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Facts and Myths about Global Warming John R. Christy NWS Climate Services University of Alabama in Huntsville 20 June 2007

Facts and Myths about Global Warming

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Facts and Myths about Global Warming. John R. Christy NWS Climate Services University of Alabama in Huntsville 20 June 2007. Consensus is not Science. Michael Crichton. Consensus is not Science. Michael Crichton. All Science is numbers. William Thompson (Lord Kelvin). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Facts and Myths about Global

WarmingJohn R. Christy

NWS Climate Services

University of Alabama in Huntsville20 June 2007

Page 2: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Consensus is not Science

Michael Crichton

Page 3: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Consensus is not Science

William Thompson (Lord Kelvin)

All Science is numbers

Michael Crichton

Page 4: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Some people will do anything to save the Earth ...

except take a science course.

Page 5: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Some people will do anything to save the Earth ...

except take a science course.

Greenhouse “Affect”, Rolling Stone

P.J. O’Rourke

Page 6: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Two Main observing systems for detecting

Greenhouse Gas effects

• Surface thermometers– Daily High Temperature– Daily Low Temperature– Daily Mean Temperature

(popular)

• Upper Air Temperatures– Balloon – Microwave emissions

Page 7: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

"Global" Surface Temperature HadCRUT3

-0.8

-0.6

-0.4

-0.2

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

1850 1870 1890 1910 1930 1950 1970 1990 2010

Constructed from Mean Temperatures

Page 8: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Vertical Temperature Change due to Greenhouse Forcing in

Models

Model Simulations of Tropical Troposphere Warming:About 2X surfaceLee et al. 2007

Page 9: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Is Mean Surface Temperature an

Appropriate Index for the Greenhouse Effect?

TMean = (TMax + TMin)/2

Page 10: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Day vs. Night Surface Temp

Nighttime - disconnectedshallow layer/inversion. Temperature affected by land-use changes, buildings, farming, etc.

Daytime - deep layer mixing, connected with levels impacted by enhanced greenhouse effect

Page 11: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Night Surface Temp

Nighttime - disconnectedshallow layer/inversion. But this situation can be sensitive to small changes such as roughness or heat sources.

Buildings, heat releasing surfaces, aerosols, greenhouse gases, etc. can disrupt the delicate inversion, mixing warm air downward - affecting TMin.

Warm air above inversion

Cold air near surface

Warm air

Page 12: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

The nighttime minimum is related to the delicate formation of the nocturnal boundary layer which can be easily disrupted, mixing warm air downward and sending temperatures up dramatically

Walters et al. (in press)

Page 13: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

No. Alabama Summer TMax Temperatures

28

30

32

34

36

1890 1910 1930 1950 1970 1990 2010

Observations: -0.13 °C/decade

Christy 2002

Page 14: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Mean TemperatureSoutheast USA 1899-2003

-0.06

-0.04

-0.02

0.00

0.02

0.04

0.06

0.08

0.10

0.12

0.14

Observations BCM CCMA CCMA_T63 CSIRO GFDL_0 GFDL_1 IPSL MIROC3 MPI MRI

ModelsObservation

Page 15: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Christy et al. 2006, J. Climate

Page 16: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

MODIS21 Jul 2002

Jacques DescloitresMODIS Land Rapid Response Team NASA GSFC

Page 17: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

+ Valley Stations° Mountain Stns

•Christy et al. 2006, J. Climate

Page 18: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Manually digitized thousands of records

Page 19: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

CA Valley and Sierra (Jun-Nov) 1910-2003

8

12

16

20

24

1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010

°C

Valley TMax (less 10°C)Valley TMinSierra TMin

Christy et al. 2006Valley affected by irrigation and urbanization

Page 20: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Christy et al. 2006

Consistent with irrigationConsistent with irrigation and urbanization

Page 21: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Snyder et al. 2002

Sierras warm faster than Valley in model simulations

Page 22: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

East Africa (Kenya/Tanzania)

Page 23: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

-0.1

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

Trend 1979-2004

°C/decade

GISSHadCRUT3CRUT3vTMinTMeanTMaxUAH SatelliteBalloon HadAT (0.0)Balloon ECMWF (0.0)

East Africa: 5°S-Eq, 35-40°E(Nairobi, Mt. Kilimanjaro, Mt. Kenya)

Daytime warming rate 20% of Mainline Datasets in E. Africa

Christy et al. (submitted) uses 10 times the amount of surface data

Upper Air

Page 24: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

0.00

0.01

0.02

0.03

0.04

0.05

0.06

1900-1999

°C/decade

GHCN ObsCSIRO (3)GISS (2)INM-CM3.0MIROC3.2 (4)NCAR CCSM3.0 (2)NCAR PCM1 (2)GCM Avg

Model vs. ObservationsTMin minus TMax

Preliminary study

Page 25: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Is Mean Surface Temperature an

Appropriate Index for the Greenhouse Effect?

Evidence indicates TMax is the better metric to serve as a proxy for monitoring deep atmospheric change

Pielke et al. 2007, Walters et al. 2007, Christy et al. (submitted)

Page 26: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Upper Air Temperatures

Page 27: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Upper Air Temperatures

• Recent claims suggest the upper air temperature record is in agreement with the surface and with climate models, so global warming theory must be right

• IPCC more or less supports this view

• UAH satellite data reportedly “flawed”

Page 28: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Vertical Temperature Change due to Greenhouse Forcing in

Models

Model Simulations of Tropical Troposphere Warming:About 2X surfaceLee et al. 2007

Page 29: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Christy and Spencer 2005Christy and Norris 2006Christy et al. 2007

Page 30: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Christy and Norris 2006Christy et al. 2007

Page 31: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

-0.6

-0.4

-0.2

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1978 1982 1986 1990 1994 1998 2002 2006

Global Bulk Atmospheric TemperaturesUAH Satellite Data

Warming rate 60% of model projections

Page 32: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Greenhouse Effect

Page 33: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Total Greenhouse Effect

• Water vapor and Clouds Dominate

• Total Greenhouse Effect is variable

• Climate models show strong water-vapor/cloud positive feedback with increased CO2

Page 34: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Greenhouse Effect

0

20

40

60

80

100

Percentage Greenhouse Effect

Water Vapor and Clouds

CO2

Other

Page 35: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Greenhouse Effect

0

20

40

60

80

100

Percentage Greenhouse Effect

Water Vapor and Clouds

CO2

Other

?

Page 36: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Tropical Temp. and Cloud Forcing (major part of total greenhouse effect) based on

latest satellite sensorsNegative feedback on monthly time scales

Spencer et al. (submitted)

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

-0.2 0 0.2 0.4

Troposphere Temp Anomaly

LW+SW CRF (W/m2)

Page 37: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

What aboutCold Places?

Page 38: Facts and Myths about Global Warming
Page 39: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

North Polar RegionsHadCRUT3

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

1850 1880 1910 1940 1970 2000

Arctic 70-85NGreenland

Period of most polar ice observations

Page 40: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Greenland Summer Temperatures

1780-2005

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

1780 1820 1860 1900 1940 1980

JJA11-season average

Period of most polar ice observations

Page 41: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Greenland Borehole TemperatureDahl-Jensen et al. 1998

-32.5

-32.0

-31.5

-31.0

-30.5

0 500 1000 1500 2000

Page 42: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Greenland Borehole TemperatureDahl-Jensen et al. 1998

-35.0

-34.0

-33.0

-32.0

-31.0

-30.0

-29.0

-8000 -6000 -4000 -2000 0 2000

Page 43: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

AlaskaHadley CRU 3 (°C)

Shift in 1977, but high natural variability

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000

Page 44: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

When Hemingway writes “Snows of

Kilimanjaro”—half of the “snows” are

already gone

X

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

1955 1965 1975 1985 1995 2005

Arusha/Kilimanjaro

TMax

Mass Gain in 2006Molg and Kaser 2007

Page 45: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Regional Snowpack, Central Andes, 1951-2005Masiokas et al. 2006

Page 46: Facts and Myths about Global Warming
Page 47: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Schneider et al. 2006

Antarctica

-3.5-3.0-2.5-2.0-1.5-1.0-0.50.00.51.01.5

1940 1955 1970 1985 2000 Thermometers

Ice Cores

Doran et al. 2002

Page 48: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Antarctica snowaccumulationtrends cm/yr

1992-2003

Davis et al. 2005

See also:Monoghan et al 2006Van de Berg et a. 2006

Page 49: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Evidence Thus Far

• Global surface temperature is rising, but in a way inconsistent with model projections of GHG forcing

• Overall decline in ice mass, with sea level rise of about 1” per decade

• Severe weather not becoming more frequent

Page 50: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Main Point:

I don’t see a disaster developing

But, suppose you do ….

Page 51: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Energy Technology1900: World supported

56 billion human-life years

Page 52: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Energy Technology1900: World supported

56 billion human-life years

2005: World supports 429 billion

human-life years

Page 53: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Kenya, East Africa

Page 54: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Energy Transmission

Energy System

Energy Use

Energy Source

Page 55: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

All Science is Numbers

• The Human population currently uses energy at a rate of 14 terawatts to its considerable benefit.

Page 56: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

All Science is Numbers

• The Human population currently uses energy at a rate of 14 terawatts to its considerable benefit.

• Most energy production relies on burning carbon (i.e. CO2 is released)

Page 57: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

All Science is Numbers

• The Human population currently uses energy at a rate of 14 terawatts to its considerable benefit.

• Most energy production relies on burning carbon (I.e. CO2 is released)

• To replace 10% of this (i.e. 1.4 terawatts) requires 1000 nuclear power plants (1.4 gigawatt each)

Page 58: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

IPCC “Best Estimate” Temp

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

199020002010202020302040205020602070208020902100

A1B

Page 59: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

California AB 149326% CO2 reduction LDV 2016

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

199020002010202020302040205020602070208020902100

A1BCANo. EastUSA

Net Impact if all US 0.01°C 2100

Page 60: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

Net Effect of 10% CO2 emission reduction to A1B Scenario

(~1000 Nuclear Plants by 2020)

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

199020002010202020302040205020602070208020902100

A1B Emissions

10% Reduction A1B

Net Impact 0.07°C 2050

Page 61: Facts and Myths about Global Warming

OR A MORE RATIONAL APPROACH?

• In 50 years will we learn that the most cost-effective path was to adapt to changes we actually observed and measured, rather than try to outguess Mother Nature’s course?

• In 50 years will we be surprised not by climate change but by the inventive minds of our scientists and engineers as they discover profitable and affordable ways to generate energy without carbon emissions?

Page 62: Facts and Myths about Global Warming