European C.E.R.N Casts Doubt on The Primary Causes of Global Warming
I have read a few articles about this over time but I wanted to wait for greater clarity and publishing from a well known, highly respected news source. Two primary points in this article: (1) the trend towards scientific "correctness" and the dangerous results thereof, as well as (2) the possibilities that deeper, more latent forces may be at work.
Al Gore won't hear it, but heavenly bodies might be driving long-term weather trends.
By ANNE JOLIS, WSJ, Sept 7, 2011
In April 1990, Al Gore published an open letter in the New York Times "To  Skeptics on Global Warming" in which he compared them to medieval flat-Earthers.  He soon became vice president and his conviction that climate change was  dominated by man-made emissions went mainstream. Western governments embarked on  a new era of anti-emission regulation and poured billions into research that  might justify it. As far as the average Western politician was concerned, the  debate was over.
But a few physicists weren't worrying about Al Gore in the 1990s. They were  theorizing about another possible factor in climate change: charged subatomic  particles from outer space, or "cosmic rays," whose atmospheric levels appear to  rise and fall with the weakness or strength of solar winds that deflect them  from the earth. These shifts might significantly impact the type and quantity of  clouds covering the earth, providing a clue to one of the least-understood but  most important questions about climate. Heavenly bodies might be driving  long-term weather trends. 
The theory has now moved from the corners of climate skepticism to the center  of the physical-science universe: the European Organization for Nuclear  Research, also known as CERN. At the Franco-Swiss home of the world's most  powerful particle accelerator, scientists have been shooting simulated cosmic  rays into a cloud chamber to isolate and measure their contribution to cloud  formation. CERN's researchers reported last month that in the conditions they've  observed so far, these rays appear to be enhancing the formation rates of  pre-cloud seeds by up to a factor of 10. Current climate models do not consider  any impact of cosmic rays on clouds.
Scientists have been speculating on the relationship among cosmic rays, solar  activity and clouds since at least the 1970s. But the notion didn't get a  workout until 1995, when Danish physicist Henrik Svensmark came across a 1991  paper by Eigil Friis-Christensen and Knud Lassen, who had charted a close  relationship between solar variations and changes in the earth's surface  temperature since 1860. 
"I had this idea that the real link could be between cloud cover and cosmic  rays, and I wanted to try to figure out if it was a good idea or a bad idea,"  Mr. Svensmark told me from Copenhagen, where he leads sun-climate research at  the Danish National Space Institute. 
He wasn't the first scientist to have the idea, but he was the first to try  to demonstrate it. He got in touch with Mr. Friis-Christensen, and they used  satellite data to show a close correlation among solar activity, cloud cover and  cosmic-ray levels since 1979. 
They announced their findings, and the possible climatic implications, at a  1996 space conference in Birmingham, England. Then, as Mr. Svensmark recalls,  "everything went completely crazy. . . . It turned out it was very, very  sensitive to say these things already at that time." He returned to Copenhagen  to find his local daily leading with a quote from the then-chair of the U.N.  Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC): "I find the move from this  pair scientifically extremely naïve and irresponsible."
Mr. Svensmark had been, at the very least, politically naïve. "Before 1995 I  was doing things related to quantum fluctuations. Nobody was interested, it was  just me sitting in my office. It was really an eye-opener, that baptism into  climate science." He says his work was "very much ignored" by the  climate-science establishment—but not by CERN physicist Jasper Kirkby, who is  leading today's ongoing cloud-chamber experiment. 
On the phone from Geneva, Mr. Kirkby says that Mr. Svensmark's hypothesis  "started me thinking: There's good evidence that pre-industrial climate has  frequently varied on 100-year timescales, and what's been found is that often  these variations correlate with changes in solar activity, solar wind. You see  correlations in the atmosphere between cosmic rays and clouds—that's what  Svensmark reported. But these correlations don't prove cause and effect, and  it's very difficult to isolate what's due to cosmic rays and what's due to other  things."
In 1997 he decided that "the best way to settle it would be to use the CERN  particle beam as an artificial source of cosmic rays and reconstruct an  artificial atmosphere in the lab." He predicted to reporters at the time that,  based on Mr. Svensmark's paper, the theory would "probably be able to account  for somewhere between a half and the whole" of 20th-century warming. He gathered  a team of scientists, including Mr. Svensmark, and proposed the groundbreaking  experiment to his bosses at CERN. 
Then he waited. It took six years for CERN to greenlight and fund the  experiment. Mr. Kirkby cites financial pressures for the delay and says that "it  wasn't political." 
Mr. Svensmark declines entirely to guess why CERN took so long, noting only  that "more generally in the climate community that is so sensitive, sometimes  science goes into the background."
By 2002, a handful of other scientists had started to explore the  correlation, and Mr. Svensmark decided that "if I was going to be proved wrong,  it would be nice if I did it myself." He decided to go ahead in Denmark and  construct his own cloud chamber. "In 2006 we had our first results: We had  demonstrated the mechanism" of cosmic rays enhancing cloud formation. The IPCC's  2007 report all but dismissed the theory. 
Mr. Kirkby's CERN experiment was finally approved in 2006 and has been under  way since 2009. So far, it has not proved Mr. Svensmark wrong. "The result  simply leaves open the possibility that cosmic rays could influence the  climate," stresses Mr. Kirkby, quick to tamp down any interpretation that would  make for a good headline. 
This seems wise: In July, CERN Director General Rolf-Dieter Heuer told Die  Welt that he was asking his researchers to make the forthcoming cloud-chamber  results "clear, however, not to interpret them. This would go immediately into  the highly political arena of the climate-change debate." 
But while the cosmic-ray theory has been ridiculed from the start by those  who subscribe to the anthropogenic-warming theory, both Mr. Kirkby and Mr.  Svensmark hold that human activity is contributing to climate change. All they  question is its importance relative to other, natural factors. 
Through several more years of "careful, quantitative measurement" at CERN,  Mr. Kirkby predicts he and his team will "definitively answer the question of  whether or not cosmic rays have a climatically significant effect on clouds."  His old ally Mr. Svensmark feels he's already answered that question, and he  guesses that CERN's initial results "could have been achieved eight to 10 years  ago, if the project had been approved and financed." 
The biggest milestone in last month's publication may be not the content but  the source, which will be a lot harder to ignore than Mr. Svensmark and his  small Danish institute. 
Any regrets, now that CERN's particle accelerator is spinning without him?  "No. It's been both a blessing and the opposite," says Mr. Svensmark. "I had  this field more or less to myself for years—that would never have happened in  other areas of science, such as particle physics. But this has been something  that most climate scientists would not be associated with. I remember another  researcher saying to me years ago that the only thing he could say about cosmic  rays and climate was it that it was a really bad career move." 
On that point, Mr. Kirkby—whose organization is controlled by not one but 20  governments—really does not want to discuss politics at all: "I'm an  experimental particle physicist, okay? That somehow nature may have decided to  connect the high-energy physics of the cosmos with the earth's atmosphere—that's  what nature may have done, not what I've done."
Last month's findings don't herald the end of a debate, but the resumption of  one. That is, if the politicians purporting to legislate based on science will  allow it.
Miss Jolis is an editorial page writer for The Wall Street Journal  Europe. 

 
 
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