The Scientific Consensus on Climate Change

The papers in categories 4, 5, 6 are irrelevant to the scientific question at hand, whether the warming is anthropogenic. The AAAP authors themselves state that they searched for the topic "climate change" in a journal data base; no surprise that the search results all assumed that there was anthropogenic warming, or that the study authors inferred that to be the case. Neither the AAAP study nor the papers contained therein support the notion that 97% of scientists believe that there is anthropogenic warming, that it is a consensus opinion, or that there is not a substantial number of papers supporting the null hypothesis --- that the
  • #71
We know there has been a history of dramatic climate changes on the Earth. This may well be cyclical most of the time, but some times it is due to cataclysmic events, such as an asteroid impact. The current climate changes also may be cyclical. However, the accelerated rate of change remains suspect. How much of an effect human activity is having on the rate of change may not need to be that large to "push the envelope" as it were.

Regardless of cause, ultimately the change is not likely to be a positive one. We must look at all the variables (e.g., deforestation) to slow or reverse the trend. To argue against this is very irresponsible and a great disservice to all. Including other species that we share this planet with:

"Is climate turning polar bears into cannibals?
U.S. and Canadian scientists report kills linked to shrinking ice"
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/13288936/?GT1=8211
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #72
Skyhunter said:
(snip)This graph has the raw data.(snip)Karl's adjustments are explained in the Quality Control, Homogeneity Testing, and Adjustment Procedures section ...(snip)

Thank you for going through the link.
[edit] Maybe this thread is ready to be moved back into Earth Sciences Forum. [/edit]

Prolly, it ain't --- still getting "political" positions on the question --- and, those do NOT belong in Earth Science.

Back to USHCN, and raw data plus six corrections; let's just play with the "Urban Heat Island" (UHI) for the moment. The argument is that urbanization over the past century has affected temperatures recorded by stations around which urban centers have built in, increasing them over time. Is that your understanding?

Further, since we're interested in the "temperature signal" resulting from climate change, it's necessary to apply a "correction" if the UHI effect can be quantified (Karl '88)?

"Karl '88" uses satellite data to quantify the UHI from daytime and nighttime IR data over urban and rural areas within same, or similar, regions, microclimates, climate zones, whatever. From this, Karl, USHCN, or others, arrive at a UHI effect which increases from near zero at the beginning of the century to 0.3 degree at the end of the century.

Then, since the raw data includes the UHI effect, and the climate signal is the information of interest, the time dependent correction is ADDED ??! to the raw data?

Understand that I've concluded nothing to this point; description of "adjustment procedures" on the USHCN page is unacceptably vague from the standpoint of publication in the scientific literature, and translation from the "turnip-speak" of internet pages for public consumption to some idea of what was actually done during data reduction is a bit of a slow and painful process --- that's what libraries are for --- Karl is on the list for the next trip. The sciences are full of "sign conventions," European vs. American redox potentials, q+w vs. q-w in thermo --- the climate crowd may have borrowed some sort of "debit-credit" system from bookkeepers, and I'm just tripping over their definition of "correction."
 
  • #73
Bystander said:
Thank you for going through the link.
thank you for posting it.

Back to USHCN, and raw data plus six corrections; let's just play with the "Urban Heat Island" (UHI) for the moment. The argument is that urbanization over the past century has affected temperatures recorded by stations around which urban centers have built in, increasing them over time. Is that your understanding?

Yes it is. I find the science fascinating and would like to hear of your trip through to the library.

Back to the politics.

Referring back to Edwards point about data from the last few years only, being relevant to what is happening now is poignant. The oceans are warming rapidly and as anyone who lives next to a coast can attest, the water warms and cools much slower than the land and air.

From the link Edward posted.
In an interview with the BBC Barnett noted that the world's oceans cover around 71 percent of the Earth's surface, and that what happens in them therefore has significant consequences on the world's weather and climate. The study used advanced computer models of climate "to calculate human-produced warming over the last 40 years in the world's oceans," said Scripps' bulletin. "In all of the ocean basins, the warming signal found in the upper 700 meters predicted by the models corresponded to the measurements obtained at sea with confidence exceeding 95 percent. The correspondence was especially strong in the upper 500 meters of the water column."

The bulletin noted that it is this "high degree of visual agreement and statistical significance that leads Barnett to conclude that the warming is the product of human influence. Efforts to explain the ocean changes through naturally occurring variations in the climate or external forces- such as solar or volcanic factors--did not come close to reproducing the observed warming."
95% is the threshold of statistical significance. If the warming is real, and the ocean temperature in my mind is a certain indicator of global warming, and that warming is significantly due to human activity, then that is a political problem that should be dealt with, not denied because there is a 5% chance, or 10%, 20%, even 50% chance it could be something else.

To argue that there is nothing we can do because soon we won't be the major contributor is shirking the responsibility this country has to lead the world through innovation and example.

America has the resources, we should be taking the lead not sitting on the sideline in denial.
 
  • #74
Skyhunter said:
Quote:
(snip)Back to the politics.

Referring back to Edwards point about data from the last few years only, being relevant to what is happening now is poignant. The oceans are warming rapidly and as anyone who lives next to a coast can attest, the water warms and cools much slower than the land and air.

From the link Edward posted.

Quote:
In an interview with the BBC Barnett noted that the world's oceans cover around 71 percent of the Earth's surface, and that what happens in them therefore has significant consequences on the world's weather and climate. The study used advanced computer models of climate "to calculate human-produced warming over the last 40 years in the world's oceans," said Scripps' bulletin. "In all of the ocean basins, the warming signal found in the upper 700 meters predicted by the models corresponded to the measurements obtained at sea with confidence exceeding 95 percent. The correspondence was especially strong in the upper 500 meters of the water column."

The bulletin noted that it is this "high degree of visual agreement and statistical significance that leads Barnett to conclude that the warming is the product of human influence. Efforts to explain the ocean changes through naturally occurring variations in the climate or external forces- such as solar or volcanic factors--did not come close to reproducing the observed warming."

The Guardian links to Scripps and AAAS didn't go anywhere but to "treasure hunting" generic sites --- so, let's see what we can come up with for "predicted signals" (the LLNL model) and field data that are going to confirm the model and AGHGW. Little snooping gives depth-T profiles for vicinity of Canary Islands ( http://www.atlantic-cable.com/Cables/1970TRANSCAN/ ), and the summer-winter variation at 700 m is 3 K. That's almost entirely due to vertical mixing processes; summer-winter insolation rate difference is around 60W/m2, and that'll account for maybe 1-2%. Vertical temperature gradient is 15-20 mK/m. Depth control on towed or stationary measurements (currents dragging instrument cables sideways) isn't going to be much better than 10 m; 0.15 to 0.20 K is going to be the smallest difference I can see and call significant. Year to year variations in the summer-winter difference? Due to decadal variations in average surface wind speeds? Drifting of gyres? "Whipping" of currents (Gulf Stream, Humboldt, Japanese, you name it)? Order of 1 K --- maybe more. How densely populated is the field data to which the model is compared? No more densely than any other oceanographic data type --- translates as "sparse." The "model predictions?" Gonna be based on a "greenhouse" decrease in surface heat loss of 1-2 W/m2, over 40 a, is around 0.5 K at 700 m --- not really out of the background noise level.
95% is the threshold of statistical significance. If the warming is real, and the ocean temperature in my mind is a certain indicator of global warming, and that warming is significantly due to human activity, then that is a political problem that should be dealt with, not denied because there is a 5% chance, or 10%, 20%, even 50% chance it could be something else.

To argue that there is nothing we can do because soon we won't be the major contributor is shirking the responsibility this country has to lead the world through innovation and example.

America has the resources, we should be taking the lead not sitting on the sideline in denial.

"Tipping point" is one phrase to "tip" you off to the fact that you're being handed a line. "Smoking gun" is another. "Efforts to explain the _______ through naturally occurring variations in the climate or external forces- such as solar or volcanic factors--did not come close to reproducing the observed warming," is yet another --- it translates as, "We are either too incompetent to recognize the factors affecting the system we're examining, or we're too damned lazy to do so, and would rather pull the wool over peoples' eyes if they're too lazy to call us on it."
 
  • #75
While the climate system is very complex and difficult to model precisely, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is increasingly certain that humans have a discernible influence on the global climate. Confirmation of the measured warming trend is substantiated by the rise in sea level of between four and 10 inches that has occurred since 1900 and the decrease in the average snow cover and glacial ice worldwide. Unseasonable weather phenomena are becoming commonplace and intensities appear to be increasing. A continued increase in greenhouse gas emissions, and the associated temperature rise, is likely to accelerate the rate of climate change, producing further impacts.
http://www.climatechange.ca.gov/background/faqs.html

Increased emissions of greenhouse gases have led to changes in precipitation, ocean salinity, CO2 absorption by the sea, water temperature, winds and pH levels. This is having a demonstrated impact on marine ecology and fisheries. The Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports that marine-disease and algal species are affected by these factors and that “in recent decades there has been an increase in reports of diseases affecting coral reefs and sea grasses, particularly in the Caribbean and temperate zones” (14)

Future climate change scenarios and models vary widely, but all agree that marine ecology will change significantly and quickly.

The IPCC is a UN-funded group of 2,500 leading climate scientists. Their fifth technical report found that coral reef systems have already begun to be affected by climate change, and refers to flow-on effects – being recorded now – that affect temperate zone fisheries too. In Australia, for example, it is predicted that temperate endemic species will be more severely affected than tropical (AGO, 2003).

A report commissioned by WWF (Are we putting our fish in hot water?) found that increased ocean temperatures means less food, less offspring and even less oxygen for marine and freshwater fish populations.

Global warming can cause fish populations to migrate: fish stocks in the North Sea have been forced to move scores of miles north to cooler waters, according to a study by climate change scientists

One scientist that took part in the North Sea study said: "What's striking is people tend to think of climate change as something that's going to affect us in the future, whereas more and more we're seeing signs that these changes are already happening and are going to continue."
via a link on this site: http://risingtide.org.au/node/60

I don't have time to google for more sources at this moment. But why argue about modeling methods to predict the future when there are variables such as rising water levels, shrinking glaciers/ice, etc. that can be clearly measured right NOW?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #76
SOS2008 said:
http://www.climatechange.ca.gov/background/faqs.html

via a link on this site: http://risingtide.org.au/node/60

I don't have time to google for more sources at this moment. But why argue about modeling methods to predict the future when there are variables such as rising water levels, shrinking glaciers/ice, etc. that can be clearly measured right NOW?

From the IPCC: http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/420.htm#tab118 ; the table is the only thing we're interested in at the moment, IPCC estimates of terrestrial (continental --- excluding Antarctica and Greenland) contributions to mean sea level over the past century as annual rates for assorted terms in the global mass balance for water. Dept. of Interior's figures for U. S. are that the nation has pumped 1000 km3/a for the last 20-25a. Global pumping is around 3000. Hydrologists estimate the average recharge time for aquifers exposed to normal rainfall (whatever that is) to be 3ka. Wells tapping aquifers in the U. S. exhibit water level drops of hundreds of feet over the century. That's right, this is P&WA --- I've got to do the arithmetic for people --- 100,000 -180,000 km3 pumped from aquifers globally over past century. IPCC says 90% went right back in --- a bit of a disagreement with hydrologists, conservationists, and well water levels, but we'll let that slide for the mo'. For the math impaired, a 10 cm sea level rise is a change in ocean volume of 35,000 km3; using IPCC's 90% recharge, that's 0.3-0.5 mm/a over the century. Using hydrologists' recharge rates, "... aquifers are being pumped at many times the recharge rate," we're into the field of "adjectival quantification," or, more colloquially, "hand-waving." What does "many times" equal numerically? Probably more than IPCC's 1.1 --- 1.5? That's a 70% recharge rate, implies aquifers would recover in decades rather than millennia (the 3000a recharge figure), puts 30-54,000km3 into the oceans, pretty much in line with the 10-20 cm rises for the 20th century. What's IPCC missed? Aquifers were full "to the brim" at the end of the last ice age --- melting at the ice-substrate interface (ground) had been going on at the rate of 0.1 - 1.0 mm/a for a couple hundred thousand years, and that crustal heat flow meltwater had no place to go but into the ground. Ice age ends, and the aquifers are back to precipitation recharge --- they "relax" to some new steady state water level that is a function of recharge rate, porosity (capacity), and permeability (controls rate of lateral movement in response to whatever pressure head is present). What's the time constant for that relaxation? Archaeologists have been locating coastal settlements 10 m below current sea level, ages around 6ka, at the rate of one every 2-4 years. Sea level stopped rising at the time of the Renaissance? The industrial age? Don't think so --- there's going to be a natural background rate that's on the order of 3-30 cm a century just from aquifer relaxation. Whatta we got? 13-50 cm rise for the 20th century without having to melt anything --- an overstatement of GW as THE driver for sea level change.

What's next? Melting tundra? Accelerating glaciers? Atmospheric CO2 levels?

Tundra? Okay --- this is a homework assignment: calculate the change in heat transport northward through the Bering Strait due only to a 10 cm increase in sea level; report the result in mid-summer insolation days at the latitude of the Arctic Circle for 10,000 km2 and 100,000 km2 areas.

Glaciers? Extra credit: write an expression for flow at any point of a circular ice sheet of fixed radius sitting on a perfectly flat surface bounded by a drop-off, or sink, being replenished at a uniform rate over its areal extent by snowfall; use cylindrical coordinates, with origin at the center of the ice sheet.

CO2? This is an "n"-parter: compare annual fossil fuel emissions to annual exchange between atmosphere and biosphere (terrestrial and marine); compare equilibrium solubility in oceans with total carbon content of oceans; estimate a "sequestration" rate for the marine biosphere from the marine carbon content and the circulation time for the oceans; compare this to the annual catch by commercial fisheries; compare the "sequestration" rate to marine productivity; compare the sequestration rate to historical estimates of "commercial" fish stocks.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #77
No homework assignments for me thanks. Your are basing too much on sea levels transferring heat north?? The sun will do that as snow and ice melt and the bare dark exposed Earth absorbs much more heat than the reflective snow or ice. Plus that bare unfrozen ground only needs a fraction of the amount of the heat that was needed to thaw it to warm it significantly.

This is already happening in several vast areas. That is why the permafrost is melting. The Siberian permafrost alone will nearly double the amount of CO2 presently in the atmosphere. see the link.

People are too hung up on old data. It is the information which is new that will be the big surprise, especially in determining the rate of accelerated change in the global warming issue.
 
Last edited:
  • #78
Bystander said:
<snip>
Skipping past the unnecessary insults... The growing human population has increased demand for potable water, which is only a small percentage of the total amount of water on the Earth. So if this water is being pumped faster to meet growing needs and resulting in lower aquifer levels, that would be no surprise to anyone. If anything, it is only an additional concern.

Global warming causes hot, arid regions to become hotter and more arid, and wet regions to become wetter. When there is rain, it becomes more torrential and erosive. That means potable water will simply become less available in more areas of the world. It's certainly a big concern here in the Southwest, for example:

"Due to last summer's drought conditions, the soil is very dry, deeper ground water is reduced and water storage reservoirs are well below average. Therefore, a significant portion of the melt from this year's snowpack will be absorbed into the ground and into ground water before beginning to fill depleted reservoirs," said Pielke. "It will take more than average snowpack to produce average runoff into reservoirs, and much more than an average snowpack to fill the depleted reservoirs to average levels."

Other climate and weather experts agree. According to NOAA's U.S. Drought Outlook, recent storms greatly improved water supply prospects in Colorado's basins. However, the report states that the odds for significant change in the status of the long-term drought decline as the snow season wanes, and their forecast is for limited improvement.
http://ccc.atmos.colostate.edu/newsapr1.php

In addition to water shortages, there are increasing wildfires that affect the atmosphere. For how long does this trend need to continue before the consequences are serious? What can be done to reverse it? I don't understand why anyone would not want to address such questions.
 
Last edited:
  • #79
According to the study cited in this article the rate of rise in sea level is accelerating.
In an attempt to reduce the scale of uncertainty in this projection, the Australian researchers have analysed tidal records dating back to 1870.

The data was obtained from locations throughout the globe, although the number of tidal gauges increased and their locations changed over the 130-year period.

These records show that the sea level has risen, and suggest that the rate of rise is increasing.

Over the entire period from 1870 the average rate of rise was 1.44mm per year.

Over the 20th Century it averaged 1.7mm per year; while the figure for the period since 1950 is 1.75mm per year.

Although climate models predict that sea level rise should have accelerated, the scientists behind this study say they are the first to verify the trend using historical data.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4651876.stm

During my reading about sea levels I read that approximately 6% of total water influx to the oceans and seas comes from direct groundwater discharge.
Change in climate means there is a change in precipitation and evaporation rates, constituents of the hydrologic cycle, which affect surface runoff, and groundwater and ocean levels (Klige, 1990; Zester and Loaiciga, 1993; Loaiciga et al., 1996).

If the rate of rise is increasing, is it due only to the pumping of groundwater?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #80
edward said:
No homework assignments for me thanks. Your are basing too much on sea levels transferring heat north??]/QUOTE]

Nope. That was the point of the homework --- you inform yourself, we don't have to go through this drill.

Atlantic conveyor moves heat northward to the tune of 1015W; current through the Bering Strait moves heat northward into the Chukchi Sea at 4x1013W. Atlantic heat keeps Europe warm enough to be inhabitable. The heat transferred to the Chukchi from N. Pac. is then transferred to Siberia by the southwesterly surface winds (driven by the north polar atmospheric circulation cell and coriolis effects). Average depth of the Bering Strait is around 50m; sea level rise over the past century is 10-20 cm; flow increase is 0.2-0.4% --- water temperatures in N. Pac. haven't changed that much, so heat flow has increased by same amount, 0.2-0.4W/m2 over the area of the Chukchi. Average insolation above the Arctic Circle? 15-20W/m2. Increase "expected" due to "GHW?" Around 1%, 0.2W/m2. Sea level rise is real. The north polar atmospheric convection is real. GHW should affect the entire Arctic Circle uniformly, not in spots.
(snip)
People are too hung up on old data.

That was Aristotle's complaint, wasn't it? You know --- the guy who spontaneously created mice from piles of old clothes.

"Climate" isn't too well defined; the closest thing I've seen to a decent definition as far as taking a scientific approach is that, "Climate is an average temperature." I'd add, "and other variables describing weather, wind speed, direction, humidity, rainfall," you get the picture; and I'd specify the time period over which these variables are to be averaged, 200 year sliding average, global (over all time of observation); something along the lines of tide gauging --- you set up your tide station, you run it for 26 years (lets you "look" at the precession of the lunar orbital axis), then you start reporting 26 year sliding averages of "mean sea level" for 13 years earlier. Lunar precession affects weather patterns; solar sunspot cycles (9-11 years) also affect weather patterns; we're looking at a minimum time span for a "climatic sliding average" of 200-300 years to see all combinations of lunar and solar effects on weather before we can start reporting 100-150 year old climate data.
It is the information which is new that will be the big surprise,

Computer models? No surprise --- GIGO, couple truckloads of lousy meteorological data (perfectly serviceable for its original purpose, weather prediction), plus a couple dozen flaky assumptions, push the button, and out pop a couple truckloads of garbage plus a couple dozen flaky assumptions all dressed up as the "latest in climate models."

especially in determining the rate of accelerated change in the global warming issue.
 
  • #81
I am not sure about the 'scientific consensus'. There are scientists who support GW, and those who disagree. Clearly politics is involved. For example, Exxon-Mobil sponsors some scientific groups who question GW, so one has to question the integrity of those groups.

Meanwhile,

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3412657607654281729&q=tvshow%3ACharlie_Rose (availability might be limited timewise)

An hour with former Vice President Al Gore. He discusses his new film, 'An Inconvenient Truth' and the science and politics surrounding global warming.

Visit www.climatecrisis.net (but turn the sound down - broadband may be necessary due to the graphics and audio).

More to the point -

http://www.climatecrisis.net/thescience/

http://www.climatecrisis.net/takeaction/

:biggrin:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #82
Astronuc said:
There are scientists who support GW

I recently saw a bumper sticker on an old, smokey Suburban, that said:
I support global warming.
 
  • #83
Ivan Seeking said:
I recently saw a bumper sticker on an old, smokey Suburban, that said:
I support global warming.
:rolleyes: Let me rephrase my comment then, "There are scientists who support the idea that human activity (vis-a-vis production of greenhouse gases) is primarily responsible for GW (i.e. increase in atmospheric and oceanic enthalpy), and those who believe human activity does not.
 
  • #84
edward said:
No homework assignments for me thanks. Your are basing too much on sea levels transferring heat north??

Bystander said:
Nope. That was the point of the homework --- you inform yourself, we don't have to go through this drill.

Below is your statement that I was referring to. It seems to be linking heat transferred north to sea levels. That is why I included the ?? in my post.

Tundra? Okay --- this is a homework assignment: calculate the change in heat transport northward through the Bering Strait due only to a 10 cm increase in sea level; report the result in mid-summer insolation days at the latitude of the Arctic Circle for 10,000 km2 and 100,000 km2 areas.

I AM NOT YOUR STUDENT so please refrain from this type of ulterior motive posting to sling insults, it is useless.

Atlantic conveyor moves heat northward to the tune of 1015W; current through the Bering Strait moves heat northward into the Chukchi Sea at 4x1013W. Atlantic heat keeps Europe warm enough to be inhabitable. The heat transferred to the Chukchi from N. Pac. is then transferred to Siberia by the southwesterly surface winds (driven by the north polar atmospheric circulation cell and coriolis effects). Average depth of the Bering Strait is around 50m; sea level rise over the past century is 10-20 cm

Very true, but as I am sure you are aware, the natural systems by which the oceans tranfer heat north are very fragile. The melting of the northern ice, and it is melting, will inevitably dilute the salinity of the northern ocean waters. This has been discussed in other threads. We may end up having Northern Europe freeze while the rest of the Earth is still warming.

"Climate" isn't too well defined; the closest thing I've seen to a decent definition as far as taking a scientific approach is that, "Climate is an average temperature." I'd add, "and other variables describing weather, wind speed, direction, humidity, rainfall," you get the picture; and I'd specify the time period over which these variables are to be averaged, 200 year sliding average, global (over all time of observation); something along the lines of tide gauging --- you set up your tide station, you run it for 26 years (lets you "look" at the precession of the lunar orbital axis), then you start reporting 26 year sliding averages of "mean sea level" for 13 years earlier. Lunar precession affects weather patterns; solar sunspot cycles (9-11 years) also affect weather patterns; we're looking at a minimum time span for a "climatic sliding average" of 200-300 years to see all combinations of lunar and solar effects on weather before we can start reporting 100-150 year old climate data.

Thank you sir. You have summed up exactly why the use of extravagant old data is futile in determining what is happening right now because GW is happenning right now.

The Scripps studies which were backed up and supported by Livermore were enough to convince many people, with the possible exception of certain politicians who still live on a flat earth. Add the more recent melting of the permafrost data to that and we a big problem.

Here is an intersting link from the Woods Hole Institute.
http://www.whoi.edu/institutes/occi/viewArticle.do?id=9206
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #85
I came across this in my studies.

[The following was posted by Dr. Jeff Masters (Ph.D. in air pollution meteorology from U. Michigan), and a co-founder of Weather Underground]

[see http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/ comment.html?entrynum=385&tstamp=200606]

I've had several people ask about the study Al Gore talked about in his movie, which found found no scientific papers disputing the reality of human-caused climate change over the past ten years. Well, to be sure, there have been a few papers disputing the reality of human-caused climate change published in the past ten years, but they didn't happen to have the key words "global climate change" included in their citations. The study Gore cites was published in December 2004 in Science magazine by Naomi Oreskes, a professor at UC San Diego. The article examined peer-reviewed studies in the world's major scientific journals between 1993 and 2003 containing the phrase "global climate change" as keywords. Oreskes found that 75% of the 928 articles with those key words in their citations agreed with the consensus position stated by the UN's panel on climate change, that the observed global warming over the past 50 years has been caused in part by human activity. The other 25% of the papers took no position, and none of the papers disagreed with the consensus view. While the study is not a perfect measure of the scientific uncertainty in the published literature, the study does show that an overwhelming majority of published scientific research supports the idea that human activity is significantly modifying Earth's climate.

As Gore noted in his movie, the situation is quite different in the media, where about half of the stories in the study he cited cast doubt on the reality of human-caused climate change. The media are fond of trying to report both sides of an issue, so in the name of journalistic fairness, the public is receiving a highly skewed view of the scientific debate on climate change. In many cases, the opposing views presented by the media are from fossil fuel industry-funded "think tanks" that routinely put out distorted and misleading science intended to confuse the public.

I've collected a list of climate change position papers put out by the major governmental scientific institutes of the world that deal with the atmosphere, ocean, and climate. All of these organizations agree that significant human-caused climate change is occurring:

United Nations IPCC American Meteorological Society NOAA U.S. National Academy of Sciences NASA EPA American Geophysical Union National Center for Atmospheric Research Royal Society of the United Kingdom Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society

Science Council of Japan, Russian Academy of Science, Brazilian Academy of Sciences, Royal Society of Canada, Chinese Academy of Sciences, French Academy of Sciences, German Academy of Natural Scientists Leopoldina, Indian National Science Academy, Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei (Italy), Royal Society (UK)

Australian Academy of Sciences, Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Sciences and the Arts, Brazilian Academy of Sciences, Royal Society of Canada, Caribbean Academy of Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, French Academy of Sciences, German Academy of Natural Scientists Leopoldina, Indian National Science Academy, Indonesian Academy of Sciences, Royal Irish Academy, Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei (Italy), Academy of Sciences Malaysia, Academy Council of the Royal Society of New Zealand, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, and Royal Society (UK)

If anyone can find examples of governmental scientific organizations that deny the consensus position, I'd be happy to make a second list of links. Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have long been hostile to international climate change negotiations, so their scientific organizations may well have official positions opposing the consensus. However, the Saudis are apparently changing their stance, as announced in May 2006 at a U.N. sponsored meeting in Germany. "I believe the petroleum industry should actively engage in policy debate on climate change as well as play an active role in developing and implementing carbon management technologies to meet future challenges," said the president of the Saudi state-run oil industry giant, Aramco. In 2005, both Saudi Arabia and Kuwait signed and ratified the Kyoto Protocol to limit greenhouse gases. The Protocol does not call on them to reduce their emissions.

In summary, there is an overwhelming level of scientific consensus on human-caused climate change. Those who defend the contrary view are fond of pointing out that we shouldn't stifle their opposing point of view, since heroes like Galileo with his sun-centered solar system view and Wegener with his continental drift theory both challenged the overwhelming scientific consensus of their day and were proved to be correct. That is true. However, Galileo and Wegener did not have the public relations staff of multi-billion dollar companies helping them promote their contrary views. I'm not too worried about the contrarian view of human-caused climate change being stifled, and contrarians are encouraged to publish in the peer-reviewed scientific literature. I would like to see the media sharply reduce their coverage of the contrary views of such think tanks as the Competitive Enterprise Institute, George C. Marshall Foundation, and scientists such as S. Fred Singer of the SEPP. Let's focus on the published scientific literature.

Jeff Masters
Are there any governmental scientific institutions denying AGW?

[edit] Go to his web page for links to the position papers of the above mentioned science institutes. [/edit]
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #86
Astronuc said:
I am not sure about the 'scientific consensus'. There are scientists who support GW, and those who disagree. Clearly politics is involved. For example, Exxon-Mobil sponsors some scientific groups who question GW, so one has to question the integrity of those groups.
(snip)

--- and, GE, Westinghouse, Bechtel, Brown & Root (the nuclear power club), the insurance industry (anticipatory rate hikes to cover increased casualty losses), and, the biggie, the Chicago Board of Trade --- got to be hundreds of billions a year in CO2 futures. There's plenty of money on both sides, and BIIGGG stakes.

_______________________________________________________

Ivan Seeking said:
I recently saw a bumper sticker on an old, smokey Suburban, that said:
I support global warming.

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=114123

________________________________________________________

edward said:
Below is your statement that I was referring to. It seems to be linking heat transferred north to sea levels. That is why I included the ?? in my post.

Increased sea level implies increased mass transport through the Bering Strait implies increased heat transport. If you're talking about melting in the Arctic Circle region you are familiar with the geography?

"Climate" isn't too well defined; (snip); we're looking at a minimum time span for a "climatic sliding average" of 200-300 years to see all combinations of lunar and solar effects on weather before we can start reporting 100-150 year old climate data.

You have summed up exactly why the use of extravagant old data is futile in determining what is happening right now because GW is happenning right now.

I'm paraphrasing because I'm not certain I understand what you're saying here: you are asserting that you can, from a single observation, with no history of the system, determine the dynamic state of the system and predict its future behavior? Don't wanta go putting words into your fingers.
 
  • #87
Aramco has reversed it's position on AGW.

http://planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm?newsid=36492&newsdate=23-May-2006
"I believe the petroleum industry should actively engage in policy debate on climate change as well as play an active role in developing and implementing carbon management technologies to meet future challenges," Saudi Aramco president and CEO, Abdallah Jumah, told the meeting.

"National oil companies -- like Saudi Aramco -- can make meaningful contributions to those efforts," he said.

The oil industry accounts for up to 40 percent of carbon dioxide increase in the atmosphere which scientists believe is the prime cause of global warming, Robert Socolow of Princeton University said on the sidelines of the meeting.
Aramco officials said the company had already begun research on removing carbon dioxide given off by oil during shipping in tankers and filling empty oilfields with the unwanted gas instead of salt water.

"We are beginning to see in the oil industry ... some companies making that (reducing carbon emission) part of their strategies," said Adnan Shihab-Eldin, former secretary-general of oil producer cartel OPEC.
Is this the beginning of a more general acceptance of AGW and the start of serious efforts to mitigate the possible consequences?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #88
Man, this thread is going to wander on forever... :rolleyes: And I do mean wander... The emotion is still running high, but the "evidence," if it can be called that, is growing thin. Perhaps we are beginning to revisit the stongest arguments of pgs. 1-3?

I'd like to state that after reading through this entire thread (all 6 pages of it, thus far. I'll bet it will hit 20 at this rate...) there have been arguments for and against AGW, but the fact is there is no definitive end-all evidence for or against it. Data is still being taken, and as our methods imporve, so too will our predictions.

I like to think of the overall consensus on climate change as a uniform standard deviaition curve: most of the arguments are in the middle, and they taper off as we get closer to "AGW is happening, no doubt about it" or "AGW is a crock, we can't change the planet." The overall average of the arguments is a big fat ZERO, wherever someone is arguing within the curve.

The only thing I can definitively say is that the Earth's climate, in some form or another, will continue on with or without our discussion. Earth is definitely NOT going to turn into Venus, and "Waterworld" and "The Day After Tomorrow" are at the very edges of my standard distribution. Man, it's going to be cool when we look back at times like this 10 or 25 or 50 years down the road and laugh at how misguided we were :biggrin:

Sorry to interrupt the heated debate (if it can still be called that), I'm going to move on to greener pastures. Something like Thermodynamics is actually quite refreshing after mucking through AGW debates...
 
Last edited:
  • #89
Bystander said:
Atlantic conveyor moves heat northward to the tune of 1015W; current through the Bering Strait moves heat northward into the Chukchi Sea at 4x1013W. Atlantic heat keeps Europe warm enough to be inhabitable. The heat transferred to the Chukchi from N. Pac. is then transferred to Siberia by the southwesterly surface winds (driven by the north polar atmospheric circulation cell and coriolis effects). Average depth of the Bering Strait is around 50m; sea level rise over the past century is 10-20 cm; flow increase is 0.2-0.4% --- water temperatures in N. Pac. haven't changed that much, so heat flow has increased by same amount, 0.2-0.4W/m2 over the area of the Chukchi. Average insolation above the Arctic Circle? 15-20W/m2. Increase "expected" due to "GHW?" Around 1%, 0.2W/m2. Sea level rise is real. The north polar atmospheric convection is real. GHW should affect the entire Arctic Circle uniformly, not in spots.
I agree that the oceans are responsible for the thawing that is happening in the Arctic. I just think it is more the Atlantic ocean.

http://www.answers.com/topic/arctic-ocean
Since the Arctic's connection with the Pacific Ocean is narrow and very shallow, its principal exchange of water is with the Atlantic Ocean through the Greenland Sea. Even there, though surface waters communicate freely and a strong subsurface current brings warm water from the Atlantic into the Arctic basin, exchange of deeper waters is barred by submarine ridges. Thus a near stagnant pool of very cold water is found at the bottom of the Arctic basin.

And as you can see by this map the Norwegian current would bring much more warm heat into the Arctic Ocean than would spill over the Bering Strait.

This is interesting, and I believe supports my argument.

http://www.fou.uib.no/fd/1997/f/406001/
Ocean Weather Ship Station M
(66°N, 2°E)
The longest existing homogeneous time series from the deep ocean

The low temperature of the Norwegian Sea Deep Water (NSDW) is maintained by the contribution of the Greenland Sea Deep Water (GSDW). The bottom water in the Greenland Sea is renewed locally by surface cooling of relative fresh water, resulting in the coldest bottom water found in the deep ocean. NSDW is formed by mixing GSDW and the deep water from the Arctic Ocean. The recent warming of the NSDW has its forerunner in an even more markedly warming of the GSDW, see figure 5, consonant with the idea that the deep water formation in the Greenland Sea has ceased. The Greenland Sea and the Norwegian Sea basins are separated by the Mohn Ridge (Figure 1), and the exchange of water masses between the two deep basins takes place through a channel which has a threshold depth of 2200 m and is situated just north of Jan Mayen. Since the warming of GSDW appears to have continued unchecked to date, (Figure 5) the cessation of warming observed in the NSDW since 1990 is certainly unexpected, (Figure 4) suggesting that as GSDW production has (virtually) ceased, the transport through the Jan Mayen Channel may have reduced or even reversed, see figure 6, cutting off the deep Norwegian Sea from the influence of the GSDW and its changes, see Østerhus and Gammelsrød, 1996, and Østerhus et al., 1996.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #91
Increased sea level implies increased mass transport through the Bering Strait implies increased heat transport. If you're talking about melting in the Arctic Circle region you are familiar with the geography?

I do know the approximate location of the Arctic Circle.:smile:

But since the oceans have not yet warmed enough to produce any dramatic increase in temperature or transport of heat, and the increase in sea level is still minimal, what is your point with all of the data and homework demands??

You didn't mention the melting of the ice in antarctica. Is that due to conveyor activity? What about the melting of the ice in Glacier national park in Wyoming?

BystanderI'm paraphrasing because I'm not certain I understand what you're saying here: [B said:
you are asserting that you can, from a single observation, with no history of the system, determine the dynamic state of the system and predict its future behavior?[/B] Don't wanta go putting words into your fingers.

Absolutely not! We have plenty of history of the system and how it works, your own posts indicate that. What I am saying for the 42 time is that until the Scripps study last year we never really had any data that we could hang our hats on.
At this point we need to quit fiddling around with data and concepts from 100 years ago and get some real scientific measurments.

Getting large numbers of temperature transponders in the water under that arctic ice to see what is happening right now and for the duration of the problem would be a good start. We have had the technology to do this for many many years.(this is actually being done currently , but with limited funding and with one unit which must stay at a constant depth. It is a recording device that can only be accessed when the ice thaws in the summer.)

I have read numerous articles n scientific publications that indicate that when significant melting has taken place the process will accelerate very rapidly. No one knows that point, but with the right equipment in the right places it most likely could be determined.

Standing around watching the ice melt or placing thermometers in remote locations of the oceans , and then waiting twenty years to process the data is ridiculous. Yet this is the method that has been prescribed and funded by political and special interests.
 
Last edited:
  • #92
edward said:
(snip)But since the oceans have not yet warmed enough to produce any dramatic increase in temperature or transport of heat,

Warming of the oceans is not necessary for heat transport --- all that is required is a temperature difference between the source of the heat (tropical and temperate zones of N. Atl. or N. Pac.) and the regions to which the heat is delivered (Arctic). Exchange of heat with air masses then raises (or lowers) the air temperature and lowers (or raises) the temperature of the water. The amount of heat transported is equal to the mass of water transported times the heat capacity of the water times the temperature difference between the water (10-15 C for N. Atl. and N. Pac. --- give or take), and 4 C, the temperature for maximum density of water (at which it definitely sinks out of contact with air --- actually at some higher temperature --- whatever yields enough density difference to result in sinking).

and the increase in sea level is still minimal,

The Bering Strait is shallow (averages 50m depth), and currents through it are not fully developed in the sense that there is a boundary layer effect from the shallow bottom; water velocity at the bottom is zero, and increases as the surface is approached. Increasing the depth of water by the 10-20 cm cited for increased sea level increases the flow rate through the strait, and as a result, the heat transport, without any increase in the temperature of the N. Pac.. The same argument does not apply to the Atlantic conveyor; the water depth, 2-3 km, is such that there is no boundary layer effect, drag, and, increased sea level has no effect on the flow rate. Increased heat transport to the West Arctic areas around the Chukchi is then a natural consequence of increased sea level.

what is your point with all of the data and homework demands??

I'm trying to get you to look at the identified physical properties of the system, and what effects those properties have on the system and its interactions with other systems which together comprise the climate of this planet.

You didn't mention the melting of the ice in antarctica. Is that due to conveyor activity?

South Atlantic, and South Pacific conveyors? Get mixed at the surface with the South Circumpolar Current (Roaring Forties, Furious Fifties, Seasick Sixties); and, the surface winds off Antarctica (south polar atmospheric convection cell) are blowing the wrong direction to transport heat to the Antarctic ice sheet.

What about the melting of the ice in Glacier national park in Wyoming?

Wouldn't know a thing about GNP in Wyo.. Montana glaciers grow when it snows, and shrink when it doesn't --- you can call it drought, or you can call it global warming --- might as well ask me about the drought that erased the Anasazi --- was that global warming?

Absolutely not! We have plenty of history of the system and how it works, your own posts indicate that. What I am saying for the 42 time is that until the Scripps study last year we never really had any data that we could hang our hats on.

"Smoking gun?" What's necessary to establish temperature-depth profiles as a function of time as a meaningful measurement of anything?
1) a zero flow, or stagnant ocean, situation in which one monitors a change in profile with no questions about the thermal history of the sample location --- obviously not the case;
2) tagged sample volumes, water masses, that maintain their identity as they move, and that can be located after forty years for further measurement --- not on this planet --- water bodies can move cohesively in open deep water, but don't retain discernible identities for longer than months to a year, and technology might be near the threshold of tracking cohesive water movements, but ain't there yet;
3) a fixed circulation pattern in which every water parcel moves in a prescribed pattern (N. Atl., 2 turns in the Beaufort, down the west side of the mid-ocean ridge, deflect upward at the equator, warm, move back up the N. Atl., sink without riding Beaufort's merry-go-round, down the east side of the mid-ocean ridge, cross the equator, hop on the Antarctic circumpolar, do 5 1/2 circuits, move north on S. Pac. floor --- is this getting ridiculous enough to discard;
4) exact knowledge of ocean circulation patterns (some pattern, lots of chaos) that enables measurement of properties of water parcels with thermal histories identical to those measured previously --- ain't no such thing --- oceanographers dream about the day;
5) can someone come up with a plausible set of conditions for expecting T as a function of depth, lat, lon to remain constant?​

Smoking dope? Smoke blowing from some other orifice? 'Nother journalist's confabulation of what may, or may not, be decent science. Forty years at 2W/m2 gives a maximum "signal" of 1 K for a perfectly mixed 600 m water column; natural variation is a minimum of 3 K. Picking 1 K from 4.5 K noise (the two measurement uncertainties added in quadrature) is humbuggery, picking a few hundredths to maybe a tenth (water stratifies by its density as a function of T) is crackpottery. The LLNL-Scripps study results as described in the link are garbage --- like I say, what got written in the link probably doesn't have anything to do with the subject or results of the study.

At this point we need to quit fiddling around with data and concepts from 100 years ago

Newton did his thing 300 years ago --- leave him out, and it ain't going to be science.
and get some real scientific measurments.

By all means.

Getting large numbers of temperature transponders in the water under that arctic ice to see what is happening right now and for the duration of the problem would be a good start. We have had the technology to do this for many many years.(this is actually being done currently , but with limited funding and with one unit which must stay at a constant depth. It is a recording device that can only be accessed when the ice thaws in the summer.)

The Navy's got truckloads of data --- getting them to "sanitize" it for declassification and public use would be a start --- write your congressman.
I have read numerous articles n scientific publications that indicate that when significant melting has taken place the process will accelerate very rapidly.

Enthalpy of fusion of water hasn't changed in the nearly two hundred years since it was first measured --- 't'aint likely to now.

No one knows that point, but with the right equipment in the right places it most likely could be determined.

Standing around watching the ice melt or placing thermometers in remote locations of the oceans , and then waiting twenty years to process the data is ridiculous. Yet this is the method that has been prescribed and funded by political and special interests.

It is necessary to know what is and what ain't going on before running off half-cocked --- you know that. Finding out what's going on takes time. Ill considered actions have huge consequences --- take a look back at the "Dustbowl" for an example.
 
  • #93
--- and, GE, Westinghouse, Bechtel, Brown & Root (the nuclear power club), the insurance industry (anticipatory rate hikes to cover increased casualty losses), and, the biggie, the Chicago Board of Trade --- got to be hundreds of billions a year in CO2 futures. There's plenty of money on both sides, and BIIGGG stakes.
Yeah, but that's not scientific - most of that is based on emotion about what 'might' happen.

GW does correlate with rising CO2 levels, but does not necessarily prove cause and effect.

It has been pointed out the water vapor H2 also absorbs EM radiation (infrared and microwave) at much the same frequencies as CO2. Could GW be simply a matter of natural positive feedback. On the other hand, humanity has cut down huge amounts of forest which stored water and maintained lower temperatures than bare land (or concrete and asphalt). Possibly cooling towers from fossil plants and evaporation from irrigation of agricultural land has contribued to additional moisture.

Also, humanity generates a lot of thermal energy through consumption of fossil fuels and nuclear energy. Much of the energy generation is based on the steam Rankine cycle which has about a 33-38% efficiency, meaning that nearly two-thirds of the thermal energy gets dumped right into the environment.

A solution could be reduce energy generation, reduce use of fossil fuels, develop more carbon sinks (fast growing vegetation, more trees, . . . ).
 
  • #94
Astronuc said:
Yeah, but that's not scientific - most of that is based on emotion about what 'might' happen.

You understand that these are the pro-greenhouse lobbying groups? Yes, the insurance industry and CBOT are very emotional about their wallets.
GW does correlate with rising CO2 levels, but does not necessarily prove cause and effect.

It has been pointed out the water vapor H2 also absorbs EM radiation (infrared and microwave) at much the same frequencies as CO2. Could GW be simply a matter of natural positive feedback. On the other hand, humanity has cut down huge amounts of forest which stored water and maintained lower temperatures than bare land (or concrete and asphalt). Possibly cooling towers from fossil plants and evaporation from irrigation of agricultural land has contribued to additional moisture.

Atmospheric water content is reasonably constant at 1012 tons (residence time about a week), enough to saturate the lower km of the atmosphere at 20-25 C. Frequency of events driving precipitation (movement up slopes or orogenic, overriding air masses, convection column cooling or thunderstorms, und so weiter) seems to limit water load to the teraton neighborhood.
Also, humanity generates a lot of thermal energy through consumption of fossil fuels and nuclear energy. Much of the energy generation is based on the steam Rankine cycle which has about a 33-38% efficiency, meaning that nearly two-thirds of the thermal energy gets dumped right into the environment.

Crackpot got locked in "Earth" couple days ago for this --- U. S. runs at 3 kW per capita, give or take, all uses --- TW; "5% of the world's population using 95% of the world's resources," but we'll assume we ain't that big a swarm of swine, and let the rest of the world have 2 TW, one for the EU, and one for everyone else; added to 1.25x1016 W solar input (still haven't convinced myself whether the 200 W "average" at the equator is or is not an overall average, so we'll stay on the short side) to radiate to the CMB is 0.02-0.03%, 0.005-0.006% in T, or 15-20 mK --- probably more like 3-5 mK, below threshold on absolute scale.
A solution could be reduce energy generation, reduce use of fossil fuels, develop more carbon sinks (fast growing vegetation, more trees, . . . ).

--- or, take a can of Drano to identifiably clogged carbon sinks --- commercial fisheries are suspect, but without carbon content from 1000 year cores from the Grand Banks, no one's going to prove anything.
 
  • #95
Bystander said:
I'm trying to get you to look at the identified physical properties of the system, and what effects those properties have on the system and its interactions with other systems which together comprise the climate of this planet.

But you have only been concentrating on the N Atlantic and the Bering strait. They are definelty the areas most involved in the heat conveyor, but there is a lot more involved than those two places. Plus the warm ocean currents flowing northward would only increase the melting which would leave bare land and open oceans which will absorb even more heat.



Bystander said:
South Atlantic, and South Pacific conveyors? Get mixed at the surface with the South Circumpolar Current (Roaring Forties, Furious Fifties, Seasick Sixties); and, the surface winds off Antarctica (south polar atmospheric convection cell) are blowing the wrong direction to transport heat to the Antarctic ice sheet.

Yet the antarctic ice has its own problems.
http://uwamrc.ssec.wisc.edu/iceberg.html


Bystander said:
"Smoking gun?" What's necessary to establish temperature-depth profiles as a function of time as a meaningful measurement of anything?
1) a zero flow, or stagnant ocean, situation in which one monitors a change in profile with no questions about the thermal history of the sample location --- obviously not the case;
2) tagged sample volumes, water masses, that maintain their identity as they move, and that can be located after forty years for further measurement --- not on this planet --- water bodies can move cohesively in open deep water, but don't retain discernible identities for longer than months to a year, and technology might be near the threshold of tracking cohesive water movements, but ain't there yet;
3) a fixed circulation pattern in which every water parcel moves in a prescribed pattern (N. Atl., 2 turns in the Beaufort, down the west side of the mid-ocean ridge, deflect upward at the equator, warm, move back up the N. Atl., sink without riding Beaufort's merry-go-round, down the east side of the mid-ocean ridge, cross the equator, hop on the Antarctic circumpolar, do 5 1/2 circuits, move north on S. Pac. floor --- is this getting ridiculous enough to discard;
4) exact knowledge of ocean circulation patterns (some pattern, lots of chaos) that enables measurement of properties of water parcels with thermal histories identical to those measured previously --- ain't no such thing --- oceanographers dream about the day;
5) can someone come up with a plausible set of conditions for expecting T as a function of depth, lat, lon to remain constant?​

Smoking dope? Smoke blowing from some other orifice? 'Nother journalist's confabulation of what may, or may not, be decent science. Forty years at 2W/m2 gives a maximum "signal" of 1 K for a perfectly mixed 600 m water column; natural variation is a minimum of 3 K. Picking 1 K from 4.5 K noise (the two measurement uncertainties added in quadrature) is humbuggery, picking a few hundredths to maybe a tenth (water stratifies by its density as a function of T) is crackpottery. The LLNL-Scripps study results as described in the link are garbage --- like I say, what got written in the link probably doesn't have anything to do with the subject or results of the study.

WOW, So to sum it up you are saying that everything that has been done in the past is useless, Scripps is garbage, and oceanographers don't have the science to measure what needs to be measured.

I am saying that 20% of the arctic ice has melted and we better be dam sure of exactly what is going on. And now, not 20 years from now. If we can measure the wind velocities and temperatures on the surface of other planets we can do what is necessary here on Earth to find out what we need to know. Lack of proper funding and political catering to special interests have been the biggest problem.


Bystander said:
Enthalpy of fusion of water hasn't changed in the nearly two hundred years since it was first measured --- 't'aint likely to now.

But when there is little ice left to melt, the latent heat of fusion really won't matter. Heat enthalpy is not a factor on bare ground, or air. And with water it is only involved in change of state.

Bystander said:
It is necessary to know what is and what ain't going on before running off half-cocked --- you know that. Finding out what's going on takes time. Ill considered actions have huge consequences --- take a look back at the "Dustbowl" for an example.

I don't think we are going to do much damage to the Earth by taking its temperature. There are few actions we can take, that would harm anything except the bottom line of the big energy companies.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #96
This kinda got lost in the shuffle ---

Skyhunter said:
According to the study cited in this article the rate of rise in sea level is accelerating.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4651876.stm

During my reading about sea levels I read that approximately 6% of total water influx to the oceans and seas comes from direct groundwater discharge.

"6%" plus or minus what limits of uncertainty? Doing the global mass balance on water requires measuring discharge rates of all rivers, streams, trickles, rivulets, springs, glaciers, and I've missed a few, into the ocean, measuring evaporation from the sea surface, measuring pptn rate to the sea, measuring storage volumes of lakes, reservoirs, ice sheets, glaciers, aquifers, vadose water, water content of atmosphere, water content of lifeforms... Some of these items are reasonably constant, "bio-water," atmospheric load, vadose water (?), are about it from the list I've given --- the rest wander around seasonally, and with weather patterns (Pacific High moves, and pptn to sea increases or decreases at expense of decreased or increased pptn on N. Amer.). "Direct" groundwater discharge is what? What's pumped? Or, includes natural groundwater discharge? 6% of the twenty-five to thirty thousand cubic kilometers per year estimated for total discharge from all rivers, streams, ... , is fifteen to eighteen hundred cubic kilometers --- I've told you the global extraction rate is estimated to be three thousand --- that minus the "6% estimate" is the fraction lost to transpiration, groundwater "recharge" (since that's where it came from), and evaporation --- gives us an upper recharge rate of 40-50%, more like 20-25% including evaporation. (I'm sick of spelling out numbers --- back to sci. notation.)

Okay, I know that's not what you or the sources meant --- "6%" of the total contribution to sea level rise, 10-20 cm; multiplied by the area is 3.5-7.0x104 km3, and all but "6%" comes from melting glaciers and ice sheets. Antarctica has an area of 1.4x107 km2, Greenland 2x106, and we'll throw in another 4 for Canada, GNP, Siberia, Scandinavia, Kilamanjaro --- 2x107 km2 furnishing 3.5-7.0x104 km3 of water. 3.5-7.0 divided by 2 is 1.75-3.5, 104 divided by 107 is 10-3 --- 1.75-3.5 x 10-3 km missing --- [sarcasm]that's not much, hardly noticeable.[/sarcasm]

1.5-3.0 meters of ice have vanished over the past century (1.5-3.0 cm/a), if melting is uniform over the entire area? And Ray Charles didn't spot it? 3.0 m isn't going to be that noticeable on barometric pressure readings, granted, and relating such measurements to those from early in the century isn't worth the effort at that level of resolution. Photos, topographic surveys, surface "dust" accumulations should exhibit some changes for melts of such magnitude.
If the rate of rise is increasing, is it due only to the pumping of groundwater?

Aquifers are "high impedance" water sources; you can pump at rate A from a single well, and half rate A from each of two wells (oversimplification). Pumping on the scale of the past century competes with my hypothesized natural groundwater relaxation by transmission to the oceans by reducing, or reversing flows through aquifers. Is the sum of pumping plus natural more or less than natural alone? Who knows? "Insufficient data." Is the global pumping rate increasing? "Insufficient data."

The temperature-depth profile crowd goes for thermal expansion --- going through the LLNL-Scripps study, maximum temperature signal for 40 years at 600 m depth from 2 W/m2 decrease in heat loss from the sea surface (GH), came up with raising 600 m 1 K --- or 1500 m in a century; expansivity of water is around 30 ppm/K (once we get above the 4 C minimum --- and below 4 inversion), time 1500 m is 45,000 micrometers, or 4.5 cm per century.

Rate increasing? Tide gauges are reasonably reliable data sources --- comparing average rates over three different period lengths to derive a change in rate is questionable from a statistical standpoint --- pick a period length, plot it, and see what it looks like. Mixing periods boils down to something called "data torture," a trap statisticians are cautioned to avoid.
 
  • #97
10,000 years ago there was sudden and swift global warming. I find it a pity. If today's scientists had been there to implement emissions cuts, mankind could have averted climate change!
 
  • #98
edward said:
But you have only been concentrating on the N Atlantic and the Bering strait. They are definelty the areas most involved in the heat conveyor, but there is a lot more involved than those two places. Plus the warm ocean currents flowing northward would only increase the melting which would leave bare land and open oceans which will absorb even more heat.

You ask about Siberia --- I talk about Siberia.
Yet the antarctic ice has its own problems.
http://uwamrc.ssec.wisc.edu/iceberg.html

Just looked at the S. Polar Stn. --- -89 F, 204 K, 100 W/m2 maximum radiation to space; 6 mos. ago (Boreal winter), the north pole was at 240 K, radiating a maximum of 190 W/m2. South polar atmospheric convection cell is transporting 100 W/m2 from the "Seasick Sixties" to the continent, leaving a lot of heat behind to chew at the continental margins. 'Mong other things, comparing the Boreal and Austral winters, Austral winter leaves the rest of the planet with an extra 2-3 W/m2 to get rid of by other means than polar heat loss. Compare this to the accepted paleoclimatic position that movement of the Antarctic continent to its polar location and opening of the Drake passage resulted in a cooling of the planet and its climate.
WOW, So to sum it up you are saying that everything that has been done in the past is useless, Scripps is garbage,

No, I'm saying that press releases, journalistic confabulations of managerial confabulations, and PR games are "garbage." You have to read the actual papers, skipping the "paeans to Chairman Mao" in the introductions and conclusions (ignore all the "weasel worded" "if" and other conditional statements that are inserted to allow funding bodies to put their own "spins" on the work).

and oceanographers don't have the science to measure what needs to be measured.

No, they have the science --- they do NOT have the data --- they are four or five orders of magnitude short in the size of data body necessary to reach conclusions of a global scale.
I am saying that 20% of the arctic ice has melted and we better be dam sure of exactly what is going on.(snip)

What's going on? The entropy of the universe is increasing. Little more detail? The Earth is intercepting 4.5x10-10 of the sun's radiated energy, reflecting some, absorbing the rest and reradiating it to space. More? The absorbed energy is distributed about the surface of the planet by a combination of convective, conductive, and radiative heat transfer processes. Something quantitative? Be a while --- bundle of heat reservoirs and convective processes to identify, and a whole lotta measurements to be made.

Arctic pack ice thaws, open Arctic radiates heat at 200 + W/m2, Atlantic conveyor speeds up, N. Atl. (equator to Arctic Circle) cools, conveyor slows, Arctic pack ice reforms, N. Canada dumps 1000 km3/a fresh water under ice pack forming insulating layer (no convective heat transfer from deeper Atl. water), heat builds up under pack, pack melts, and around and around we go.
But when there is little ice left to melt, the latent heat of fusion really won't matter. Heat (snip typo) is not a factor on bare ground, or air. And with water it is only involved in change of state.

This doesn't make sense after I fix the typo --- these are "tipping point, runaway" arguments?
I don't think we are going to do much damage to the Earth by taking its temperature.

I'm talking about the damage resulting from committing the global economy to actions based on conclusions drawn from inconclusive data.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #99
Futobingoro said:
10,000 years ago there was sudden and swift global warming. I find it a pity. If today's scientists had been there to implement emissions cuts, mankind could have averted climate change!
Do you have some evidence of this that you could provide?

Or are you just being sarcastic?
 
  • #100
Bystander said:
I'm talking about the damage resulting from committing the global economy to actions based on conclusions drawn from inconclusive data.
Now that is the crux of the biscuit.

What damage by converting to clean energy? The only people harmed are those that want to squeeze the last few trillion dollars from fossil fuels.

The reality is that the Earth is warming. The greenhouse effect is real and growing stronger as we continue to dump GHG into the environment. Lindzens theory that increased cloud cover would mitigate the effect is not playing out. It is hotter now than it has been in the last 400 years, perhaps the last 2000.

And the main argument is discount the science supporting AGW while decrying the economic damage of converting to clean energy.

What about the cost of not doing something?

Ask an asthmatic what the cost of air pollution is to them. Even without AGW converting to clean energy should be a priority.
 
  • #101
The Bush administration estimated that it would cost $400 billion to the U.S. economy and that 5 million jobs would be lost.
http://www.globalization101.org/index.php?file=news1&id=66

This is a bargain compared to the cost of the war in Iraq. With the $400 billion in changes to the way we use energy, we wouldn't have needed the Iraqi oil. And we would have saved putting billions tons of CO2
into the atmosphere.

As for the 5 million jobs being lost, I seriously doubt that figure. A lot of new jobs would have been created. And it surely would have helped if we hadn't imported 12 million illegals and given them jobs.:rolleyes:
 
  • #102
Bystander said:
You ask about Siberia --- I talk about Siberia.

Thanks and BTW I do appreciate the knowledge that you have shared.

Bystander said:
No, they have the science --- they do NOT have the data --- they are four or five orders of magnitude short in the size of data body necessary to reach conclusions of a global scale.

What kind of time frame are we looking at to gather that data? It seems like we are moving at a snails pace.

Bystander said:
What's going on? The entropy of the universe is increasing. Little more detail? The Earth is intercepting 4.5x10-10 of the sun's radiated energy, reflecting some, absorbing the rest and reradiating it to space. More? The absorbed energy is distributed about the surface of the planet by a combination of convective, conductive, and radiative heat transfer processes. Something quantitative? Be a while --- bundle of heat reservoirs and convective processes to identify, and a whole lotta measurements to be made.

Arctic pack ice thaws, open Arctic radiates heat at 200 + W/m2, Atlantic conveyor speeds up, N. Atl. (equator to Arctic Circle) cools, conveyor slows, Arctic pack ice reforms, N. Canada dumps 1000 km3/a fresh water under ice pack forming insulating layer (no convective heat transfer from deeper Atl. water), heat builds up under pack, pack melts, and around and around we go.

WOW thanks you should have made me look that up.:smile:

Bystander said:
This doesn't make sense after I fix the typo --- these are "tipping point, runaway" arguments?

This is what I keep reading in numerous scientific journals. They keep mentioning things like GW is an "18 wheeler rolling down hill" and "run away train scenarios." It is difficult to believe that all of them can be wrong.

Bystander said:
I'm talking about the damage resulting from committing the global economy to actions based on conclusions drawn from inconclusive data.

I see your point on that, but since fossil fuels are limited anyway, I see no harm in getting a head start on making energy use changes. Or at least we should put more money into alternative energy technology so that we could make a more sudden change if necessary. We could even use the high tech jobs right now. Bush did allow $2 or $3 billion for research, but that is a drop in the proverbial bucket compared to what is needed.

And we seem to be locked into a situation where the large fossil fuel suppliers have waaay too much influence on the federal government.
 
  • #103
I heard today that we burn one million years worth of fossil fuels in a singe year! :bugeye:

This is such a selfish society.

1,000,000 = 1

And with all that wealth and technological power at our disposal, at this unique time in the history of civilization, are we truly prepared to just consume as much as we can in our pitifully short lives and possibly wreck the world for future life and civilizations?

People in the first world, because we are the ones with the power, need to take the initiative and change our lifestyles and consumption habits. People in a first world democracy have many times the political power of third world people. Even greater than their rights of suffrage however is their $$$$. If enough common people started making better consumption choices, voting with their $$$$ as it were, the markets will respond.

If consumers demand it, some smart capitalist will deliver it.

We the privileged owe it to those with no power. That is our noblis oblige.
 
  • #104
edward said:
Thanks and BTW I do appreciate the knowledge that you have shared.

Welcome. I ain't guaranteeing I've covered all factors, interactions, and possibilities.

What kind of time frame are we looking at to gather that data? It seems like we are moving at a snails pace.

Scripps, Woods Hole, Lamont-Doherty, TAMU, U. of Del., and maybe a dozen other institutes of oceanography in the U. S. plus maybe a couple dozen others word-wide, averaging maybe two weeks to a month of cruising time a year? Gonna be a while --- your guess is as good as mine, and NSF can "turn on a dime" as far as where the money goes from one year to the next. I wasn't kidding about the Navy --- forty years of CW games with the submariners playing "blind man's bluff" with each other and the opposition, probably 20-40 boats at sea at all times, got to be a lot of depth-T-position data. Jaques and Calypso? Ballard? Kinda doubt the amateurs have accumulated much useful --- might be some decent qualitative observations for other people to follow up.

WOW thanks you should have made me look that up.:smile:

The WHOI link you posted put that together --- I was sort of aware of the freshwater lens, but never really thought about its consequences in the heat transfer and circulation problem before. The fine details ain't going to be quite as cut and dried, and this is one totally "off the cuff" alternative to think about --- there have to be more.

This is what I keep reading in numerous scientific journals. They keep mentioning things like GW is an "18 wheeler rolling down hill" and "run away train scenarios." It is difficult to believe that all of them can be wrong.

The system's been around four billion years, been subjected to numerous upset conditions, and not turned "runaway" --- stable? No new factors have been introduced, same mass, same chemistry, same illumination, same geometry (excluding tectonic rearrangements of land and ocean areas), same environment to radiate to --- temperature's going to wiggle around as I tectonically rearrange the furniture at the poles, and adjust the "feng shui" of the oceanic circulation, but without introducing some new factor it's tough to see it running away now.

I see your point on that, but since fossil fuels are limited anyway, I see no harm in getting a head start on making energy use changes. Or at least we should put more money into alternative energy technology so that we could make a more sudden change if necessary. We could even use the high tech jobs right now.

The energy problem and the GW question are two different things, and not "joined at the hip." The "OPECcers" :devil: price themselves out of business and the nuke and solar options move in --- the oil companies pick up their own nukes and start synthesizing their own "syncrude" from sewage, landfills, garbage, ag waste, whatever can be pipelined or barged to them and continue with the same liquid fuels market as ever --- no one's going to waste a whole lot of time peddling hydrogen. Who pays whom for delivering the garbage, or for hauling it off? Laissez faire capitalism is going to work as well for that as anything --- .

Bush did allow $2 or $3 billion for research, but that is a drop in the proverbial bucket compared to what is needed.

Energy research has always been the last thing funded, and first cut --- 'tain't just George. Turning bio-materials into chemical feedstocks is going to take a little "cut and try," but isn't going to require Manhattan Project scale funding.

And we seem to be locked into a situation where the large fossil fuel suppliers have waaay too much influence on the federal government.

Wish I had bought the book --- can't even remember the title now --- came out couple years back --- "Where the Money Is (or Goes)," something along those lines --- one of those NYT bestseller non-fiction items on the bookstore shelves --- that vanish without a sale or a trace --- all I saw was one review, and didn't even have sense to hang on to that --- 10-15% of the nation's GNP/GDP, or salaried income, is from/in primary production (mining, timber, agriculture, refining, manufacturing) and transportation (trucking, railways, air freight --- NO passenger service), another 15% from/in government (federal, state, and local), 30% in financial (banks, stock market, insurance, real estate(?)), and the rest in "service" industries (health care, restaurants, legal). Bottom line is that the lobbying power of these various sectors is proportionate to their finances --- who's got the bigger chokehold on congress ain't the traditional "large caps" of the pre-WW II era --- just about all of those have been buried by the likes of Microsoft (service sector?), and the banking and financial stocks --- railroads, steel, chemical companies are all in the small and mid-cap range as far as "market capitalization." Getting way off topic.
 
  • #105
Bystander said:
The Bering Strait is shallow (averages 50m depth), and currents through it are not fully developed in the sense that there is a boundary layer effect from the shallow bottom; water velocity at the bottom is zero, and increases as the surface is approached. Increasing the depth of water by the 10-20 cm cited for increased sea level increases the flow rate through the strait, and as a result, the heat transport, without any increase in the temperature of the N. Pac.. The same argument does not apply to the Atlantic conveyor; the water depth, 2-3 km, is such that there is no boundary layer effect, drag, and, increased sea level has no effect on the flow rate. Increased heat transport to the West Arctic areas around the Chukchi is then a natural consequence of increased sea level.

This graph shows a warming trend in the Bering Sea.

http://www.beringclimate.noaa.gov/bering_status_overview.html
Ocean temperatures for the previous decade (Fig 3) from an oceanographic mooring (M2, Fig.4) show a shift toward warmer temperature of 2 deg C around 2000. Of particular importance is that recent winter temperatures are above the freezing point, indicating no or little sea ice in the southeastern Bering Sea for the previous four years (Fig 2 (b)).

The Bering Sea is warming, so increased sea level as well as warmer waters in the Bering Sea is contributing to the Arctic thaw. Open sea absorbs heat while ice reflects it.

I posted this http://www.fou.uib.no/fd/1997/f/406001/ earlier in the thread. Perhaps you missed it but I would like to hear your comments Bystander.

The temperature of deep water temperatures show a pronounced warming in recent years. The major exchange of water with the Arctic is from the Atlantic. Since the deep waters in the Norwegian and Greenland seas are warming is that not indicative of Arctic warming in general?
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Similar threads

Replies
39
Views
4K
  • General Discussion
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • General Discussion
2
Replies
37
Views
5K
  • General Discussion
2
Replies
51
Views
10K
  • General Discussion
Replies
7
Views
2K
  • General Discussion
Replies
8
Views
3K
Replies
526
Views
55K
Replies
2
Views
6K
  • General Discussion
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • Sticky
  • Earth Sciences
Replies
1
Views
14K
Back
Top