] would guarantee atmospheric conditions at the equator were equivalent....
Flip of a coin.
I think you should cool your heels for a couple days to let you reconsider how you talk to people around here. You're free to disagree with me, challenge my assumptions, but don't try to piss me off please.
Quoting Frogboy, reply 1634What I find baffling is the snark from people who don't even know the what the "scientific consensus" is. There's not only no scientific consensus that CO2 is what is causing our warmer temperatures over the past century, you'd be hard pressed to find even a significant minority of scientists who have that belief. What I find baffling is how someone could possibly type this - it's like you inhabit an alternate universe. It's fine if you believe CO2 is not a significant driver. But your comments about the scientific consensus on the subject are ridiculous.The reason I get snarky is because people go through these obstinate circular arguments ad nauseum while clearly making very little effort to do a proper reading on the topic AND claiming others are the ones not doing the reading.... Meanwhile, November smashed temperature records globally (land and ocean):http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/sotc/global/2013/11/
And yet you provided no evidence to support that CO2 is what is driving recent temperature increases. None (at best you provided a link that seems to indicate that you aren't familiar with radiative forcing). I linked you to the IPCC and in response you insult me and then try to talk about the current temperature. Let's say November was the warmest on record for the sake of argument. What does that have to do with CO2? Nothing. Is CO2 exacerbating temperatures? Of course. So is every green house gas. But that doesn't mean that's what is driving it.
We have no idea what the temperature would be if humans weren't on the Earth. Based on history, we would expect that climate will constantly change. It will be warmer and it'll be colder.
I do want to address this:
To read more on what they mean by radiative forcing go here:
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Features/EnergyBalance/page1.php
In other words, CO2, methane, or any green house gas can alter the equation in terms of what % of energy is kept within the climate system. However, this is not intended to imply that CO2 in itself is the cause of warming. The Earth has been warming since the last ice age. However, since the start of the industrial revolution, we've VASTLY added more CO2 to the atmosphere. We've gone from 0.3% to 0.4% which is a pretty big change.
CO2 in itself is merely an accelerator. Claiming that CO2 is the *cause* of global warming is akin to saying that leaving flammable materials around your house will in itself cause a fire.
The single biggest issue I have with those that postulate CO2 as the primary driver of *temperature* is that they aren't able to explain why it hasn't been a driver in the past. It is a well established fact that CO2 increases after temperatures rise. It's not even as warm today as it was during the medieval warming period when Greenland and Iceland were being farmed by Vikings. And consider how abrupt that temperature change was. It was cold and then just popped up out of nowhere and then disappeared (same for the Romans).
I have no idea what level of influence humans are having on global climate. But I get pretty sick of people who know little on the topic substituting naked arrogance for rational discourse on it.
Mostly, I think it's no coincidence that if you scratch a CO2 AGW alarmist you find a leftist underneath. I suspect that if there was no prospect of empowering statists that there'd be a lot less interest in this. After all, I very rarely meet AGW alarmists who actually behave as if it's a real problem.
I'm trying my best to understand your point. And I like to think about these things
I've (partly) changed my mind about the influence of the ocean for example.
And I've also (partly) changed my mind about nuclear power as a possible solution to the problem of CO2.
So that's your logic.
But I think it's a bit limited in scope.
CO2 can result from a wealth of sources: volcanic, human, ocean, methane hydrates. And it can be removed by a wealth of sources: weathering, life.
And many of these have a relationship with temperature, of course.
A burp of CO2 or methane hydrate from the ocean (from disruption of an ocean current) can be a result of a temperature change.
Life depends on temperature.
Sea level depends on temperature.
The speed of weathering depends on temperature.
Solubility of CO2 in the ocean depends on temperature.
Vertical mixing of oceans also depends on temperature.
Now... in an unstable regime like we are in (flip-flopping between glaciations) anything can be a trigger. And an ice age is even more complicated, because you also have to deal with albedo and the uneven distribution of continents (Milankovitch cycles).
But there are also important sources/ sinks that are dependent on tectonics (and not on temperature):
Volcanism, its intensity depends on processes in the earth (Siberian traps).
Volcanism also gives us a continuous influx of CO2.
Tectonics can create isolated large bodies of anoxic water (good at trapping carbon) depend on tectonic settings (see the Azolla event).
It also creates regions that subside, forming swamps where life can bury CO2 permanently.
But how does this make CO2 insignificant as a driver in climate change?
It doesn't... even if the CO2 concentrations are influenced (partly) by temperature because of a multitude of feedback events that depend on temperature, CO2 can still be a driver behind all these things.
The only way you can claim that CO2 is not a driver, is if you can make plausible that CO2 cannot act on its own.
Much like the level H2O, which is a more potent Greenhouse gas, is almost entirely dependent on the temperature of the atmosphere and of the oceans. Because H2O forms rain and is removed very quickly from the atmosphere, we can safely say that H2O is not a driver of climate.
A similar argument goes for CH4. It's more potent as a greenhouse gas, but it reacts quickly with other molecules and it's removed from the atmosphere in a few decades, so that it's not really possible to have large quantities of methane in the atmosphere at any one time.
Scientists do believe that CO2 can be a driver of climate, because there is no quick way of removing it from the atmosphere. Therefore, even if it requires hundreds of billions of tons of the stuff to get a noticeable effect, this effects is there to stay for thousands of years, until it's removed again by weathering or burial of plant material.
Even the oceans are in equilibrium with CO2 and cannot remove hundreds of billions of tons of excess quantities of CO2 from the atmosphere just like that. It takes life a very long time to absorb hundreds of billions of CO2 and to sink those to the bottom of the ocean... and only a small part of the sunken material will be buried permanently, most of it will decompose and return to the surface (which is why it takes such a very long time).
The only thing that "proves" that is the ice-core data from the Antarctica and Greenland.
Every other shred of evidence (which have much better time-resolution) and our general knowledge of physical processes proves otherwise.
Anyways... there is a difference between being a "driver" and being the "medium".
We humans can be a driver, the CO2 can be the medium for higher temperatures (until it's removed by natural processes over the course of thousands of years).
A period of intense volcanism that releases copious amount of CO2 can be a driver, CO2 just sits there in the atmosphere for a long time and changes global temperatures.
If you say that temperature drives CO2, then that would imply that CO2 by itself cannot be sustained and is removed when temperatures drop. This implies that you need another mechanism than CO2 to explain a climate change and higher temperatures.
What mechanism is there?
Sometimes it also helps to think about extreme situations.
What do you think would happen if all volcanism on the earth would suddenly stop, and volcanism would not produce a "steady" influx of CO2 anymore? What do you think would happen to our world then, if this "driver" of sustained nice temperatures would suddenly disappear?
Probably what Frogboy is saying is you probably would be better served to go away and think about these things a LOT ....on your own ....and perhaps you might move on from a fanaticism/love affair with CO2.
You're in a rut.
No matter who posts...or what they post...you'll respond with..."well...CO2...bla...blah...blah....." ... ad nauseum.
EVERYONE knows mankind adversely affects his environment. The issue here is simple.
Does that 'affect' also include the climate?
Now.....all you need to do is take MORE time to think of a reply....several days would be good.... and see if you can make it through one post without mention of CO2.
Come back with another angle. Currently each post is just playing musical chairs with the same vocabulary...
Sure but Frogboy bases his conclusions on this article:
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2004/12/co2-in-ice-cores/
Which is outdated, that's pretty clear to me.
The "lag" has already been reduced to 200 years. It's not nearly 800 years anymore.
What will the next revision bring?
When deriving temperature and CO2 data from ice cores, the scientists also use equations to correct for the burial process, what if those equations are wrong?
I mean... people here don't trust scientists, but somehow they DO trust that scientists did a good job on those measurements? I can play that game too.
And he continuously asks for "evidence".
I've already shown this:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v484/n7392/full/nature10915.html
But he ignores that.
He also ingnores the grander scheme of things, like that the earth was hotter during eras with high CO2 levels, and colder since CO2 levels have dropped - and why have they dropped: largely because of the Azolla event and that event was a freaky tectonic coincidence combined with a freaky algae that went on a rampage.
And he ignores my statement that if CO2 levels were temperature driven, we should've seen the reverse happening on a long time-scale, since the sun only got hotter during the past 400 millions years while CO2 dropped overall. I also present that as "evidence".
So what am I to do about that? I've just tried to give a comprehensive overview to let him see the bigger picture here.
There's nothing wrong with that, is there?
But ok something new.
http://www.ghgonline.org/predictions.htm
First figure on the page.
I think model A2 is how carbon emissions will develop this century.
You may wonder why we all need so much energy... but there's just so many of us!
I once seen a thread on religion with 18000 comments. I see this one going the same direction. Probably because it's also about religion
The difference between this and religion is that in a religious thread, only half the people claim to know "science"....
LOL
The difference really would be by now it would have devolved into an ugly fight...and the thread would be well and truly locked....
That's fine. My opinion may change as new data is released. I'm not wedded to any view.
Just earlier this thread, you proposed we institute a worldwide ban on carbon related energy production all the while you admit that there is a CO2 lag (but it's down to 200 years!).
Before we destroy our worldwide economy I think we should, at the very least, wait until the evidence points to CO2 rising coming BEFORE the temperature changes, not 10 years, 50 years or two centuries.
That evidence is already there, but for some reason you assign a lot of credit to the Antarctic data set and you assign zero value to the rest.
The problem perhaps is, that especially during an ice age, the temperature depends on a lot of things, not just on the CO2 levels but also on albedo and atmospheric moisture (deserts).
During the transition from a glacial period to a warmer period, lots of things can happen:
- albedo drops, increasing temperatures
- ocean currents change, introducing regional effects by transporting warm or cold water to different areas.
- during a warming period, deserts retreat and forests expand, adding more moisture to the air, adding to the greenhouse effect.
- sea level changes, which change the sedimentation patterns and the capture of CO2.
- the jet streams move towards the poles during a period of warming, changing global wind patterns.
These are things that affect temperatures, especially on regional levels. If you compare such regional data sets, you'll probably find a lot of differences there and that may lead you to believe that everything is noise. Except perhaps the Antarctic data set.
You also pay no value to past extinction events, and you pay no value to the 500-million year cooling trend.
Therefore I think it will be impossible to find data that can convince you that CO2 affects temperature in a significant way.
Now suppose that the end of the ice age triggered a change in oceanic circulation, which triggered a release of CO2 from the deep ocean. Just suppose that happened. What would that tell you about the relationship between CO2 and temperature ?
(The correct answer is: absolutely nothing. What is important is what happens after such an event, not what happens before the event).
Again, geo: provide a link to a source that shows long term temperature and CO2 levels where CO2 rises before temperatures.
The fact that it works the opposite isn't even disputed in the scientific community.
I've already shown numerous links throughout this topic about this and I'm tired of repeating myself. Worse, I get blamed by the moderator for repeating myself.
Well ok just one more repeat then.
Read more about the Azolla event. It was algae that more or less terraformed our planet and removed so much CO2 from the atmosphere (trillions of tons) that it was largely responsible for our current glacial period. There's proof for this event in coal/oil/gas layers all around the arctic region.
This is very long-term and I think it's very robust.
http://theazollafoundation.org/azolla/the-arctic-azolla-event-2/
This was quite a unique event, and you cannot explain it by temperature alone. It was just a freaky set of coincidences. You know, like the series "Seconds from disaster"? There was the algae. There was the isolated polar ocean. There was the greenhouse earth at the time. There was this amazing Azolla algae. And the rest is history, it has helped to shape the world we live in today. Without that plant, we would still have lived in a steaming hot earth.
That's not evidence, Geo.
Evidence would be accepted records (like ice core samples from say Greenland, Norway, Antartica) that show CO2 rising BEFORE the temperature rises. The reason you can't find any is that there isn't any. By your own accounts, they've gotten the gap down to 200 years.
We have a lot of data for the past 20,000 years ago. I'm not sure why you won't concede something that's already accepted by the rest of the scientific community. This isn't a religious argument.
Meanwhile...
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