Explaining
how the water vapor greenhouse effect works
CLIMATE MYTHh...
Water
vapor is the most powerful greenhouse gas
“Water vapour is the most important greenhouse gas. This is part of the difficulty with the public and the media in understanding that 95% of greenhouse gases are water vapour. The public understand it, in that if you get a fall evening or spring evening and the sky is clear the heat will escape and the temperature will drop and you get frost. If there is a cloud cover, the heat is trapped by water vapour as a greenhouse gas and the temperature stays quite warm. If you go to In Salah in southern Algeria, they recorded at one point a daytime or noon high of 52 degrees Celsius – by midnight that night it was -3.6 degree Celsius. […] That was caused because there is no, or very little, water vapour in the atmosphere and it is a demonstration of water vapour as the most important greenhouse gas.” (Tim Ball)
“Water vapour is the most important greenhouse gas. This is part of the difficulty with the public and the media in understanding that 95% of greenhouse gases are water vapour. The public understand it, in that if you get a fall evening or spring evening and the sky is clear the heat will escape and the temperature will drop and you get frost. If there is a cloud cover, the heat is trapped by water vapour as a greenhouse gas and the temperature stays quite warm. If you go to In Salah in southern Algeria, they recorded at one point a daytime or noon high of 52 degrees Celsius – by midnight that night it was -3.6 degree Celsius. […] That was caused because there is no, or very little, water vapour in the atmosphere and it is a demonstration of water vapour as the most important greenhouse gas.” (Tim Ball)
When
skeptics use this argument, they are trying to imply that an increase
in CO2 isn't a major problem. If CO2 isn't as
powerful as water vapor, which there's already a lot of, adding a
little more CO2 couldn't be that bad, right? What this
argument misses is the fact that water vapor creates what scientists
call a 'positive feedback loop' in the atmosphere —
making any temperature changes larger than they would be otherwise.
How
does this work? The amount of water vapor in the atmosphere exists
in direct relation to the temperature. If you increase the
temperature, more water evaporates and becomes vapor, and vice versa.
So when something else causes a temperature increase (such as
extra CO2 from fossil fuels), more water evaporates. Then,
since water vapor is agreenhouse gas, this additional water vapor
causes the temperature to go up even further—a positive feedback.
How
much does water vapor amplify CO2 warming? Studies show
that water vaporfeedback roughly doubles the amount of warming
caused by CO2. So if there is a 1°C change caused by CO2,
the water vapor will cause the temperature to go up another 1°C.
When other feedback loops are included, the total
warming from a potential 1°C change caused by CO2 is, in
reality, as much as 3°C.
The
other factor to consider is that water is evaporated from the land
and sea and falls as rain or snow all the time. Thus the amount held
in the atmosphere as water vapour varies greatly in just
hours and days as result of the prevailing weather in any location.
So even though water vapour is the greatest greenhouse gas, it
is relatively short-lived. On the other hand, CO2 is
removed from the air by natural geological-scale processes and these
take a long time to work. Consequently CO2 stays
in our atmosphere for years and even centuries.
A small additional amount has a much more long-term effect.
So
skeptics are right in saying that water vapor is the
dominant greenhouse gas. What they don't mention is that the
water vapor feedback loop actually makes temperature
changes caused by CO2 even bigger
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