Global Warming Models Are Wrong Again
The observed response of the climate to more CO2 is not in good agreement with predictions.
WSJ Opinion, March 27, 2012
By WILLIAM HAPPER
During a fundraiser in Atlanta earlier this month, President Obama is
reported to have said: "It gets you a little nervous about what is happening to
global temperatures. When it is 75 degrees in Chicago in the beginning of March,
you start thinking. On the other hand, I really have enjoyed nice weather."
What is happening to global temperatures in reality? The answer is: almost
nothing for more than 10 years. Monthly values of the global temperature anomaly
of the lower atmosphere, compiled at the University of Alabama from NASA
satellite data, can be found at the website
http://www.drroyspencer.com/latest-global-temperatures/. The latest (February
2012) monthly global temperature anomaly for the lower atmosphere was minus 0.12
degrees Celsius, slightly less than the average since the satellite record of
temperatures began in 1979.
The lack of any statistically significant warming for over a decade has made
it more difficult for the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) and its supporters to demonize the atmospheric gas CO2 which is
released when fossil fuels are burned. The burning of fossil fuels has been one
reason for an increase of CO2 levels in the atmosphere to around 395 ppm (or
parts per million), up from preindustrial levels of about 280 ppm.
CO2 is not a pollutant. Life on earth flourished for hundreds of millions of
years at much higher CO2 levels than we see today. Increasing CO2 levels will be
a net benefit because cultivated plants grow better and are more resistant to
drought at higher CO2 levels, and because warming and other supposedly harmful
effects of CO2 have been greatly exaggerated. Nations with affordable energy
from fossil fuels are more prosperous and healthy than those without.
The direct warming due to doubling CO2 levels in the atmosphere can be
calculated to cause a warming of about one degree Celsius. The IPCC computer
models predict a much larger warming, three degrees Celsius or even more,
because they assume changes in water vapor or clouds that supposedly amplify the
direct warming from CO2. Many lines of observational evidence suggest that this
"positive feedback" also has been greatly exaggerated.
There has indeed been some warming, perhaps about 0.8 degrees Celsius, since
the end of the so-called Little Ice Age in the early 1800s. Some of that warming
has probably come from increased amounts of CO2, but the timing of the
warming—much of it before CO2 levels had increased appreciably—suggests that a
substantial fraction of the warming is from natural causes that have nothing to
do with mankind.
Frustrated by the lack of computer-predicted warming over the past decade,
some IPCC supporters have been claiming that "extreme weather" has become more
common because of more CO2. But there is no hard evidence this is true. After an
unusually cold winter in 2011 (December 2010-February 2011) the winter of 2012
was unusually warm in the continental United States. But the winter of 2012 was
bitter in Europe, Asia and Alaska.
Weather conditions similar to 2012 occurred in the winter of 1942, when the
U.S. Midwest was unusually warm, and when the Wehrmacht encountered the
formidable forces of "General Frost" in a Russian winter not unlike the one
Russians just had.
Large fluctuations from warm to cold winters have been the rule for the U.S.,
as one can see from records kept by the National Ocean and Atmospheric
Administration, NOAA. For example, the winters of 1932 and 1934 were as warm as
or warmer than the 2011-2012 one and the winter of 1936 was much colder.
Nightly television pictures of the tragic destruction from tornadoes over the
past months might make one wonder if the frequency of tornadoes is increasing,
perhaps due to the increasing levels of CO2 in the atmosphere. But as one can
read at Andrew Revkin's New York Times blog, dotearth, "There is no evidence of
any trend in the number of potent tornadoes (category F2 and up) over the past
50 years in the United States, even as global temperatures have risen markedly."
Like winter temperatures, the numbers, severity and geographical locations of
tornadoes fluctuate from year-to-year in ways that are correlated with the
complicated fluid flow patterns of the oceans and atmosphere, the location of
the jet stream, El Niño or La Niña conditions of the tropical Pacific Oceans,
etc.
As long as the laws of nature exist, we will have tornadoes. But we can save
many more lives by addressing the threat of tornadoes directly—for example, with
improved and more widely dispersed weather radars, and with better means for
warning the people of endangered areas—than by credulous support of schemes to
reduce "carbon footprints," or by funding even more computer centers to predict
global warming.
It is easy to be confused about climate, because we are constantly being
warned about the horrible things that will happen or are already happening as a
result of mankind's use of fossil fuels. But these ominous predictions are based
on computer models. It is important to distinguish between what the climate is
actually doing and what computer models predict. The observed response of the
climate to more CO2 is not in good agreement with model predictions.
We need high-quality climate science because of the importance of climate to
mankind. But we should also remember the description of how science works by the
late, great physicist, Richard Feynman: "In general we look for a new law by the following process. First we guess
it. Then we compute the consequences of the guess to see what would be implied
if this law that we guessed is right. Then we compare the result of the
computation to nature, with experiment or experience; compare it directly with
observation, to see if it works. If it disagrees with experiment it is wrong."
The most important component of climate science is careful, long-term
observations of climate-related phenomena, from space, from land, and in the
oceans. If observations do not support code predictions—like more extreme
weather, or rapidly rising global temperatures—Feynman has told us what
conclusions to draw about the theory.
Mr. Happer is a professor of physics at Princeton.
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