Runaway Global
Warming
Runaway global warming, the climate alarmist
fantasy let loose on the public, has not yet been captured, but it
certainly appears to have at least been cornered by new data from
researchers at the University of Alabama-Huntsville
(UAH).
In a study
published in the American Geophysical Union's Geophysical Research
Letters on Aug. 9, the UAH researchers provide more real-world
evidence of the atmosphere's self-regulating nature. If this
particular self-regulatory mechanism is confirmed by additional
research, it will represent yet another deal-breaker for the
scientific hypothesis that has propped up climate alarmism thus
far.
Global warmers claim that increasing levels of atmospheric
greenhouse gases are raising global temperatures. But even if this
claim was true — and there is ample reason to be skeptical —
greenhouse gases by themselves could only warm the planet by so
much.
One of the oft-cited predictions of potential warming is that a
doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide levels from pre-industrial
levels — from 280 to 560 parts per million — would alone cause
average global temperature to increase by about 1.2 degrees
Centigrade.
But such a modest warming by itself is unlikely to cause
catastrophic climate change. At a current atmospheric carbon
dioxide level of 380 parts per million, we have already observed
about half that predicted temperature change without experiencing
any climatic chaos.
Recognizing the ho-hum nature of such a temperature change, the
alarmist camp moved on to hypothesize that even this slight warming
will cause irreversible changes in the atmosphere that, in turn,
will cause more warming. These alleged "positive feedback" cycles
supposedly will build upon each other to cause runaway global
warming, according to the alarmists.
Existing climate models, for example, assume that a warmer
atmosphere will cause an increase in high-altitude cirrus clouds —
a positive feedback into the climate system since cirrus clouds
trap outgoing radiation emitted by the Earth.
When you feed the above-mentioned warming scenario — the
doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide levels causing 1.2 degrees
Centigrade of warming — into a climate model that has been
turbo-charged with positive feedback, the resulting estimated
warming increases by 250 percent to 3 degrees Centigrade.
Many have questioned the validity of the hypothetical positive
feedback mechanism. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
atmospheric physicist Richard Lindzen, for example, proposed in
2001 an explanation called the "iris effect" for why amplified
warming has never materialized.
Based on a limited set of data, Lindzen hypothesized that cirrus
clouds and associated moisture actually work in opposition to
surface temperature changes. When the Earth's surface warms,
Lindzen supposed, the clouds open up to allow heat to escape. A
cooling surface, in turn, causes clouds to close and trap heat.
This elegant atmospheric self-regulatory mechanism was soon
attacked for being based on limited data and the inability of other
researchers to be able to identify the iris effect in other cloud
and temperature data sets.
But the new
research from the University of Alabama-Huntsville supports the
validity of the iris effect.
Analyzing six years of data from four instruments aboard three
NASA and NOAA satellites, the UAH researchers tracked precipitation
amounts, air and sea surface temperatures, high- and low-altitude
cloud cover, reflected sunlight and infrared energy escaping out to
space.
Rather than the hypothesized positive feedback of the climate
models, the UAH data actually shows a strong negative feedback. As
the tropical atmosphere warms, cirrus clouds decrease, allowing
infrared heat to escape from the atmosphere to outer space.
"To give an idea of how strong this enhanced cooling mechanism
is, if it was operating on global warming, it would reduce [climate
model-based] estimates of future warming by 75 percent," said UAH
researcher Roy Spencer in a media release.
"The role of clouds in global warming is widely agreed to be
pretty uncertain," Spencer said. "Right now, all climate models
predict that clouds will amplify warming. I'm betting that if the
climate models' 'clouds' were made to behave the way we see these
clouds behave in nature, it would substantially reduce the amount
of climate change the models predict for the coming decades."
If you think about it for a moment, none of this should be
surprising. As explained in greater detail at JunkScience.com, if
positive feedback from warming was really a dominant climatic
effect, then it should be very easy to identify by considering an
unusual recent weather event — the 1997-98 El Niño event which
caused temperatures to spike to the highest level since the
1930s.
But since the Earth cooled almost as abruptly as it warmed, we
can only assume that no positive feedback occurred. Our El Niño
experience indicates that the Earth is not precariously perched
upon some critical temperature threshold beyond which a whole new
type of physics takes over and runaway global warming becomes a
self-perpetuating nightmare.
The seasonal heating of the hemispheres — quite a severe annual
warming event — is also worthy of mention. Average surface
temperature in the northern hemisphere, for example, warms by 3.8
degrees Centigrade from January to July every year without
triggering any self-perpetuating positive feedback.
It is, therefore, somewhat difficult to view ongoing global
temperature change — amounting to an estimated 0.6 plus or minus
0.2 degrees Centigrade over the past 120 years — as being
dangerous.
No doubt the iris effect will require more research to confirm
its existence. But at least real-world data encourage such
research. That's a lot more than can be said for the imaginary
notion of runaway climate and the climate models that are rigged to
make-believe it exists.
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