Global
warming since 1997 more than twice as fast as previously estimated,
new study shows
A
new study fills in the gaps missed by the Met Office, and finds the
warming 'pause' is barely a speed bump
26
January, 2013
A
new paper
published in The Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological
Society fills in the gaps in the UK Met Office HadCRUT4
surface temperature data set,
and finds that the global surface warming since 1997 has happened
more than twice as fast as the HadCRUT4 estimate. This short video
abstract summarizes the study's approach and results.
The
study, authored by Kevin Cowtan from the University of York and
Robert Way from the University of Ottawa (who both also contribute to
the climate science website Skeptical
Science),
notes that the Met Office data set only covers about 84 percent of
the Earth's surface. There are large gaps in its coverage, mainly in
the Arctic, Antarctica, and Africa, where temperature monitoring
stations are relatively scarce. These are shown in white in the Met
Office figure below. Note the rapid warming trend (red) in the Arctic
in the Cowtan & Way version, missing from the Met Office data
set.
Met
Office vs. Cowtan & Way (2013) surface temperature coverage and
trends
NASA's
GISTEMP
surface temperature record tries to address the coverage gap by
extrapolating temperatures in unmeasured regions based on the nearest
measurements. However, the NASA data fails to include corrections for
a change in the way sea surface temperatures are measured - a
challenging problem that has so far only been addressed by the Met
Office.
The
Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature (BEST)
project used a similar approach as NASA, but with a statistical
method known as "kriging"
to fill in the gaps by interpolating and extrapolating with existing
measurements. However, BEST only applied this method to temperatures
over land, not oceans.
Dr.
Cowtan is an interdisciplinary computational scientist who recognized
some potential solutions to this temperature coverage gap problem.
"Like
many scientists, I'm an obsessive problem solver. Sometimes you see a
problem and think 'That's mine, I can make a contribution here'"
In
their paper, Cowtan & Way apply a kriging approach to fill in the
gaps between surface measurements, but they do so for both land and
oceans. In a second approach, they also take advantage of the
near-global coverage of satellite observations, combining the
University of Alabama at Huntsville (UAH) satellite temperature
measurements with the available surface data to fill in the gaps with
a 'hybrid' temperature data set. They found that the kriging method
works best to estimate temperatures over the oceans, while the hybrid
method works best over land and most importantly sea ice, which
accounts for much of the unobserved region.
Both
of their new surface temperature data sets show significantly more
warming over the past 16 years than HadCRUT4. This is mainly due to
HadCRUT4 missing accelerated Arctic warming, especially since 1997.
Cowtan
& Way investigate the claim of a global surface warming 'pause'
over the past 16 years by examining the trends from 1997 through
2012. While HadCRUT4 only estimates the surface warming trend at
0.046°C per decade during that time, and NASA puts it at 0.080°C
per decade, the new kriging and hybrid data sets estimate the trend
during this time at 0.11 and 0.12°C per decade, respectively.
These
results indicate that the slowed warming of average global surface
temperature is not as significant as previously believed. Surface
warming has slowed somewhat, in large part due to more
overall global warming being transferred to the oceans over the past
decade.
However, these sorts of temporary surface warming slowdowns (and
speed-ups) occur on a regular basis due to short-term natural
influences.
The
results of this study also have bearing on some recent research. For
example, correcting for the recent cool bias indicates that global
surface temperatures are not as far from the average of climate model
projections as we previously thought, and certainly fall
within the range of individual climate model temperature simulations.
Recent studies that concluded the global climate is a bit less
sensitive to the increased greenhouse effect than previously believed
may also have somewhat underestimated the actual climate
sensitivity.
This
is of course just one study, as Dr. Cowtan is quick to note.
"No
difficult scientific problem is ever solved in a single paper. I
don't expect our paper to be the last word on this, but I hope we
have advanced the discussion."
The
perceived recent slowdown of global surface temperatures remains an
interesting scientific question. It appears to be due
to some combination
of internal factors (more global warming going into the oceans),
external factors (relatively low solar activity and high volcanic
activity), and an underestimate of the actual global surface warming.
How
much each factor is contributing is being investigated by extensive
scientific research, but the Cowtan & Way paper suggests the
latter explanation is a significant contributor. The temporary
slowing of global surface warming appears to be smaller than we
currently believe.
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