| IPCC Fourth Assessment Report 2007, Initial Analysis and Summary |
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| Written by Viscount Monckton of Brenchley |
| Thursday, 19 July 2007 04:38 |
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>
Also, the
UN, in its 2007 report, has cut its high-end best estimate of the rise in sea
level by 2100 from 3 feet to less than 2 feet. It suggests that the rate of
sea-level rise is up from 2mm/yr to 3mm/year – no more than one foot in a
century.
>
UN
scientists faced several problems their computer models had not predicted. Globally,
temperature is not rising at all, and sea level is not rising anything like as
fast as had been forecast. Concentrations of methane in the air are actually
falling.
>
The
Summary for Policymakers was issued February 2, 2007, but the report on which
the Summary is based was not published until May. This strange separation of
the publication dates has raised in some minds the possibility that the Summary
(written by political representatives of governments) was taken as a basis for
altering the science chapters (written by scientists, and supposedly finalized
and closed in December 2006).
>
The text
of the science chapters reveals that the tendency of computers to over-predict
rises in temperature and sea level has forced a major rethink.
>
The report’s
generally more cautiously-expressed projections confirm scientists’ warnings
that the UN’s heavy reliance on computer models had exaggerated the temperature
effect of greenhouse-gas emissions.
>
Previous
reports in 1990, 1995 and 2001 had been progressively more alarmist. In the
final draft of the new report there is a change in tone. Though carbon dioxide
in the air is increasing, global temperature is not.
>
Figures
from the US National Climate Data Center show 2006 as about 0.03 degrees
Celsius warmer worldwide than 2001. Since that is within the range of
measurement error, global temperature has not risen in a statistically
significant sense since the UN’s last report in 2001.
>
Sources at
the center of the drafting say that, though the now-traditional efforts are
being made to sound alarmist and scientific at the same time, key projections
are being quietly cut.
>
One says:
“Stern is dead. The figures in the final draft of the UN’s Fourth Assessment
Report makes the recent report of your Treasury’s chief economist on the
cost of climate change look like childish panic.”
>
The UN’s
2001 report showed that our greenhouse-gas emissions since 1750 had caused a
“radiative forcing” of 2.43 watts per square metre. Our other effects on
climate were shown as broadly self-cancelling.
>
In the
current draft, the UN has cut its estimate of our net effect on climate by more
than a third, to 1.6 watts per square metre. It now thinks pollutant particles
reflecting sunlight back to space have a very strong cooling effect.
>
As a
deterrent to direct comparisons between the two reports, the key table of
“radiative forcings” – the list of human influences on the amount of
heat-energy in the atmosphere – has been rotated by 90 degrees compared with
the 2001 table.
>
The UN
also uses a 90% “confidence interval” rather than the 95% interval that is
normal statistical usage. This has the effect of giving the UN’s projections a
misleading appearance of greater certainty.
>
The UN’s
best estimate of projected temperature increase in response to CO2
reaching 560 parts per million, twice the level in 1750, was 3.5C in the 2001
report. Now it is down to 3C.
>
The 2007
draft concludes that it is very
likely that we caused most of the rise in temperatures since 1940.
It does not point out that for half that period, from 1940 to 1975, temperature
actually fell even though carbon dioxide rose monotonically – higher every year
than the previous year.
>
Of the
UN’s six modeled scenarios, three are extreme exaggerations. Two assume that
population will reach 15bn by 2100, though demographers say population will
peak at 10bn in 40 years and then plummet. The UN’s high-end temperature
projection to 2100, up from 5.8C to 6C, is based on these extreme and
unrealistic scenarios.
>
The new
report confirms the finding of the 2001 report that global warming will have
little effect on the number of typhoons or hurricanes, though it may increase
the intensity of some storms a little. However, updated research shows that
wind-shear effects largely cancel this intensity.
>
Computer
models heavily relied on by the UN did not predict the considerable cooling of
the oceans that has occurred since 2003 – a cooling which demonstrates that
neither the frequency nor the intensity of the hurricanes in the year of
Katrina was attributable to “global warming”.
>
The UN’s
models also failed to predict the halt to the rise in methane concentrations in
the air that began in 2001. And they did not predict the timing or size of the
El Nino which hiked temperature in 1998. Without it, the satellite record shows
little or no greenhouse warming. Land-based temperature records may accordingly
overstate the problem.
>
Likewise
the UN’s models have recently been found to have over-projected the observed
rise in sea temperatures, which has had to be corrected downward to allow for
over-reading by incorrectly-calibrated instrumentation.
>
The UN’s
draft Summary for Policymakers contains no apology for the defective and
discredited “hockey-stick” graph that erroneously abolished the warm climate of
the Middle Ages, arousing in some minds the suspicion that the intellectual
honesty of the IPCC process is deficient.
>
Ambiguities
in the report, and considerable discrepancies between it and its predecessor,
show that there is no scientific consensus on many points for which consensus
is often claimed. Overall, however, the report is drafted so as to allow environmental
extremists to cite its high-end projections as evidence of the need for urgent
action.
>
The
ambiguities, together with the conspicuous failure to apologize for the
discredited “hockey-stick” graph, fully justify the decision of fast-developing
third-world countries such as China and India not to yield to
pressure from the EU at the recent Nairobi
climate summit to cut their greenhouse-gas emissions.
>
China,
with 30,000 coal mines, is opening a new pit every week and a new coal-fired
power station every five days until 2012. Well before then, China will overtake the US
as the world’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases.
>
Even if a
country the size of Britain were to shut down and cease using energy or cars
altogether, the growth in carbon emissions in China would more than make up for
our sacrifice long before the Kyoto agreement expires in 2012.
>
Even if
the US
were to shut down its entire economy, growth in emissions from fast-emerging
new polluters such as China,
India,
Indonesia,
Russia,
and Brazil
would replace the US
emissions within the next quarter of a century.
>
The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change of the UN approved the complete
report for publication at its 36th session, in Bangkok, Thailand,
in May 2007.
>
In the
meantime, there will be continuing pressure from a small but vociferous body of
politicized scientists, bureaucrats, and lobby groups to suggest that the 2007
report is more alarming than its predecessors. However, the sharp downward
revisions in the values of the two central variables – the human contribution
to warming compared with 1750 and the projected rise in sea level to 2100 –
indicates that the UN has come to appreciate the dangers that would have arisen
if it were to have persisted in its former exaggerations.
>
The
“consensus” clique are displeased at the UN’s new-found moderation,
particularly in its slashing of its upper-bound projection of the rise in sea
level to 2100. But it was they who formerly insisted that the UN, with 2,000
participating scientists, represented the very heart of the “consensus”.
Accordingly they find themselves unable convincingly to repudiate the findings
of a body whose work they have hitherto represented to us as sacrosanct.
Though the mass media are now well-programmed to focus on the more alarmist aspects of the report, the halving of the sea-level projection is in effect a declaration, from the heart of the “consensus”, that the consequences of warmer worldwide weather will be minor and may be beneficial, that the worst scenarios are no longer probable, and that the panic is officially over.
{mospagebreak}
Summary
of the Summary
align="center">
align="center">
What
the UN said – and what it ought to have said
align="center">
Main
points from the 2007 Summary for Policymakers are in italics. Comments
are in bold face.
>
UN:
Equilibrium global average warming if carbon dioxide is stabilized at 550 parts
per million is very likely to be between 1.5° and 4.5°C and likely to be at
least 2°C above 1750 values. Best estimate is 3°C.
>
CM:
“Equilibrium” temperature will occur at least 100 years after stabilization. By
then, oil and gas are likely to have become scarcer. Also, much of the forecast
warming has already occurred. Perhaps as little as 0.6C of further warming will
occur at CO2 doubling.
>
UN: To
2025, a warming of about 0.2°C per decade is projected. Half would have
occurred even if concentrations had been stabilized at year 2000 levels,
because of slow ocean response.
>
CM:
Temperature stopped rising in 2001. “Slow ocean response” means the sea, 1100
times denser than air, is taking up much of the heat. If so, we have more time
and less of a problem than had been thought.
>
UN:
Since the 1990 report, projections have suggested global temperature increases
of 0.15 to 0.3°C per decade for 1990 to 2005. 0.2°C per decade has been
observed.
>
CM: The
outturn is actually 0.16C (1990-1999), right at the lower end of the UN’s
projections. The outturn for 2000 to 2010 will probably be 0.18C.
>
UN:
Projected sea level rise for 2090-2099 v. 1980–1999 is 7.5 to 17 inches,
two-thirds from thermal expansion, one-third from melting polar ice.
>
CM: The
reference period should be a decade, not 20 years, and should be the most
recent decade, reducing the projection by 10-15%. The rate of increase in sea
level has changed little in 80 years.
>
UN:
Ice-cores suggest more carbon dioxide and methane in the air now than in
650,000 years. Increases since 1750 are chiefly from use of fossil fuels,
farming, deforestation and other changes in our land use.
>
CM: The
central question is this: “By how much will the increases in greenhouse gases
cause temperature to rise?” On the answer to that question, there is no
scientific consensus at all.
>
UN:
Atmospheric carbon dioxide, the most important greenhouse gas we emit, rose
from 280ppmv in 1750 to 379ppmv in 2005.
>
CM:
Even if the UK stopped using energy, cars or industry altogether, world
temperature by 2035 would be just 0.006C less than if we carry on as usual.
>
UN:
There is very high confidence that our global net effect since 1750 has been
warming of 1.6 watts per square metre, likely to have been at least five times
greater than that due to changes in solar output.
>
CM:
Just six years ago, the UN said our global effect since 1750 had been 2.43
watts per square metre. Since temperature has failed to rise as fast as
predicted, this estimate has had to be slashed by a third.
>
UN: The
combined radiative forcing arising from increases in the major greenhouse gases
is +2.3 Wm-2. The rate of increase since 1750 is very likely to have
been unprecedented in more than 10,000 years.
>
CM:
Mere lack of precedent does not in itself imply a problem. The greenhouse-gas
forcing of 2.3 Wm-2 is lower than the 2.43 Wm-2 in the
2001 report, and the net forcing of 1.6 Wm-2 is down by a third.
>
UN: The
CO2 radiative forcing increased by 20% during the last 10
years (1995–2005), the largest change observed or inferred for any decade in at
least the last 200 years.
>
CM: The
figure is actually 17%. China
is opening a new coal-fired power station every five days until at least 2012.
Within two years, China
will emit more CO2 than the US.
>
UN:
Aerosol emissions, chiefly sulphate, organic carbon, black carbon, nitrate and
dust, are thought to produce a total direct radiative forcing of -0.5 Wm-2,
and an indirect cloud albedo forcing of -0.7 Wm-2.
>
CM: The
climate feedback from pollutant aerosols cuts the UN’s estimate of our
influence on climate since 1750 by a third, from 2.43 to just 1.6 watts per
square metre.
>
UN:
Changes in solar output since 1750 are estimated to have caused a radiative
forcing of +0.12 Wm-2, down from +0.3Wm-2 in the 2001
report.
>
CM:
Published papers by solar physicists since the previous UN report suggest that
the Sun could have had a much larger influence than this – and could have
caused more than two-thirds of observed warming. Solar activity is expected to
decline for the next 50 years.
>
UN:
Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, evident from increases in global
average air and ocean temperatures, melting of snow and ice, and rising sea
level.
>
CM: The
fact of warming tells us nothing of the cause. Correlation does
not necessarily indicate causation. The world’s ice mass has grown in the past
30 years. Recent fluctuations in the rate of increase in sea level are not
unusual compared with the fairly recent past.
>
UN:
Eleven of the last twelve years rank among the 12 warmest years since 1850. The
trend from 1906 to 2005 of 0.74°C is larger than the 2001 report’s trend from
1901–2000 of 0.6°C.
>
CM: The
start date has been brought forward five years. From 1900 to 1905 the
temperature fell. Thus the trend has changed little. Also, the UN’s figures are
from unreliable surface readings that do not always conform with satellite readings.
>
UN: The
average rate of warming over the last 50 years (0.13°C per decade) is nearly
twice that for the last 100 years.
>
CM: The
UN only obtains this result because between 1940 and 1975 temperature fell. In
fact, between 1910 and 1930 the average rate of warming also was 0.13C, so the
rate in the past 50 years is not unprecedented.
>
UN: New
analyses of balloon and satellite measurements of atmospheric temperature show
warming rates that are similar to the surface, largely reconciling a previous
discrepancy.
>
CM: The
records only match if the El Nino event of 1998 is taken as part of the trend.
Without it the satellite measurements show less warming than the surface, where
warming is said to be occurring but may not be.
>
UN:
Atmospheric water vapour content has increased since the 1980s over land and
ocean as well as in the upper troposphere. The increase is broadly consistent
with the extra water that warmer air can hold.
>
CM: The
result of the more humid atmosphere is a substantial greening of the fringes of
the Sahara, which has shrunk by 300,000 square kilometers in the past 20 years.
>
UN:
Observations show that the average temperature of the global ocean has
increased to depths of at least 3000m and that the ocean has been absorbing
most of the heat added to the climate system.
>
CM:
Ocean temperature has been falling recently. Models over-project sea surface
temperatures and only match observation if averaged to a very great depth,
where temperature has not changed.
>
UN:
Warming that causes seawater to expand may have contributed 0.42mm a year to
the average sea level rise from 1961 to 2003, and 1.6mm a year from 1993 to
2003.
>
CM:
There is no hard evidence for any increase in thermosteric expansion of the
sea. Leading scientists say the rate of increase in sea levels has not changed
in 80 years.
>
UN:
Mountain glaciers and snow have declined. Decreases in glaciers and ice caps (not
counting Greenland and Antarctica)
caused sea level to rise by 0.50mm a year (1961-2003) and 0.77mm a year (1993-2003).
>
CM:
Mountain glaciers account for less than 5% of the world’s ice. Ice mass in
Greenland and Antarctica
(95% of the world’s ice) has grown in the past 30 years, compensating for loss
of mountain ice.
>
UN:
There is high confidence that the rate of observed sea level rise increased
from the 19th to the 20th century, and the total 20th century rise is estimated
to be 0.17m.
>
CM: Sea
level has been rising for thousands of years. In the past century it rose just
six and a half inches – less than a sixteenth of an inch a year. The rate of
increase has been constant since 1922, though the UN says it has been rising a
little recently.
>
UN:
Numerous changes in climate have been observed at the scales of continents or
ocean basins. These include wind patterns, precipitation, ocean salinity, sea
ice, ice sheets, and aspects of extreme weather.
>
CM:
Climate has always changed, because it is what mathematicians call a “chaotic object”.
Behaviour of chaotic objects cannot be predicted, but is capable of changing
suddenly in any direction.
>
UN:
Arctic temperatures rose twice as fast as the global average since 1905.
However, Arctic temperatures are very variable. A warm period was observed from
1925 to 1945.
>
CM: The
Arctic warm period from 1925 to 1945 mentioned by the UN was actually warmer
than the present by as much as 1 degree Celsius. The polar bears throve, and
still thrive. Most researches show the Antarctic is cooling.
>
UN:
Satellite data since 1978 show that annual average Arctic sea ice extent has
shrunk by 2.7% per decade, with larger decreases in summer of 7.4% per decade.
>
CM:
Almost all the Arctic
is sea-ice. There was almost certainly less Arctic sea-ice in the early 1940s
than there is now, and there may have been none in Summer in the middle ages.
>
UN:
Shrinkage of Greenland and Antarctic ice
sheets contributed 0.41mm a year to sea level rise from 1993 to 2003. Some Greenland
and Antarctic outlet glaciers are draining interior ice faster than before.
>
CM:
During the past 30 years, both Greenland and Antarctica
have gained ice mass. In the 10 years from 1993 to 2003, the Greenland
ice sheet grew an average extra thickness of 2 inches a year.
>
UN:
Arctic permafrost surface temperature has risen up to 3°C since the 1980s. The
maximum area covered by seasonally frozen ground has decreased by about 7% in
the Northern Hemisphere since 1900.
>
CM: The
bones of woolly mammoths and other creatures are found in the thawing
permafrost, showing that it was not always frozen. Scares about release of
methane from permafrost have proven false.
>
UN:
There has been more rain since 1900 in the eastern Americas,
northern Europe and northern and central Asia; less in the Sahel,
Mediterranean, southern Africa and parts of S. Asia.
>
CM:
There has been no net change in average world rainfall for 100 years. Likewise,
the pattern of monsoons, vital to prevent droughts, has remained unchanged.
>
UN:
Since the 1970s there have been longer, harder droughts partly caused by
warming and less rain, particularly near the Equator. Warmer seas and less snow
cover also suggest droughts.
>
CM:
Records such as those for Moon Lake
in the US
show that the frequency and severity of droughts has decreased in the past
1,000 years and in the past 50 years. The Sahara
is greening fast.
>
UN:
There is no trend in the number of tropical cyclones. Satellites suggest more
intense tropical cyclones since 1970, correlated with warmer seas. Cyclone
data, particularly pre-1970, are questionable.
>
CM: The
annual number of hurricanes has in fact been declining steadily over the past
50 years. The hurricane season that included Katrina was exceptional, but had
precedents 70 years ago and in 1821.
>
UN:
Paleoclimate suggests recent warming is unusual. Past warming has shrunk ice
sheets and raised sea level. Recent studies show more variable Northern
Hemisphere temperatures than the 2001 report.
>
CM: The
UN casts doubt upon the integrity of its climate change reports by failing to
apologize for the defective and now-discredited “hockey-stick” graph of world
temperatures since 1000 AD.
>
UN:
Warmer periods during the past 1,000 years have fallen within the uncertainty
range given in the 2001 report.
>
CM: The
uncertainty range was so large as to be meaningless. A growing number of
scientific papers attest to a mediaeval warm period warmer than the present.
>
UN:
Average Northern Hemisphere temperatures during the second half of the 20th
century were very likely warmer than in the last 500 years and likely the
warmest in at least the past 1300 years.
>
CM: In
some places, the Middle Ages were up to 3C warmer than today. There is evidence
from scientific papers worldwide that the warm period in the middle ages was
global.
>
UN: It
is very likely that we caused most of the world temperature rise since 1950.
Our influence now extends to continental temperatures, atmospheric circulation
patterns, and some extremes.
>
CM: UN
temperatures for the USA
and China
disagree with those published locally. Temperature in New
Zealand has scarcely risen for 50 years. Some
Russian figures for the past 15 years are missing.
>
UN: It
is likely that greenhouse gases alone would have caused more warming than
observed because volcanic and manmade pollutants have offset some warming.
>
CM:
Most of the warming arises from the increased frequency of El Nino events in
recent years. Volcanic aerosols only have a temporary effect.
>
UN:
Snow cover is projected to contract. Widespread further thawing is projected
over most permafrost regions. Sea ice may shrink at both poles. Arctic
late summer sea ice may largely disappear by 2100.
>
CM: The
projections are speculative. There may have been little sea ice at the North
Pole in the middle ages. Some solar physicists think warming may lessen in 20
years as the Sun enters a less active phase.
>
UN:
Typhoons and hurricanes may decrease but their intensity is expected to
increase, with higher wind speeds and heavier rain. Models did not predict the
increase in intense storms since 1970.
>
CM:
There has been a steady decrease in hurricanes since 1970. Dr. Landsea, a UN
author, resigned when his lead author, on a political platform, announced that
hurricanes had become more frequent.
>
UN:
Global warming and sea level rise may continue for centuries even if greenhouse
gas emissions are stabilized. Stabilization in 2100 may lead to further warming
of 0.5C, mostly before 2200.
>
CM:
There is no reason to project a significant acceleration in the rate of
increase in sea level at all, or of temperature more than a century after
stabilization. Projections are based on modeling, not on evidence.
>
UN: If
CO2 forcing were stabilized in 2100, thermal expansion alone would raise sea
level 0.3 to 0.8m of sea level rise by 2300 relative to 1980–1999) and would
continue at decreasing rates for many centuries.
>
CM:
Initial calculations suggest that, as Professor Richard Lindzen and others
hypothesize, equilibrium climate response may be intra-annual rather than
supra-centennial.
>
UN: The
shrinking Greenland ice sheet may continue to
contribute to sea level rise after 2100. Warming since 1750 of 1.9 to 4.6°C may
melt almost all of it, raising sea level by 7m if sustained for millennia.
>
CM:
These speculations are unfounded. Arctic temperatures undergo periodic changes.
Even if sea level were to rise 23ft over millennia, annual costs for defenses
would be small.
>
UN: The
Antarctic ice sheet may remain too cold for widespread melting and may gain
mass from increased snowfall, but net loss of ice mass may occur if dynamical
ice discharge dominates the ice-mass balance.
>
CM: In
the past 30 years the mass of the Antarctic ice-sheet has grown, reversing a
6,000-year melting trend. Antarctica contains 90% of the world’s ice, and
growing.
>
UN: Our
CO2 emissions to 2100 will contribute to warming of the atmosphere
and to sea level rise for more than 1000 years.
>
CM:
After the warming in the first 100 years, oil and gas will have become too
expensive for mass use. Very little additional warming caused by fossil-fuel
use will occur in the subsequent millennium.
UN: Computer simulations that include only natural forcings do not simulate the warming observed over the last three decades. > CM: The UN’s simulations omitted the important El Niño ocean oscillation which has been more prominent in recent years, and underestimated urban heat-island effects: thermometers are mostly near towns. > {mospagebreak} align="center"> Questions about the IPCC’s Summary for align="center"> Policymakers, 2007 > [SPPI Note: the following questions were sent to the IPCC early in the year, prior to release of the final report.] > [Monckton Note (7-15-07): It should be explain that the UN, as a result of my questions, corrected Table SPM0, in which it had multiplied the projected contributions of the Greenland and West Antarctic ice-sheets tenfold by the ingenious movement of four separate decimal points, and relabelled it Table SPM2, and quietly posted the new version of the SPM without comment on its website. Inferentially, the deliberate exaggeration of the contributions to sea-level rise from these two ice-sheets was done to support Al Gore's wild exaggeration of sea-level rise. Certainly, journalists throughout the world wrote alarmist headlines about sea-level rise, even though the UN had actually cut its top-end projection by at least a third. The same journalists somehow failed to point out subsequently that the UN had made the correction asked for. We should also point out that the UN has not replied giving answers to any of the questions which I sent to it.] align="center"> **************** > I should be grateful if the IPCC were able to answer the following questions, which will help me to understand the Summary for Policymakers. > 1. Why has the Summary for Policymakers been released at least three months before the underlying science chapters, which were declared to have been finalized before the Summary was compiled? > 2. Will the science chapters now be revised to conform with the Summary for Policymakers? If so, is it appropriate that the scientists should bring the science into line with the opinions of the political representatives who compiled the Summary, rather than the other way about? > Page 3 > 3. Why does the Summary not mention that there has been little or no increase in methane concentrations since the previous UN report in 2001? > 4. In the Third Assessment Report, the anthropogenic contribution from greenhouse gases was estimated at 2.43 watts per square metre, with all other anthropogenic forcings broadly cancelling each other out. In the present report, the anthropogenic greenhouse-gas forcing is said to be 2.3 watts per square metre (a decrease of one-eighth despite a rise in CO2 concentration since 2001), and this falls to 1.6 watts per square metre (less than two-thirds of the 2001 estimate, and amounting to little more than 1% of the 150-watts-per-square-metre natural greenhouse effect) if the IPCC’s new quantifications of all anthropogenic forcings are taken into account. Am I right that the UN had previously overstated total anthropogenic forcings by more than half? > 5. If the natural greenhouse effect is taken as 20 – 33C, is it right to say that the temperature effect of the total anthropogenic increment of 1.6 watts per square metre since 1750 is an increase (over and above natural variability) of no more than 0.21 to 0.35C? > 6. In December 1995 CO2 concentration at Mauna Loa was 360ppmv, and in December 2005 it was 380ppmv, an increase of 20ppmv, or 5%. Using the UN’s CO2 forcing formula, dF = 5.3 ln (C / C0), and taking C0 as unity, the total radiative forcing from CO2 to 1995 was 5.3 ln (360) = 31.20 watts per square metre (around one-fifth of the natural greenhouse effect). The total CO2 radiative forcing to 2005 was 5.3 ln (380) = 31.48 watts per square metre, an increase of just 1%. Yet the UN says: “The carbon dioxide radiative forcing increased by 20% from 1995 to 2005.” One can only reach the published figure by assuming that the natural greenhouse effect does not exist and that the pre-1750 concentration of ~280ppmv produces no natural radiative forcing at all. In that event the figures for 1995 and 2005 respectively are 5.3 ln(360/280) = 1.33 watts per square metre and 5.3 ln(380/280) = 1.62 watts per square metre, an increase of 22% over the decade. Did the UN mean to say: “The anthropogenic carbon dioxide radiative forcing increased by 20% from 1995 to 2005”? If so, the omission of anthropogenic is a misleading error, which has led at least one national journalist in the UK to draw inappropriately alarmist conclusions. > 7. The decadal increase of 0.29 watts per square metre, multiplied by 0.5 as suggested in ch.6 of the Third Assessment Report, would suggest a temperature increase of 0.145C over the decade 1995-2005 arising from the additional CO2 forcing and all other forcings and feedbacks. The observed temperature increase from 1994 to 2004 (comparing NCDC five-year means) was 0.29C, suggesting that anthropogenic factors contributed half of the observed warming over the decade. Would the IPCC agree? > 8. If half (or 0.145C) of the 1995-2005 increase in temperature was natural, does the UN consider that the entire solar contribution to warming compared with 1750 (now reduced to 0.12 watts per square metre) has occurred in the last decade? > 9. The Sun has been more active, for longer, in the past 50 years than in any similar period in at least the past 11,400 years (Solanki, Usoskin et al., 2005). Therefore, is it appropriate to assume as little as 0.12 watts per square metre of solar forcing compared with 1750? > 10. The Sun’s activity in 1750 was not far short of recent levels. It then passed through several minima of which the last ended 100 years ago. How much of the increase in temperature over the past century does the IPCC attribute to the increase of 4 watts per square metre at top of atmosphere (0.7 watts per square metre or 0.35C at the surface) in solar activity since 1906? > 11. Why does the Summary for Policymakers fail to mention the growing number of results from around the world suggesting that the Sun is about to enter a profound cooling phase that may last most of this century? > Page 4 > 12. The IPCC says: “The linear warming trend over the last 50 years (0.13C per decade) is nearly twice that for the last 100 years.” But is it not the case that the warming trend over the 1920s and over the 1930s was also 0.13C (NCDC annual means)? Should it not have been made clear that the 50-year trend is only higher than the 100-year trend because of the pronounced fall in mean global temperature between 1940 and 1975? > 13. Where does the Summary for Policymakers mention that in the five years since its previous report global mean surface temperature has not risen at all. > 14. The IPCC says that “the ocean has been absorbing more than 80% of the heat added to the climate system.” Does the IPCC mean that mean global land and sea surface air temperature would have risen at least five times as fast as the observed figure if the ocean had not taken up 80% and more of the heat? > 15. Since 1961 (taking NCDC 5-year means) global mean land and sea surface air temperature has risen by ~0.485C. Is the IPCC suggesting that this would have been 2.5C but for the absorption of 2C of heat by the oceans? > 16. Given that the oceans are 1,100 times as dense as the atmosphere, is it correct to divide the 2C above by 1,100 to arrive at the mean ocean water temperature increase since 1961? > Page 517. Was Table SPM0 (reproduced below) inserted to the draft following, and because of, the report by the Science Correspondent of the Sunday Telegraph to the effect that the UN’s present report cuts the 2001 report’s high-end estimate of the increase in sea level to 2100 by half? >![]() > 18. I am having difficulty in understanding table SPM-0, which I summarize here: >
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The italicized figures, added by me, are the sums of
the four individual sources listed. However, in the table as published the
totals are considerably less. Please explain.
>
19. Assuming that the recent increase in the rate of
sea level rise is real (but see Morner, 2004), and taking the estimate from the
Third Assessment Report that in the 10,000 years of the Holocene interglacial
sea level has risen 130m, is it not right that the observed 17cm centennial
rate of rise in sea level is around one-seventh of the mean centennial
sea-level rise, and that even the higher rate of rise over the past decade is
only a quarter of the mean centennial rise over the past 10,000 years?
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Page 6
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20. Where does the Summary for Policymakers mention
that the warm period in the Arctic in the
1930s and 1940s was warmer than the present?
>
21. Where in the Summary does the UN mention the
extensive greening of the Sahara, which has
lost 300,000 square kilometres of area to vegetation over the past 30 years?
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Page 7
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22. In general, why does the UN mention so few of the
beneficial consequences of warming, such as the less cruel temperatures in
Northern latitudes, particularly across Siberia?
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Page 8
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23. Why was the defective “hockey-stick” graph not
withdrawn and apologized for in the section on palaeoclimate? The failure of
the UN to apologize for this error in the only graph which was printed six
times, large and in full colour in the previous report, and the continuing use
by the UN of that now-discredited graph in other climate publications, casts
doubt on the scientific integrity of the IPCC process.
>
24. Given the large and growing number of papers in
the peer-reviewed literature attesting to the existence of a mediaeval warm
period that was 3 or 4C warmer than the present in some places and was
discernible in all parts of the globe, what is the basis for the UN’s
conclusion that the current warm period is likely to be warmer than the Middle
Ages? > Page 9 > 25. The UN says equilibrium climate sensitivity to a doubling of CO2 concentrations is 2 to 4.5C, with a best estimate of 3C. The climate forcings listed in the table in the current SPM are insufficient to yield 3C of warming for a doubling of CO2: accordingly, the UN must be assuming that the feedbacks occurring in response to higher temperature are net positive. Please provide a quantified list of all climate feedbacks used in the UN’s calculations, whether positive or negative. > Page 12 > 26. There is a mention of “increasing acidification of the ocean”. However, is it not true that even with the reductions in alkalinity the ocean will remain alkaline rather than acid? > 27. “Ongoing increases” of sea surface temperatures are mentioned. But Lyman et al. have found that in the past three years sea surface temperatures have fallen (though the Summary for Policymakers does not mention this). Is “ongoing” the appropriate word? > Page 13 > 28. The UN says “thermal expansion would continue for many centuries … “. Is it not correct that the expansion beyond 2200 would be measured in small fractions of a metre per century? > 29. Since the half-life of CO2 in the atmosphere is 50-100 years, is it not true that if CO2 stabilization occurs by 2100 the lingering effects on temperature and sea level in the millennium beyond 2200 will be near-vanishingly small, putting into context the reports mention of effects lasting a millennium after stabilization? > 30. Where does the UN draw attention to the fact that, if the Sun grows cooler as is now widely expected among solar physicists, the medium-term effects projected in the Summary for Policymakers will be offset to at least some extent? > Page 14 > 31. Please state the estimated world population in 2050 and 2100 for each of the scenarios shown on page 14. Most demographers forecast a peaking of world population in 2050, followed by a sharp decline thereafter.
Christopher Walter, Third
Viscount Monckton of Brenchley, is a former policy advisor to Margaret Thatcher
during her years as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. He may reached through SPPI, or directly at (
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Robert Ferguson,
President
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bferguson@sppinstitute.org
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209 Pennsylvania
Ave., SE
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Suite 299
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Washington,
D.C 20003
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www.scienceandpublicpolicy.org (202) 288-5699
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*Views here expressed are those of
the author, and not necessarily those of SPPI.
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| Last Updated on Monday, 23 July 2007 07:32 |


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