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Dr
Willem de Lange
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Dr
Willem de Lange
is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Earth and Ocean
Sciences at the University of Waikato, specialising in coastal
oceanography. He deals mostly with coastal hazards, including
tsunami, storm surges, sea level rise, coastal erosion and
waterspouts. Since many coastal hazards are affected by climate
he has been involved in researching climate variability and
its effect at the coast. In particular he has worked on ENSO
and PDO related impacts in the Southwest Pacific. Willem has
been an advisor to Civil Defence on tsunami and storm surge
hazard since the mid-1980s.
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Guest Forum
Why
I am a Climate Realist
Dr
Willem de Lange
23 May 2009
In
1996 the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change’s (IPCC) Second Assessment Report was released, and I
was listed as one of approximately 3000 “scientists” who
agreed that there was a discernable human influence on climate.
I
was an invited reviewer for a chapter dealing with the
economic impact of sea level rise on small island nations. In
keeping with IPCC procedures, the chapter was written and
reviewed in isolation from the rest of the report, and I had
no input into the process after my review of the chapter
draft. I was not asked if I supported the view expressed in my
name, and my understanding at the time was that no
evidence of a discernable human influence on global
climate existed.
The
chapter I reviewed dealt primarily with the economic
consequences of an assumed sea level rise of 1 m causing
extensive inundation. My response was that I could not comment
on the economic analysis, however, I disagreed with the
initial assumptions, particularly the assumed sea level rise
in the stated time period. Further, there was good evidence at
the time that sea level rise would not necessarily result in
flooding of small island nations, because natural processes on
coral atolls were likely to raise island levels.
The
IPCC Second Assessment Report assessed sea level rise by AD
2100 as being in the range 0.20-0.86 m, with a most
likely value of 0.49 m (less than half the rate assumed for
the economic analysis). Subsequent research has demonstrated
that coral atolls and associated islands are likely to
increase in elevation as sea level rises. Hence, the
assumptions were invalid, and I was convinced that IPCC
projections were unrealistic and exaggerated the problem.
Following
the release of IPCC Second Assessment Report I also
co-authored the sea level rise section of the New Zealand
impact report, and same section for a revised report following
the release of IPCC Third Assessment Report (2001). The third
report followed the trend of decreasing sea level rise
projections evident in sea level rise literature, with a most
likely projection of 0.44 m. However, some extreme scenarios
were added at a late stage of the review process to give a
wider range of projections from 0.09-0.88 m. There was little
support in the literature for these extremes, and my view was
that a range of 0.31-0.49 m was more reasonable. I also
expected future projections to be lower.
For
the New Zealand 2001 report, I was asked to state that sea
level rise was accelerating, or at least could be
accelerating. However, my own research and published
literature shows that sea level fluctuates at decadal time
scales. Therefore, although there was an increase in the rate
of sea level rise around 1998, I expected sea level rise to
slow and reverse early in the 21st Century. The
underlying long-term trend, however, was likely to decrease,
and there were some tide gauge data to indicate that it had
started to do so. In the 1980s, the New Zealand rate was 1.8
mm per year. By 1990, it was 1.7 mm per year, and by 2001 it
was 1.6 mm per year. These changes are small, and were not
enough to prove that sea level rise was slowing. However, they
clearly did not show that sea level rise was accelerating.
After
2001, published studies continued to project lower global sea
level rises over the 21st Century, and several
reported a slowing of the rate of rise during the 20th
Century. Shortly before the IPCC Assessment Report 4 was
published I undertook a literature review of all sea level
studies, which: projected lower levels than the IPCC Third
Assessment Report review; indicated a slowing of the rate of
sea level rise; emphasised the role of decadal scale
fluctuations; and there was concern about the discrepancy
between satellite and tide gauge sea level measurements. It
was recognised that, although satellite sensing gives a better
overall measurement of global sea level, satellites reported
twice the rate of sea level rise being measured at the coast.
It was evident that satellite data could not be combined with
tide gauge data.
The
IPCC Assessment Report 4 report emphasises a single paper,
which was not available when I conducted my review, which
spliced the satellite data onto the tide gauge data to
“find” acceleration in sea level rise over the period of
satellite measurement. This is being used to imply that global
sea level rise is accelerating due to global warming (now
renamed Climate Change). The satellite data only covered the period of
increasing sea level associated with decadal cycles, and the
known discrepancy between satellite trends and tide gauge
trends was not corrected for. This is poor science comparable
to the splicing of proxy and instrument data in the infamous
Hockey Stick graph, and the splicing of ice core and
instrumental CO2 measurements to exaggerate the
changes.
Despite
therefore finding accelerating sea level rise, the latest IPCC
assessment projects lower sea level rises than the previous
ones. The methodology used to report the projections was
changed to make comparisons harder, but the range of 0.18-0.59
m equates to a most likely rise of around 0.39 m. The IPCC
Assessment Report 4 also included an extra 0.20 m allowance
for uncertainties associated with destabilisation of the
Greenland and West Antarctic Ice Caps. Various groups have
speculated that the collapse of these Ice Caps could produce a
much higher additional sea level rise. In contrast, published
studies that have specifically studied this contribution have
concluded that given the worst possible scenarios, the maximum
extra contribution is 0.18 m. Hence, the IPCC Assessment
Report 4 allowance is a very conservative upper bound.
What
has sea level actually done so far this century? There have
been large regional variations, but the global rate has slowed
and is currently negative, consistent with measured ocean
cooling. Claims to the contrary are exaggerations and not
realistic.
So,
given my understanding of oceanography, what do I believe
about climate change? Firstly climate change is real, and has
occurred on Earth for at least 4 billion years – as long as
an atmosphere and oceans have existed. Climate change occurs
in cycles at various time scales, with the shorter time scales
known as weather (by convention the distinction is 35 years).
Trying to stop or control climate change is akin to stopping
ocean tides. Secondly, I believe human activities affect
climate, otherwise why would I bother with a mortgage. The
climate inside my house is different to the climate that would
exist if my house were gone.
There
are many ways human activities affect climate on a small
scale. Interestingly the concentration of CO2 is
not one of them (CO2 are often elevated inside
buildings). As the size of the area considered increases, the
impact of human activities decreases. As the latest IPCC
report notes, there is no convincing evidence of the impact of
CO2 (or any other human influence on climate) at a continental
scale. Yet, they say that the impact of a CO2 (and other gases
treated as effective CO2) is the dominant driver of
climate at a global scale and will have catastrophic
consequences. This conclusion I strongly disagree with. Why?
It
is frequently pointed out that the Earth is approximately 32°C
warmer than it would be without an atmosphere due to the
Greenhouse Effect. This is misleading, as the climate system
responsible for this extra warmth includes many components.
Important ones omitted in most discussions are clouds and
oceans. About 70 percent of the Earth’s surface is covered
in water, which absorbs sunlight and warms up. The oceans
retain heat better than land, and, while slow to warm up, they
cool slowly and warm the surroundings (a maritime climate).
Considering
the available data, it is clear that the oceans warmed over
the 20th Century by about the same amount as the
atmosphere. This agreement should not be entirely surprising
as 70 percent of the mean global air temperature comes from
over oceans. The inconvenient truth that is generally ignored,
is that the atmosphere is not capable of warming the oceans to
any significant degree – 99.9 percent of ocean heat is
derived from sunlight at wavelengths less than 3 microns. The
balance is mostly from heat leaking from the interior of the
Earth. The Greenhouse Effect involves a delay in the loss of
infra-red radiation at wavelengths greater than 5 microns.
What
does this mean for climate change? It means that variations in
the amount of sunlight reaching the oceans will control the
rate at which the oceans warm. This is influenced at long time
scales by changes in the Earth’s orbit. At short time scales
there are changes in the amount of sunlight associated with
the sunspot cycle. These changes are small, but due to the
ability of the oceans to store heat it may be possible to have
a cumulative effect as sunspot cycles wax and wane. However,
the main control is the amount of cloud and ice cover. Clouds
and sea ice reflect sunlight before it can be absorbed by the
oceans, and is referred to as albedo. Albedo changes have a
greater influence on climate than the Greenhouse Effect, and
are usually invoked to produce the catastrophic consequences
of “Climate Change” (aka Accelerated Global Warming).
Oceans
lose heat through evaporation (53 percent), infra-red
radiation (41 percent) and conduction (6 percent). The
Greenhouse Effect can slow the loss of the infra-red
radiation, thereby warming the atmosphere but not the oceans.
However, evaporation accounts for more than half the heat
loss. Evaporation produces clouds, and hence there is a
feedback loop – warming the oceans results in more
evaporation, producing more clouds, which increases albedo,
which cools the oceans. This is exactly what was observed
during The Tropical Ocean Global Atmosphere Coupled Ocean
Atmosphere Response Experiment (TOGA COARE) that was set up to
investigate the Pacific Warm Pool – the warmest ocean water
in the western equatorial Pacific Ocean. COARE also found that
rainfall would cool the ocean surface, so increased
evaporation producing rain is another feedback loop.
What
does this have to do with the 20th Century? Well
the observed climate change is consistent with variations in
albedo and associated ocean warming and cooling, suggesting
that it is just a natural cycle. This pattern of behaviour is
evident in palaeoclimate data for most of the last 10,000
years. None of this is simulated in climate models. Instead
they focus on the 20th Century increase in CO2,
CH4 and a few other greenhouse gases. The
increasing concentrations correlate well with global
temperature. This is taken as proof that the greenhouse effect
is driving temperature.
However,
it is also correct that changing ocean temperatures affect the
concentration of these gases in the atmosphere. At annual and
2-7 year time scales it is clear that the concentration of CO2
in the atmosphere is strongly driven by the ocean. At longer
time scales it is also clear that the concentration of
greenhouse gases lags behind, and therefore is driven by,
temperature. Once again the oceans are the likely control on
atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. The IPCC position
requires that for 50-100 year periods everything works in
reverse, which still showing an oceanic influence at
shorter time periods. It is more likely that the warming of
the oceans since the Little Ice Age is a major contributor to
the observed increase in CO2. Carbon isotopic
ratios indicate that while there is a contribution from the
burning of fossil fuels, it is of the order 1-5 percent of the
increase.
So,
I am a climate realist because the available evidence
indicates that climate change is predominantly, if not
entirely, natural. It occurs mostly in response to variations
in solar heating of the oceans, and the consequences this has
for the rest of the Earth’s climate system. There is no
evidence to support the hypothesis runaway catastrophic
climate change due to human activities.
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