Friday, May 20, 2011

New paper shows significant natural climate change from ocean oscillations

A paper published online today in the journal Geophysical Research Letters finds a strong influence of shifts in the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) on changes in snow cover of the distant Tibetan Plateau over the past 200 years. Major shifts occurred in the 1840s, 1880s, 1920s, and 1960s with CO2 levels well below Hansen's fictitious "safe limit" of 350 ppm. Ocean oscillations such as the AMO are not incorporated in climate models, but nonetheless have large effects upon climate change as demonstrated by this paper and others. Meanwhile, the IPCC claims they can't explain climate change based on natural forces, allows no competing hypotheses, and thus proclaims man-made CO2 as the default climate control knob, while conveniently ignoring ocean oscillations and other natural influences. Although ocean oscillations are poorly understood and scant research is being done to understand this large natural climate forcing, the IPCC and fellow alarmists cannot rightfully claim that only man-made CO2 explains climate change over the past century.

The paper also finds not surprisingly that cold phases are associated with more snow and warm phases with less snow, making a mockery of the claims of Jeff Masters, Mark "death spiral" Serreze, Al Gore and others that warming causes more snowfall.
The Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) follows a quasi-60-year cycle
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 38, L10703, 4 PP., 2011
Decadal variability in snow cover over the Tibetan Plateau during the last two centuries

Key Points
  • Coherent variability in ice cores can be considered as a proxy for snow cover  
  • This proxy for snow cover over the TP exhibits significant decadal variations  
  • Its variations are highly associated with AMO
Caiming Shen
Atmospheric Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Albany, New York, USA

Wei-Chyung Wang
Atmospheric Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Albany, New York, USA

Gang Zeng
Atmospheric Sciences Research Center, State University of New York, Albany, New York, USA

Based on the coherency in decadal variability between the ice core data and the observed snow cover over the Tibetan Plateau during recent decades, we used three available ice core data to characterize the snow cover variability of the last 200 years. The analysis suggests that the snow cover exhibits significant decadal variability with major shifts around 1840s, 1880s, 1920s, and 1960s. Its variations are found to be closely correlated with the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation: Cool/warm phases coincide with large/small snow cover. A plausible mechanism linking the North Atlantic climate to Asian monsoon is presented.

New paper: Increased CO2 decreases tropical cyclones

A paper published online today in the Journal of Climate finds climate models predict a 20% decrease in tropical cyclone frequency in response to doubled atmospheric CO2 and global warming. Another recent paper also found global warming decreases the frequency of the strongest wind events. Regardless of the many limitations and biases of climate models, the papers expose the alarmist claims of Al Gore et al that warming causes more hurricanes as baseless.

The response of tropical cyclone statistics to an increase in CO2 with fixed sea surface temperatures


Isaac M. Held1* and Ming Zhao1,2

1 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory / NOAA, Princeton, New Jersey, USA
2 University Corporation for Atmospheric Research

Abstract:  The effects on tropical cyclone statistics of doubling CO2, with fixed sea surface temperatures (SSTs), are compared to the effects of a 2K increase in SST, with fixed CO2, using a 50km resolution global atmospheric model. Confirming earlier results of Yoshimura and Sugi (2005), a significant fraction of the reduction in globally averaged tropical storm frequency seen in simulations in which both SST and CO2 are increased can be thought of as the effect of the CO2 increase with fixed SSTs. Globally, the model produces a decrease in tropical cyclone frequency of about 10% due to doubling of CO2 and an additional 10% for a 2K increase in SST, resulting in roughly a 20% reduction when both effects are present. The relative contribution of the CO2 effect to the total reduction is larger in the Northern than in the Southern Hemisphere. The average intensity of storms increases in the model with increasing SST, but intensity remains roughly unchanged, or decreases slightly, with the increase in CO2 alone. As a result, when considering the frequency of more intense cyclones, the intensity increase tends to compensate for the reduced total cyclone numbers for the SST increase in isolation but not for the CO2 increase in isolation. Changes in genesis in these experiments roughly follow changes in mean vertical motion, reflecting changes in convective mass fluxes. Discussion is provided of one possible perspective on how changes in the convective mass flux might alter genesis rates.

Monday, May 16, 2011

James Hansen admits man-made global warming has been greatly exaggerated by climate models

As just pointed out by an astute and disillusioned young climate scientist, James Hansen, the high priest of the global warming religion and defender of creation has recently produced a non-peer-reviewed paper finding that the net man-made effects on climate have been greatly exaggerated by computer models. Hansen claims most climate models have underestimated the cooling effect of man-made aerosols via cloud changes, although the fine print in the paper admits they really have no idea what is causing the cloud changes and resulting cooling effect. Hmmm, possibly the cosmic ray theory of Svensmark et al? Hansen also references estimates for climate sensitivity pulled out of the air by his brainwashed grandchildren in the amusing paper (p. 3).

Earth's Energy Imbalance and Implications

James Hansen (1), Makiko Sato (1), Pushker Kharecha (1), Karina von Schuckmann (2)

((1) NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and Columbia University Earth Institute, (2) Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique)

(Submitted on 5 May 2011)

Improving observations of ocean temperature confirm that Earth is absorbing more energy from the sun than it is radiating to space as heat, even during the recent solar minimum. The inferred planetary energy imbalance, 0.59 \pm 0.15 W/m2 during the 6-year period 2005-2010, provides fundamental verification of the dominant role of the human-made greenhouse effect in driving global climate change. Observed surface temperature change and ocean heat gain constrain the net climate forcing and ocean mixing rates. We conclude that most climate models mix heat too efficiently into the deep ocean and as a result underestimate the negative forcing by human-made aerosols. Aerosol climate forcing today is inferred to be -1.6 \pm 0.3 W/m2, implying substantial aerosol indirect climate forcing via cloud changes. Continued failure to quantify the specific origins of this large [negative] forcing is untenable, as knowledge of changing aerosol effects is needed to understand future climate change. A recent decrease in ocean heat uptake was caused by a delayed rebound effect from Mount Pinatubo aerosols and a deep prolonged solar minimum. Observed sea level rise during the Argo float era can readily be accounted for by thermal expansion of the ocean and ice melt, but the ascendency of ice melt leads us to anticipate a near-term acceleration in the rate of sea level rise.

Sorry Jimbo, near-term sea level rise is decelerating  

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Experimental results support cosmic ray theory of climate

The cosmic ray theory of Svensmark et al postulates that small changes in solar activity can have amplified effects upon the climate by influencing galactic cosmic rays and cloud formation. Scientists at CERN -the European Laboratory for Particle Physics have been studying this theory in the laboratory for the past several years, and according to Nigel Calder's blog (former chief editor of New Scientist), the experiment is showing that cosmic rays have a strong influence on aerosol (cloud) formation and that the results will soon be published. Indeed, the highly-recommended video below of a lecture last month by the director of the experiment, Jasper Kirby, has an example run from the experiment (the full results are embargoed until publication) showing large increases in cloud nucleation particles related to the intensity of artificial cosmic rays entering the experimental chamber. If the Svensmark et al theory is proven correct, the Sun may finally be vindicated as the dominating control knob of the climate, not man-made CO2.


Example run from the CLOUD experiment shows in the bottom graph the increase in cloud nucleation particles following introduction of low levels of artificial cosmic rays at time "1", moderate levels at "2", and high levels at time "3". Notations in red added. Slide from Dr. Kirby's lecture above.

h/t also to WUWT
Blogger has been having many software problems over the past 2 days and comments & posts have apparently been lost. Here is a 2nd upload of the above graphic if the above does not load:
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-TT-Diut9W0w/Tc8z3kjPvqI/AAAAAAAABo0/QEZvOujZaZ8/s1600/ScreenShot2338.jpg

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

New paper explains another way that climate is dominated by negative feedbacks

A paper published today in the Journal of Climate finds that increases in ocean heat transport from the warmer tropics to the poles are unlikely to cause alarmist 'positive feedback' 'tipping point' scenarios as predicted by James Hansen and the IPCC. The paper finds that increases in ocean heat transport above the current are likely to be offset by increased cloud cover over the tropics, resulting in cooling of the tropics, without inducing significantly warmer climates than today. The paper shows yet another means by which negative feedbacks - not positive - dominate the climate.

Climate sensitivity to changes in ocean heat transport 

Marcelo Barreiro

Unidad de Ciencias de la Atmosfera, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la Republica, Uruguay
Annalisa Cherchi

Simona Masina
Centro Euro-Mediterraneo per i Cambiamenti Climatici, and Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Bologna, Italy

Abstract: Using an atmospheric general circulation model coupled to a slab ocean we study the effect of ocean heat transport (OHT) on climate prescribing OHT from zero to two times the present-day values. In agreement with previous studies an increase in OHT from zero to present-day conditions warms the climate by decreasing the albedo due to reduced sea-ice extent and marine stratus cloud cover and by increasing the greenhouse effect through a moistening of the atmosphere. However, when the OHT is further increased the solution becomes highly dependent on a positive radiative feedback between tropical low clouds and sea surface temperature. We found that the strength of the low clouds-SST feedback combined with the model design may produce solutions that are globally colder than Control mainly due to an unrealistically strong equatorial cooling. Excluding those cases, results indicate that the climate warms only if the OHT increase does not exceed more than 10% of the present-day value in the case of a strong cloud-SST feedback and more than 25% when this feedback is weak. Larger OHT increases lead to a cold state where low clouds cover most of the deep tropics increasing the tropical albedo and drying the atmosphere. This suggests that the present-day climate is close to a state where the OHT maximizes its warming effect on climate and pose doubts about the possibility that greater OHT in the past may have induced significantly warmer climates than that of today.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

New paper: Global warming decreases the strongest wind events

A paper published today in Geophysical Research Letters finds that warming of the tropical oceans results in a decrease in frequency of the strongest wind events. The paper states that these findings add further evidence to suggest the atmospheric circulation (winds) become less energetic with global warming. These results are consistent with several other papers showing that global warming reduces the strength or frequency of hurricanes. No doubt, Al Gore will do the right thing and remove the hurricane cover images from his series of books and sci-fi movie:
 Evidence for a weakening of tropical surface wind extremes in response to atmospheric warming

Geophysical Research Letters

Authors: Guillaume Gastineau and Brian J. Soden

Abstract: The changes of extreme winds and its links with precipitation are assessed over the past two decades using daily satellite observations and climate model simulations. Both observations and models indicate a decrease in the frequency of the strongest wind events and an increase in the frequency of light wind events in response to a warming of the tropical oceans. The heaviest precipitation events are found to be more frequent when the tropical oceans warm, but the surface winds associated with these extreme rainfall events weaken. These results add further evidence to suggest that the atmospheric circulation becomes less energetic as the climate warms. It further suggests that the enhancement of the extreme precipitation events is mainly a result of increasing atmospheric water vapor and occurs despite a weakening of the large-scale circulation, which acts to diminish the mass convergence toward the precipitating zones.

Shining a light on solar impacts

A review article of solar effects upon climate was published in Nature Climate Change today and finds considerable uncertainly in estimates of solar forcing of climate based upon the Total Solar Irradiance (TSI). The article also suggests that TSI may not be the best indicator of solar variability because solar UV has been found to vary much more than previously thought. Solar UV is the most energetic portion of the solar spectrum and causes the most significant heating of the oceans. The IPCC and climate models look only at TSI, without consideration of the significant variations in solar UV, and therefore likely underestimate the influence of the Sun upon climate change.
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Monday, May 9, 2011

New paper: Increased solar activity caused far more global warming than assumed by the IPCC

A recent peer-reviewed paper published in Astronomy & Astrophysics finds that solar activity has increased since the Little Ice Age by far more than previously assumed by the IPCC. The paper finds that the Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) has increased since the end of the Little Ice Age (around 1850) by up to 6 times more than assumed by the IPCC. Thus, much of the global warming observed since 1850 may instead be attributable to the Sun (called "solar forcing"), rather than man-made CO2 as assumed by the IPCC.
Total Solar Irradiance (TSI)
Astronomy & Astrophysics 529, A67 (2011)   

A new approach to the long-term reconstruction of the solar irradiance leads to large historical solar forcing

A. I. Shapiro, W. Schmutz1, E. Rozanov, M. Schoell, M. Haberreiter1, A. V. Shapiro and S. Nyeki

1 Physikalisch-Meteorologishes Observatorium Davos, World Radiation Center, 7260 Davos Dorf, Switzerland
2 Institute for Atmospheric and Climate science ETH, Zurich, Switzerland
3 Institute for Astronomy ETH, Zurich, Switzerland

Received: 19 November 2010 Accepted: 22 February 2011

Abstract 
Context. The variable Sun is the most likely candidate for the natural forcing of past climate changes on time scales of 50 to 1000 years. Evidence for this understanding is that the terrestrial climate correlates positively with the solar activity. During the past 10 000 years, the Sun has experienced the substantial variations in activity and there have been numerous attempts to reconstruct solar irradiance. While there is general agreement on how solar forcing varied during the last several hundred years – all reconstructions are proportional to the solar activity – there is scientific controversy on the magnitude of solar forcing. Aims. We present a reconstruction of the total and spectral solar irradiance covering 130 nm–10 μm from 1610 to the present with an annual resolution and for the Holocene with a 22-year resolution. Methods. We assume that the minimum state of the quiet Sun in time corresponds to the observed quietest area on the present Sun. Then we use available long-term proxies of the solar activity, which are 10Be isotope concentrations in ice cores and 22-year smoothed neutron monitor data, to interpolate between the present quiet Sun and the minimum state of the quiet Sun. This determines the long-term trend in the solar variability, which is then superposed with the 11-year activity cycle calculated from the sunspot number. The time-dependent solar spectral irradiance from about 7000 BC to the present is then derived using a state-of-the-art radiation code. Results. We derive a total and spectral solar irradiance that was substantially lower during the Maunder minimum than the one observed today. The difference is remarkably larger than other estimations published in the recent literature. The magnitude of the solar UV variability, which indirectly affects the climate, is also found to exceed previous estimates. We discuss in detail the assumptions that lead us to this conclusion.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

US taxpayers subsidize ethanol exported to Brazil

The Financial Times reports that Brazil has been importing record amounts of ethanol - almost all from the US - because US ethanol is the "most competitive" on price. And what helps keep US ethanol prices low? Six billion in ethanol subsidies paid by US taxpayers to ethanol producers.

Brazil imports record amount of ethanol in 1st quarter; almost all from U.S.



obama brazil
President Obama visits Brazil
Brazil, the world's ethanol superpower, has had to import unprecedented volumes of the biofuel from December of 2010 through March of 2011. Due to a culmination of factors – an insufficient 2010 harvest, weak expectations for the 2011 growing season and booming domestic demand – Brazil imported an estimated 80 to 200 million liters (21.1 to 52.9 million gallons) of ethanol during the first quarter of 2011. According to some sources, this is only the second time that Brazil's has resorted to importing the biofuel, with the first being in 2009 when Brazil's harvest was devastated by heavy rains.

So, where's Brazil getting all of this ethanol from? The United States. According to Platts, almost all of Brazil's imports were U.S. corn-based ethanol, as prices were deemed to be the world's most competitive. Perhaps coincidentally, President Obama timed his recent trip to Brazil with the height of the South American nation's need for U.S.-produced ethanol.

Sea level rise is accelerating...to the downside

Following a long delay and some controversial "adjustments," the University of Colorado sea level satellite data was recently released. A plot of the rate of sea level rise shows a stable rate between 2003 and 2007, and declining rates since 2007.
Rate of sea level rise in mm/year
Sea levels have been rising since the peak of the last ice age 22,000 years ago and have been decelerating over the past 8,000 years.
See also Inconvenient Truth: Sea Level Rise is Decelerating for evidence that the rate of sea level rise also decelerated in the 20th century:

h/t the Portuguese blog Ecotretas

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Most widely used climate computer model exaggerates global warming by 67%

A paper published today in the Journal of Climate announces a new version of the computer climate model most widely used by climate scientists and the IPCC, called the Community Climate System Model (CCSM) version 4. The creators claim their program is
 "a fully-coupled, global climate model that provides state-of-the-art computer simulations of the Earth’s past, present, and future climate states."
The abstract, however, contains a remarkable admission that the model exaggerates the global warming from 1850 to 2005 by 0.4°C more than observations. The observed global warming from 1850 to 2005 was only 0.6°C, thus the computer model predicted ~ 67% more global warming than actually occurred. This exaggeration alone could account for all of the claimed "heat trapping" from the increase in man-made carbon dioxide over that same 155 year period. IPCC projections for future global warming based upon this model may be similarly greatly exaggerated.

The Community Climate System Model Version 4

Abstract: The fourth version of the Community Climate System Model (CCSM4) was recently completed and released to the climate community. This paper describes developments to all CCSM components, and documents fully coupled pre-industrial control runs compared to the previous version, CCSM3. Using the standard atmosphere and land resolution of 1° results in the sea surface temperature biases in the major upwelling regions being comparable to the 1.4° resolution CCSM3. Two changes to the deep convection scheme in the atmosphere component result in CCSM4 producing El Nino/Southern Oscillation variability with a much more realistic frequency distribution than CCSM3, although the amplitude is too large compared to observations. They also improve the Madden-Julian Oscillation, and the frequency distribution of tropical precipitation. A new overflow parameterization in the ocean component leads to an improved simulation of the Gulf Stream path and the North Atlantic Ocean meridional overturning circulation. Changes to CCSM4 land component lead to a much improved annual cycle of water storage, especially in the tropics. The CCSM4 sea ice component uses much more realistic albedos than CCSM3, and for several reasons the Arctic sea ice concentration is improved in CCSM4. An ensemble of 20th century simulations produces a pretty good match to the observed September Arctic sea ice extent from 1979 to 2005. The CCSM4 ensemble mean increase in globally-averaged surface temperature between 1850 and 2005 is larger than the observed increase by about 0.4°C. This is consistent with the fact that CCSM4 does not include a representation of the indirect effects of aerosols, although other factors may come into play. The CCSM4 still has significant biases, such as the mean precipitation distribution in the tropical Pacific Ocean, too much low cloud in the Arctic, and the latitudinal distributions of short-wave and long-wave cloud forcings.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Geophysicist Dr. Nils-Axel Mörner predicts new Little Ice Age by the middle of this century

Dr. Nils-Axel Mörner is the past chair of the Paleogeophysics and Geodynamics department at Stockholm University in Sweden. Dr. Mörner has just published a peer-reviewed paper showing that the Sun will be in a new major Solar Minimum by the middle of this century, resulting in a new Little Ice Age over the Arctic and NW Europe. Dr. Morner bases his analysis upon solar influences on the Earth's length of day and the cosmic ray theory of Svensmark et al., and finds the analysis provides conclusions "completely opposite to the scenarios presented by the IPCC."
ABSTRACT: At around 2040-2050 we will be in a new major Solar Minimum. It is to be expected that we will then have a new “Little Ice Age” over the Arctic and NW Europe. The past Solar Minima were linked to a general speeding-up of the Earth’s rate of rotation. This affected the surface currents and southward penetration of Arctic water in the North Atlantic causing “Little Ice Ages” over northwestern Europe and the Arctic.

EXCERPTS: At around 2040-2050 the extrapolated cyclic behaviour of the observed Solar variability predicts a new Solar Minimum with return to Little Ice Age climatic conditions.

The date of the New Solar Minimum has been assigned at around 2040 by Mörner et al. (2003), at 2030-2040 by Harrara (2010), at 2042 ±11 by Abdassamatov (2010) and at 2030-2040 by Scafetta (2010), implying a fairly congruent picture despite somewhat different ways of transferring past signals into future predictions.

The onset of the associated cooling has been given at 2010 by Easterbrook (2010) and Herrara (2010), and at “approximately 2014” by Abdassamatov (2010). Easterbrook (2010) backs up his claim that the cooling has already commenced by geological observations facts.

At any rate, from a Solar-Terrestrial point of view, we will, by the middle of this century, be in a New Solar Minimum and in a New Little Ice Age (Figure 7). This conclusion is completely opposite to the scenarios presented by IPCC (2001, 2007) as illustrated in Figure 3. With “the Sun in the centre”, no other conclusion can be drawn, however.
IPCC projections (center) vs. Dr. Morner's projections (3rd panel)

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Freeman Dyson: Shale gas is 'cheap and effective'

Carbon reduction without the dodgy renewables?

The Register 5/4/11 

Renowned British-born boffin Freeman Dyson has given a cautious welcome to shale gas – the energy revolution that has caught energy experts, politicians and civil servants by surprise.

"A surge in gas production and use may prove to be both the cheapest and most effective way to hasten the decarbonisation of the world economy, given the cost and land requirements of most renewables," he writes in the foreword to a new report.

Dyson compares shale to the introduction of wax candles, which replaced tallow candles and allowed the poor to read at night for the first time.

"Wax candles did more than government schools to produce a literate working class ... Compared with that, the later change from wax candles to electric light was not so important."

New reserves of gas extracted from rocks that lie much deeper than gas fields, have had a dramatic effect on the energy market in recent years. The global price of gas and oil have diverged for the first time, and the US is now a net gas exporter. Countries previously dependent on imports, such as Poland, South Africa, Mexico and Argentina, should become self-sufficient if they exploit their resources.

The report, written by science writer Matt Ridley, was commissioned by the Global Warming Policy Foundation; Dyson sits on the Board.

Ridley notes that the shale gas is a combination of old techniques and new computer processing power. Fracturing rock and horizontal drilling are not new, but have improved considerably; 3D geological modelling has allowed the sources to be exploited with greater precision.

"Though oil may yet grow more scarce and costly during this century, there is no realistic prospect of the world 'running out' of coal or gas this millennium. Like the peak-oil theory of the 1970s (when Jimmy Carter, influenced by EF Schumacher, argued that oil could be used up within a decade) and the peak-coal debate of 1865 (when WE Gladstone, influenced by WS Jevons, argued that Britain should retire its national debt before its coal ran out), all these forecasts proved to be far too pessimistic," he writes.

Ridley does highlight a few counter arguments. Geologist Art Berman wonders why one-third of shale wells drilled in the past "four to six" years are already abandoned; advocates say they should last 40 to 50 years.

However, many of the environmental impact reports have been disproved, or are much less impactful than campaigners suggest: drilling doesn't spoil the countryside, doesn't use much water, and doesn't require subsidising.

He also notes that "powerful and entrenched interests" – from nuclear power giants to existing natural gas suppliers such as Gazprom, and the environmental lobbies – are working against the advancement of shale gas as a energy source. But the clincher, Ridley suggests, is its low cost:

"Ultimately, it will be a matter of whether overborrowed European governments, businesses and people will be able to resist such a hefty source of new revenue and a clean energy source requiring no subsidy."

Dyson agrees. Shale gas is still a "fossil fuel", but it's much cleaner than coal. China alone creates half of the world's coal-fired energy (EIA stats), and these aren't going to go away any time soon.

"It undoubtedly carries environmental risks, which may be exploited to generate sufficient public concern to prevent its expansion in much of western Europe and parts of North America, even though the evidence suggests that these hazards are much smaller than in competing industries."

Costs of energy production c.2016

By contrast, solar and wind renewables are between many times more expensive and require direct and indirect subsidies, typically burdening the poor with higher fuel bills. Unless renewable technology improves dramatically, most may simply prove themselves to be unaffordable.

You can read the full report here (36-page/1.6MB PDF). ®

Monday, May 2, 2011

New paper asks if oil spill made the Gulf of Mexico greener

A paper published today in Geophysical Research Letters finds the initial satellite measurements following the BP Gulf of Mexico oil spill show a significant increase in phytoplankton biomass. Begs the question, did plankton consume spilled oil to help account for much less dire consequences from the spill than predicted?

Did the northeastern Gulf of Mexico become greener after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill?

http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2011GL047184

Authors: Chuanmin Hu, Robert H. Weisberg, Yonggang Liu, Lianyuan Zheng, Kendra L. Daly, David C. English, Jun Zhao and Gabriel A. Vargo

Abstract: Assessment of direct and indirect impacts of oil and dispersants on the marine ecosystem in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico (NEGOM) from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill (April – July 2010) requires sustained observations over multiple years. Here, using satellite measurements, numerical circulation models, and other environmental data, we present some initial results on observed biological changes at the base of the food web. MODIS fluorescence line height (FLH, a proxy for phytoplankton biomass) shows two interesting anomalies. The first is statistically significant (>1 mg m−3 of chlorophyll-a anomaly), in an area exceeding 11,000 km2 in the NEGOM during August 2010, about 3 weeks after the oil well was capped. FLH values in this area are higher (i.e., water is greener) than in any August since 2002, and higher than ever since 2002 in an area of ∼3,000 km2. Analyses of ocean circulation and other environmental data suggest that this anomaly may be attributed to the oil spill. The second is a spatially coherent FLH anomaly during December 2010 and January 2011, extending from Mobile Bay to the Florida Keys (mainly between 30 and 100-m isobaths). This anomaly appears to have resulted from unusually strong upwelling and mixing events during late fall. Available data are insufficient to support or reject a hypothesis that the subsurface oil may have contributed to the enhanced biomass during December 2010 and January 2011.

Scientist: "...we cannot claim to understand why we have the climate we have today"

The hunt is on for million-year-old ice core

NEW SCIENTIST  29 April 2011 by Wendy Zukerman


A RACE is on to retrieve the first million-year-old sample from deep within Antarctica's ice. It's a prize that could help us understand what drives major changes in Earth's climate.
Every 100,000 years or so, the Earth swings into an ice age - but it wasn't always this way. Until around 1 million years ago, our planet danced to a faster beat, with the ice age pulses occurring every 40,000 years. No one knows why the tempo slowed.
Currently, the shifts between ice ages and warm interglacial phases are thought to be influenced by three cyclical changes to Earth's motion. The Earth's axis wobbles or "precesses" on a 26,000-year cycle; it changes its average tilt on a 41,000-year cycle; and it shifts its orbit from being roughly circular to more elliptical on a 100,000-year cycle.
These changes alter the intensity of sunlight hitting the Earth at high latitudes, and so affect the extent of glaciation. The puzzling thing about the shift that happened a million years ago is that there was no obvious change to any of these cycles to make it happen.
"It's a real head spinner," says Tas van Ommen at the Australian Antarctic Division in Hobart, Tasmania. But climatologists are keen to find an explanation. "If we don't understand the switch, then we cannot claim to understand why we have the climate we have today," saysEric Wolff of the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, UK.
One possible explanation is that there was a slow decline in the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, starting around 3 million years ago. This could have weakened the greenhouse effect and cooled the Earth so much that the tilt towards the sun every 41,000 years no longer provided enough heat to melt the glaciers that formed in between. Confirmation of this idea requires a direct record of the ancient atmosphere - and this can be recovered by analysing the air that became trapped in tiny bubbles within ice as the snow it formed from fell to Earth.
In 2005, the European Consortium for Ice Coring in Antarctica (EPICA) drilled an ice core in Dome C on east Antarctica's plateau that stretches our record of the ancient atmosphere back 800,000 years (Quaternary Science ReviewsDOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.10.002). That's frustratingly short of the crucial transition period, so to extract an older core, the EPICA consortium must now go back to its drill site.
It has been joined in the chase for the million-year-old core by three other teams: one from the Australian Antarctic Division; a US contingent; and one from the Chinese Arctic and Antarctic Administration. Although the groups collaborate, there is no doubt each wants to win the prize.
"China is there already, at Dome A," in east Antarctica, says van Ommen. The Australians are also close to committing to a drill site: van Ommen has just returned from a survey of the Aurora basin in east Antarctica, which is believed to hold the thickest ice in Antarctica.
Despite their head start, however, the Chinese may have run into trouble. Last month, Robin Bell of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in Palisades, New York, and her colleagues found that ice sheets in Dome A are growing from the bottom up. This could mean that any ancient ice that was once there may have melted and been replaced (ScienceDOI: 10.1126/science.1200109).
Similar problems may stymie work at other potential drill sites, van Ommen says, but Wolff remains optimistic that the million-year-old ice core will be found. It is only recently that very deep cores have been drilled - and three of them contain ice more than 160,000 years old. "It would be surprising if we happened to have already collected the oldest ice available," Wolff says.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

New Paper: Greenland ice sheet didn't melt despite temperatures much hotter in the past

A new paper from the 2011 Antarctic Science Symposium presents new ice core data from Greenland and finds that not even the southern portion of Greenland was ice-free during the Eemian period, despite temperatures much higher than the present (5°C or 9°F) lasting for 16,000 years (from 130,000 to 114,000 years ago). Meanwhile, alarmists such as Richard Alley (buddy of Michael Mann at Penn State) and James Hansen claim "The entire ice mass of Greenland will disappear from the world map if temperatures rise by as little as 2°C." Note global temperatures have recovered by a mere 0.7°C since the end of the Little Ice Age in 1850 and have been flat to declining since 1998.
Eemian Period from 130,000 to 114,000 years ago was est. to be at least 5°C hotter than the present

The role of the Greenland Ice Sheet in future sea levels - Based on palaeorecords from ice cores and present observations

A new Greenland ice core has been drilled. The first results from the NEEM ice core are presented and then combined with results from other deep ice cores from the Greenland Ice Sheet.

All of the ice cores drilled through the Greenland Ice Sheets have been analyzed, and the results show that all contain ice from the previous warm Eemian period near the base. Is it thus clear that the Greenland Ice Sheet has existed for over 120,000 years, going back to the previous warm period, when it was 5 deg C warmer over Greenland?

The difference between Eemian and Holocene stable oxygen isotope values has been combined with an ice sheet flow model constrained by the ice core results and internal radio echo sounding layers, to estimate the volume of the Greenland Ice Sheet 120,000 years ago.

The results show that South Greenland has not been ice-free during the Eemian period, and that the sea level contribution from the Greenland Ice Sheet has been 1 to 2 meters.

Primary Authors:    DAHL-JENSEN, Dorthe (Centre for Ice and Climate, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen)

An opportunity for you to protect science and freedom

email received from Malcolm Roberts of Brisbane, Australia:

Friends:

Do you want to help expose and end the global warming scam?

If so, please see letter below from Englishman John O'Sullivan.

Professor Tim Ball is an internationally eminent Canadian climatologist and environmentalist courageously protecting science. He has written many articles protecting science and scientific integrity.

He has highlighted the need to make decisions based on real-world science as opposed to unvalidated computer models that even the UN IPCC has admitted are based on 16 factors, 13 of which have low or very low levels of understanding. That's one of many reasons why the models have repeatedly failed. Yet the models remain the basis for unfounded UN and government climate alarm.

This seems a marvelous opportunity to expose the global warming scam. I hope you'll decide to accompany me in supporting Professor Ball protecting freedom and science.

Malcolm

Begin forwarded message:
 
The Tim Ball Legal Fund: Two Crucial Global Warming Lawsuits
 
The following is based on the legal opinions of John O’Sullivan and Michael Scherr.
 
In what many regard as the definitive test of global warming science prominent climatologists on either side of the debate are set to fight each other in a Canadian courtroom.
 
Appearing at the British Columbia Supreme Court in Vancouver is American climatologist, Dr. Michael Mann suing defendant, Canadian climatologist Dr. Timothy Ball, for accusing him of scientific fraud. One of Canada’s most prominent libel lawyers, Roger D. McConchie, will be prosecuting not one, but two such libel cases against 72-year-old Ball, a retired professor. In a separate defamation suit Andrew Weaver, a Canadian climate modeler, is also suing Dr. Ball.
 

Courtroom Showdown Can Kill Climate Alarm & Carbon Tax Policies 

 
The implications for international policymakers from these two lawsuits may be huge. Dr. Mann has long been a key figure in the climate alarmist camp. Mann’s ‘hockey stick’ graph became the icon of the science that galvanized world political leaders to accept that modern global temperatures were unusually high and dangerously rising.
 
Dr. Ball is without doubt among the top tier of skeptic scientists denouncing unproven claims man-made global warming. No one has spoken more bravely or eruditely. Ball has repeatedly been critical of Mann’s infamous graph created using secret data. Ball has also criticized Weaver’s computer models.
 
Ball’s legal team believes it has a superb opportunity to expose critical flaws that may prove fatal to the claims. Success for Ball will reinforce skeptic arguments that human emissions of carbon dioxide are not causing an unprecedented rise in global temperatures; thus UN doomsaying claims will be very publicly discredited. If Mann and Weaver defeat Ball it will chill dissent among all principled scientists opposed to the promulgation of ill-conceived climate taxes.
 
In Tim’s favor are independent analysts who have identified sinister statistical anomalies in Mann’s iconic graph. Despite shrill words that Mann’s evidence supports claims that our planet faces “catastrophic” global warming Mann's excuse for not releasing any of his key calculations for public scrutiny is that he must protect his “intellectual property rights.” So much for trying to “save the planet!”
 

Canadian Libel Law: A Devastating Skeptic Weapon

 
All told, Mann has gone a decade denying other scientists, a U.S. Congressional Committee on Energy and Commerce as well as the Chairman of the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations examination of his hidden data. Michael Mann and his friends at the University of Virginia recently spent in excess of $500,000 in legal fees defying similar requests from Virginia’s Attorney General.
 
But Mann’s folly was to engage Tim under Canadian litigation rules. Canadian rules of libel permit Ball’s legal team to for apply a court mandate ordering the release of all such withheld data because it is Mann who is the instigator of these proceedings. A good outcome in Canada for Tim will likely help open the door to expose Mann and his UN accomplices to further review in the United States.
 

Legal Attrition Tactics Must Not Win Case by Default

 
Just as in the U.S., Canadian legal costs are huge. Supporters have rallied to Tim’s cause and opened a fund for donations with a target set for $200,000. This was the estimate for a minimum sum to adequately defend both the Weaver and Mann cases. No doubt when McConchie filed his double-barreled legal claims few could have anticipated that a retired scientist like Ball, with limited means, would succeed in raising so much public interest and support.
 
Grass roots donors have, within weeks, taken Tim’s fund past $100,000.
 
But what Dr. Ball really needs now is one or two ‘big donors.’ We are not referring to ‘big oil’ money but to civil liberties supporters who have done well in life and want to give something back to protect and promote free speech in scientific debate. Our new goal is to raise $400,000 to send a signal that scientific free speech will not capitulate to attrition. This is no small sum but is increasingly achievable in light of the astonishing groundswell of international support since the launch of the campaign. Moreover, the sum gives cover for Tim in the event the court awards aggravated damages against him.
 
If we prevail at trial, under in the British Columbia Civil Rules we may recover approximately half of all legal fees so we can make substantial reimbursements to donors of amounts over $10,000, upon request. Tim’s attorney, Michael Scherr, is willing to confirm this arrangement by written agreement and unexpended funds will be promptly and more easily returned.
 
The Frontier Centre for Public Policy (FCPP), a registered charity, is also supporting Tim. Any donors who believe they may be eligible to make tax-exempt donations via this registered charity should contact their tax advisers and FCCP for further advice. 
 
If you are as angered as we are by wealthy environmentalists groups’ bullyboy tactics to misuse the courts to quell crucial scientific debate, then please contribute and play your part in making a difference. Tim’s blog has more information here.
 
Truly,
 
 John O’Sullivan Esq.