New
Research Confirms Global Warming Has Accelerated
25
March, 2013
A
new study of ocean warming has just been published in Geophysical
Research Letters
by Balmaseda, Trenberth,
and Källén (2013).
There are several important conclusions which can be drawn from this
paper.
Completely
contrary to the
popular contrarian myth,
global warming has accelerated, with more overall global warming in
the past 15 years than the prior 15 years. This is because
about 90% of overall global warming goes into heating the oceans, and
the oceans have been warming dramatically.
As
suspected, much of the
'missing heat' Kevin Trenberth previously talked about
has been found in the deep oceans. Consistent with the results
of Nuccitelli
et al. (2012),
this study finds that 30% of the ocean warming over the past decade
has occurred in the deeper oceans below 700 meters, which they note
is unprecedented over at least the past half century.
Some
recent studies
have concluded based on the slowed global surface warming over the
past decade that the
sensitivity of the climate
to the increased greenhouse effect is somewhat lower than the IPCC
best estimate. Those studies are fundamentally flawed because
they do not account for the warming of the deep oceans.
The
slowed surface air warming over the past decade has lulled many
people into a false and unwarranted sense of security.
The
main results of the study are illustrated in its Figure 1.
Figure
1: Ocean
Heat Content
from 0 to 300 meters (grey), 700 m (blue), and total depth (violet)
from ORAS4,
as represented by its 5 ensemble
members. The time series show monthly anomalies smoothed with a
12-month running mean, with respect to the 1958–1965 base period.
Hatching extends over the range of the ensemble
members and hence the spread gives a measure of the uncertainty
as represented by ORAS4 (which does not cover all sources
of uncertainty).
The vertical colored bars indicate a two year interval following the
volcanic eruptions with a 6 month lead
(owing to the 12-month running mean), and the 1997–98 El Niño
event again with 6 months on either side. On lower right, the linear
slope for a set of global heating rates (W/m2)
is given.
The
Data
In
this paper, the authors used ocean heat content data from
the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts' Ocean
Reanalysis
System 4 (ORAS4).
A ‘reanalysis’
is a climate
or weather model simulation of the past that incorporates data from
historical observations. In the case of ORAS4, this includes
ocean temperature measurements from bathythermographs
and the Argo
buoys,
and other types of data like sea level and surface
temperatures.
The ORAS4 data span from 1958 to the present, and have a high 1°x1°
horizontal resolution, as well as 42 vertical layers. As the
authors describe the data set,
"ORAS4
has been produced by combining, every 10 days, the output of an ocean
model forced by atmospheric reanalysis
fluxes and quality controlled ocean observations."
Accelerated
Global Warming
As
illustrated in Figure 1 above, the study divides ocean warming into
three layers for comparison – the uppermost 300 meters (grey), 700
meters (blue), and the full ocean depth (violet). After each of
the Mt. Agung, Chichón, and Pinatubo volcanic eruptions (which cause
short-term cooling by blocking sunlight), a distinct ocean cooling
event is observed in the data. Additionally, after the very
strong El Niño event of 1998, a cooling of the upper 300 and 700
meters of oceans is visible as a result of heat being transfered from
the surface ocean to the atmosphere.
One
of the clearest features in Figure 1 is the rapid warming of the
oceans over the past decade. As we have previously discussed,
the warming of the shallower oceans has slowed since around 2003,
which
certain climate contrarians have cherrypicked
to try and argue that global warming has slowed. However, more
heat accumulated in the deeper oceans below 700 meters during this
period. The authors describe the ocean warming since 1999 as,
"the
most sustained warming trend
in this record of OHC.
Indeed, recent warming rates of the waters below 700m appear to be
unprecedented."
Their
results in this respect are very similar the main conclusion of
Nuccitelli
et al. (2012),
in which we noted that recently, warming of the oceans below 700
meters accounts for about 30% of overall ocean and global warming.
Likewise, this new study concludes,
"In
the last decade, about 30% of the warming has occurred below 700 m,
contributing significantly to an acceleration of the warming trend."
The
warming of the oceans below 700 meters has also been identified by
Levitus
et al. (2012)
and Von
Schuckmann & Le Traon (2011),
for example.
Some
'Missing Heat' Found
Kevin
Trenberth's past comments about 'missing
heat'
drew considerable attention. The phrase refers to the fact that
the heat accumulation on Earth since about 2004 (e.g. from warming
oceans, air, and land, and melting ice) that instruments were able to
measure could not account for the amount of global heat accumulation
we expected to see, based on the energy imbalance caused by the
increased greenhouse
effect,
as measured by satellites at the top of the Earth's atmosphere.
These
new estimates of deeper ocean heat content go a long way towards
resolving that 'missing heat' mystery. There is still some
discrepancy remaining, which could be due to errors in the satellite
measurements, the ocean heat content measurements, or both. But
the discrepancy is now significantly smaller, and will be addressed
in further detail in a follow-up paper by these scientists.
So
what's causing this transfer of heat to the deeper ocean layers?
The authors suggest that it is a result of changes in winds related
to the negative phase of the Pacific
Decadal Oscillation
and more
frequent La Niña events.
Good
News for Climate Sensitivity? Probably Not
Recently
there have been some
studies
and comments
by a few climate scientists
that based on the slowed global surface warming over the past decade,
estimates of the Earth's overall equilibrium climate
sensitivity
(the total amount of global surface warming in response to the
increased greenhouse
effect
from a doubling of atmospheric CO2,
including amplifying and dampening feedbacks) may
be a bit too high. However, as
we previously discussed,
these studies and comments tend to neglect the warming of the deep
oceans below 700 meters.
Does
the warming of the deep ocean support these arguments for lower
equilibrium climate
sensitivity?
Probably not, as Trenberth explained (via personal communication),
"it
contributes to the overall warming of the deep ocean that has to
occur for the system to equilibrate. It speeds that process
up. It means less short term warming at the surface but at the
expense of a greater earlier long-term warming, and faster sea level
rise."
So
the slowed warming at the surface is only temporary, and consistent
with the 'hiatus decades' described by Meehl
et al. (2011).
The global warming end result will be the same, but the pattern of
surface warming over time may be different than we expect.
The
real problem is that in the meantime, we have allowed the temporarily
slowed surface warming to lull us into a false sense of security,
with many people wrongly believing global warming has paused when in
reality it has accelerated.
Global
Warming Wake Up Call
Perhaps
the most important result of this paper is the confirmation that
while many people wrongly believe global warming has stalled over the
past 10–15 years, in reality that period is "the
most sustained warming trend"
in the past half century. Global warming has not paused, it
has accelerated.
The
paper is also a significant step in resolving the 'missing heat'
issue, and is a good illustration why arguments for somewhat lower
climate
sensitivity
are fundamentally flawed if they fail to account for the warming of
the oceans below 700 meters.
Most
importantly, everybody (climate
scientists and contrarians included) must learn to stop equating
surface and shallow ocean warming with global warming. In fact,
as
Roger Pielke Sr. has pointed out,
"ocean
heat content change [is] the most appropriate metric to
diagnose global warming."
While he has focused on the shallow oceans, actually we need to
measure global warming by accounting for all
changes
in global heat content, including the deeper oceans. Otherwise
we can easily fool ourselves into underestimating the danger of the
climate
problem we face.
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