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Superb article on why climate change is real

By Thomas Levenson GLOBE COLUMNIST APRIL 17, 2016
LAST MONTH, DONALD DRUMPF sat down with the editorial board of The Washington Post for over an hour. The Post editors asked him about his foreign policy advisers, about his plans to revive US cities, about law enforcement, race, libel laws, thuggery at his rallies, and more — until, hard against the end of the session, there was time for one last question. What about global warming, asked editorial page editor Fred Hiatt: “Is there human-caused climate change?”

No, Drumpf replied. Not really: “I think there’s a change in weather. I am not a great believer in man-made climate change. I’m not a great believer.” That’s not really an argument, of course — it’s more an evocation of that old Monkees tune. But stripped to essentials, the GOP presidential front-runner’s stance is essentially the same as that of his chief rival, Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who says more bluntly that “climate change is the perfect pseudoscientific theory for a big government politician who wants more power.”

Climate change is a hoax, Cruz argues, because his favorite data set shows that there has been “no significant warming over the last 18 years.” No warming means no climate change, which means there’s nothing to see here, folks — and, to complete the syllogism, any suggestion that we face a human-caused crisis is just a Trojan horse for a far-left program of economic change.

There’s lots wrong with Cruz’s claim, starting with the repeated and always ignored debunking of his premise. Cruz’s 18-year timeline was carefully chosen. It starts in 1997/98, omitting the first 18 years of that particular series of observations. 1997/98 was an abnormally warm El Nino year, which makes this a classic example of cherry picking: It’s easy to deny a warming trend if you pick the warmest year and not the year-over-year average. Similarly, Cruz looks at satellite measurements of the temperature only of the atmosphere — and ignores those that measure temperatures on the surface of the earth, where people actually live.

But the problem with such fact-by-fact correctives is the implicit acceptance of the terms of dispute that Cruz (and more vaguely, Drumpf) wants to define. As you debate each data point, the larger picture never comes into view. And that directly encourages a false sense that all of climate science is up for grabs.

That is: Climate science (like any ambitious attempt to interrogate nature) faces plenty of uncertainty at the limits of knowledge. There are hard-fought debates about each new observation or analysis. But such battles take place against a background of settled ideas and rock-solid observations that taken together inform every attempt to make sense of climate and human action.

This body of uncontested knowledge is exactly what Cruz and other climate change deniers ignore. In so doing, they not only distort whatever particular bit of data they’re peddling, they also undermine the public understanding of how science in general actually works. That makes it ever more difficult to inform our politics with what we do know.

Here are some key facts about humankind’s impact on the earth’s climate. Taken together they form a bedrock of understanding for which any attempt to dispute the global warming picture must account.

The founding insight can be traced back to a precise place and time: Stockholm, Dec. 11, 1895, when Svante Arrhenius stood before the Swedish Academy of Science to present his paper “On the Influence of Carbonic Acid upon the Temperature of the Ground.” (Carbonic acid is now better known as carbon dioxide.) Arrhenius began by recalling how his predecessors had shown that the gas is transparent to visible light — the sun shines perfectly happily through all the CO2 between it and the earth’s surface — but absorbs energy at longer wavelengths of light — infrared radiation, what we feel as heat.

Arrhenius then took this basic physical insight and used it to build a picture of a planetwide process. He showed that “if the quantity of carbonic acid [in the atmosphere] increases in geometric progression, the augmentation of the temperature [at the earth’s surface] will increase nearly in arithmetic progression” — which is to say, more carbon up there leads directly to more heat down here. He went on to discuss a possible link between CO2 levels and the ebb and flow of ice ages — and he even noted the possibility that burning coal or other fossil fuels might affect the carbon content of the atmosphere.

There it was: One hundred and twenty years ago physicists and chemists already knew that atmospheric CO2 molds global climate. There was and is no disagreement on this. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas. It allows visible light to penetrate the atmosphere, and it acts as a blanket, keeping heat from radiating back out into space. This knowledge does not depend on any indirect measurements, assumptions, or elaborate numerical analysis. Rather, it emerges directly from the extremely well established basic understanding of the behavior of atoms and molecules.

The second piece of the puzzle is equally solid. We know how much carbon is in the atmosphere; we know that its concentration is going up; we know by how much. This isn’t a case of argument-by-proxy, an attempt to reconstruct a record through pollen deposits or tree ring data or what have you (though such methods are powerful tools to extract information from the past). There is no question about these facts — because, more than 50 years ago, a guy climbed a tall mountain to find out.

In the mid 1950s, Charles Keeling was a postdoc in geochemistry at Caltech. While there, he built the first instrument that could accurately measure CO2 concentrations in atmospheric samples. He tried his new device out on trips around California, but it was only when he moved to the Scripps Institution of Oceanography that was able to begin an experiment that has outlived him. Beginning in 1956, Keeling and his successors have measured atmospheric CO2 at an observatory high on the flanks of Mauna Loa, one of the two giant volcanoes that dominate the Big Island of Hawaii. There is nothing there to confound the work — no smokestacks, cars, anything. The graph that records what they’ve found over six decades is now called the Keeling Curve — and it is unequivocal.

One of the first things Keeling saw was a jigsaw trace tracking the change of the seasons. As plants grow in the land-rich Northern hemisphere in spring and summer, they grab CO2 out of the air. In winter, as leaves die and fall, some of that carbon gets released back into the atmosphere. As one of the obituaries that followed his death in 2005 put it, Keeling “had discovered that the earth itself was breathing.”

We live on a planet that until recently sported 310 parts per million of carbon dioxide as a thermal blanket — and now has more than 400. Any debate about global climate begins from that unvarnished, unchallengeable reality.

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But such small fluctuations can’t hide the overall trajectory. When Keeling first began his measurements, carbon dioxide accounted for 310 parts per million of the atmosphere. Since then, each year has seen an increase, drawing a curve that is pretty close to a line pointing ever upward. As of April 13, 2016, the Mauna Loa observatory counted 408.70 parts per million of CO2.

That’s just the way it is: a number that corresponds to a real quantity out there in nature. Like the figure for acceleration due to gravity at the earth’s surface (about 9.8 meters/ second squared) or the chemical composition of water (two atoms of hydrogen bound to one of oxygen), it’s not subject to debate. It’s not an article of Drumpf’s (or anyone’s) belief. We live on a planet that until recently sported 310 parts per million of carbon dioxide as a thermal blanket — and now has more than 400. Any debate about global climate begins from that unvarnished, unchallengeable reality.

The third beyond-dispute fact about climate change concerns who’s responsible for that rise in atmospheric CO2.

It’s us.

Human society excretes a lot of carbon. The numbers are somewhat less precise than the Mauna Loa measurements — but they’re still based on direct observation. A number of different agencies and research centers collect the various data sets on industrial activity, power generation, deforestation, and the like. In 2014, all that work put together tallied 35.9 billion tons of CO2 produced by burning of coal, oil, and gas, plus or minus a small variance. Land use changes added another 3.3 billion tons of the gas per year over the last decade, though here the uncertainty is larger — plus or minus 1.8 billion tons. (There are other greenhouse gases for which good estimates of human production exist — notably methane — but CO2 remains the single largest culprit in the climate change story.)

From Arrhenius’s first musings about the impact of human action on climate, the key question was whether any possible carbon sinks — especially the oceans — could absorb both natural sources of CO2 (volcanoes, forest fires, and the like) and that released by everything people burn. Now we know — thanks to Keeling’s observations — that the answer is no. The oceans do absorb some of the annual production of CO2 from both natural events and what we produce, but the way we live now creates an excess of carbon that overflows all such natural reservoirs.

These three facts: Atmospheric carbon dioxide regulates temperature at the earth’s surface, its levels have been and are continuing to rise, and human beings are behind that increase — lead directly to a simple conclusion. All else being equal, human action is driving a global process that will create and likely already is leading to a warmer world.

Everything else isn’t equal, of course. The global climate system is intricate, difficult to untangle, tricky to measure, and home to plenty of uncertainties. But here’s the nub: Any claim that the world isn’t getting hotter now and won’t warm in the future can’t rely on just one scrap of information or another. It has to make a bigger argument — some coherent account of why ever increasing amounts of carbon produced directly by human activity won’t end up where at all our basic understanding of how nature works suggests it should.

So, when Ted Cruz argues that all of climate science is a hoax because one piece of information — squinted at just right — suggests a gap in the warming record, he’s not thinking like a scientist. Instead, he’s making a lawyer’s case, pounding the table for the defense. That’s fine work as rhetoric; we’re trained through cultural understanding and uncounted hours of TV courtroom drama to see cases turn on each individual piece of evidence. “If the carbon don’t fit, you must acquit” and all that.

But that’s not how science works, not when studying climate or anything else. A century ago, Albert Einstein produced his General Theory of Relativity, a radical conception of gravity that displaced Isaac Newton’s version. Yet Einstein’s theory didn’t erase all the successes the older idea had in explaining the motions of everything from the moons of Jupiter to tides here on Earth’s tides. That’s why one of the first calculations Einstein performed to test his new idea was to see if it could reproduce Newtonian results at the appropriate scales. Even the greatest discoveries don’t invalidate older knowledge. Rather they frame such prior ideas within their newly emerging picture.

Much of contemporary science has accumulated into a deep understanding of the natural world that is inconvenient for the leading Republican candidates for president. Willed ignorance is a disaster for climate policy in particular. It is worse as an approach to science in the public sphere. For centuries, human curiosity led us to the point where we know so much; it would be good — more, it may well be a matter of survival — to put all that knowledge to use.

Thomas Levenson is a professor of science writing at MIT and an Ideas columnist. His latest book is “The Hunt for Vulcan.”
Published by talonequ
9 years ago
Comments
10
nightskies
nightskies 8 years ago
to edintx99 : Thank you for your very well written and well thought-out reply. Without question, there is skepticism, and some of it well grounded. I would be remiss if I tried to claim myself an expert on climate change or climate science in general; I am not. Nor have I worked on mathematical models for climate dynamics myself, so I can only go by the data I've been able to fine in my research. Research that is admittedly quite limited compared to my major areas of study, so I cannot go as deep into the subject as I would like. Although I stand by my comments regarding the ramifications of nonlinear dynamics on climate science, which is why the research is inherently complex and at many times unpredictable. Much like the odd effects of the increasing levels of ammonia in the atmosphere generated mainly in China. I do absolutely agree that climate change has become an ideology, and one far to ingrained with rhetoric and politicized by modern society. It has become fashionable to drive a Tesla and beat one's chest about helping the environment, when forgetting that the materials, some exotic, used to make said Tesla had their own impacts on the world. Don't get me wrong, I think the Tesla is a cool car, but let's not think of it as something it's not. That is one small example. I would have to pull the charts and do the math myself to find some of the correlations you're speaking of, and I may do that should I find the time in this upcoming tumultuous semester. Climate change has become the "irrefutable claim" that powers many conspiracy theories, when studies need to continue to be ongoing and open. The main thrust of comment was the fact that there is a unpleasant streak of anti-science sentiment in the US and it's new political leadership and that is worrying to me personally. What is also worrying is that if you attempt to argue with any findings of climate change scientists you are called a "denier" and told you are "uneducated". That flies in the face of the core of science, to question and test everything. You've made some thought provoking points here, and one's that bare researching. Thank you.
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edintx99
edintx99 8 years ago
to edintx99 : Oh, and a correction to my failing memory on this subject. For posterity, it was the IEA (International Energy Agency) not the IAEA.
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edintx99
edintx99 8 years ago
to nightskies : Nightskies, I thought I'd post on your reply so you and Tal could both see it. Without taking sides, I do know some reasons why there is skepticism on the subject of climate change or global warming. (1) Gore's famous run chart showing hundred of thousands of years of temperature and CO2 data didn't really support his case. When you examine the root data, it showed two things: (a) Temperature changed first and CO2 FOLLOWED (not vice versa). This is clearly the case at the start and stop of ice ages. There was about a 700 years lag. (b) When you do an XY plot of the root temperature and CO2 data, it shows a correlation of about 0.5. In other words, correlated, but poorly. Many other factors affect it. (2) The time period that was used by the IAEA several years ago to mathematically model and outlook run-away global warming selected the steepest relationship you could find (something like a 3 decade period) in the recent 150 year rise in CO2. I suspect it's one of the reasons the global warming predictions did not pan out in the last couple decades. It's also one of the reasons some people look at the "sky is falling" preaching on world temperature and go, meh... (3) When the temperature curve flattened, a new term was coined, "climate change". It is both hard to support or refute a "change" in climate. This generates skeptics. (4) I was fairly well read on the subject several years ago. I emailed and spoke to the person that had done the economic analysis for the IAEA and UN's big push on the global warming. I also gave comments back to him on the pre-release copy. About maybe 3/4 of the steps put forth to decrease CO2 were reasonably priced. But that wasn't the objective he was given. He had been told to model the economics of meeting a target CO2 level. My opinion... if they had pulled the world together to do THOSE economic steps, they wouldn't have gotten so much push back. The global warming (climate change) activity had become an ideology. Ideologues don't make good implementers. I agree that thorium coupled with the economic forms of solar, wind, hydro and natural gas make for a perfect low carbon footprint. We demonstrated the thorium nuclear tech in the 60's and abandoned it. China has launched a massive thorium program. They'll get there before India. https://www.iaea.org/NuclearPower/Downloadable/Meetings/2016/2016-10-31-11-03-NPTDS/05_TMSR_in_China.pdf Just thought you'd be interested.
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lonerider10
lonerider10 8 years ago
reduce your carbon footprint, get a quarter horse. sorry, I think the research is suspect and yes I look at data every day.
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nightskies
nightskies 9 years ago
biological warfare, it goes on and on. We need the power of technology, and the advantages it give us to continue to survive, there is little question about that. I haven't even touched on the $3T issue of diseases like Alzheimer's and ALS, cancer and heart disease (add a few more trillion) that we can't seem to touch with conventional means. So advanced computation and new technologies will be needed, there's no argument about that. We cannot allow the lights of civilization go out, we must survive. Now, with that being said, that doesn't mean that this march of technology be damaging to the earth or readily contribute to climate change. It means that more efficient technologies and energy plans need to be worked on, and that means difficult research and even more difficult policy making (the damage to the petro-dollar is another issue altogether). In other words, it means hard work, a lot of hard work and many people are simple opposed to hard work, and that majorly includes politicians. We can solve these issues and do it in a way that is climate responsible, but it's going to take monumental effort, don't misunderstand that. As solar becomes more efficient, battery storage technology is beginning to grow rapidly, geothermal (in some areas) there are things we can do. As much as people don't want to hear the word "nuclear" there are several designs that have little to no environmental impact and have almost no possibility of melting down. That includes both generation three lithium reactors as well as thorium-salt reactors. Of course, this all becomes moot if we can figure out that whole pesky fusion thing, which would absolutely change the world, as much as AI, nanotechnology, synthetic biology and the like. It would lead to a cleaner, more efficient world, safe from climate change and increase economic output and opportunities for developing worlds. Which would increase the relative safety of the world and allow humanity to push towards a positive destiny. Once again Tal, great posting.
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nightskies
nightskies 9 years ago
First of all, excellent article posting. Okay, here we go. Drumpf and the stranger with candy known as Rafael "Ted" Cruz deny empirical evidence, not too surprising there. Drumpf is ignorant of these facts, he hasn't touched upon it in his "research" preparing for the WH. What is very frightening is that Cruz intentionally selects information that supports his notion and right-winged idea of climate change denial. It is willful misinformation and nothing short of it. A question should be begged that do people want a President that is willfully ignorant on any subject? Personally, I don't. We live in a time of great change, and that change is accelerating rapidly, believe me. Cruz and possibly to a slightly lesser extent Drumpf are ill-equipped to lead in this new world, and it's frightening that they have come so far on a national stage. Although, it must be said, that climate science is a particularly difficult area of research. Much of it is dependent on nonlinear dynamics, and especially chaos theory, which shows complex deterministic equations or systems of equations that are very difficult to solve, and sometimes impossible. While powerful supercomputing allows us greater transparency into these kinds of issues with their ability to handle a large number of complex variables, it's not an absolute. More so, when looking at many solutions in the applicable complex adaptive systems, the answers, many times, give rise to more complex questions. So it can be said that we don't know the full extend of what climate change will do to the Earth, how the system may evolve and adapt and the gross outcomes. However, what can be said is that there will be changes, and many of them dramatic, and we live in a world (especially economically) that doesn't have the capacity to absorb a high delta of events. More and more politicians and business leaders need to take the time to realize this, because entire swaths of the economy could be devastated by small, perturbation changes. Data on CO2 increases, ground level temperature increases, not to mention depressive jet-stream movements, and increasing water levels cannot be ignored, or at least shouldn't be. Data is data, cold hard math, and a refusal to accept it applies a blindness to empiricism which makes one question the mental agility of the denier in question. Being that soil samples, ice-core samples, carbon dating and the like show a relatively constant rate of CO2 in the atmosphere, it has gone up exponentially (thankfully not geometrically) in the last ~120 years. That means us, we did this, we changed and continue to change the world, and it's our responsibility to fix it. Hardcore environmentalists would have us scale back on technology and industrialism, which would have untold effects on our quality of life and longevity as a species. There are growing threats that we as a species will have to face, climate change being just one of them, pandemics, asteroids, continued...
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talonequ
talonequ Publisher 9 years ago
I can't remember if I posted a New Yorker article on rising sea levels or if I just sent the link directly to Richard. But, in case you haven'e seen it, you'll very much enjoy it http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/12/21/the-siege-of-miami @stupidity - I'm guessing that you're already familiar with the Darwin Awards. But, again, just in case you're not: http://www.darwinawards.com/ Or, as Dorothy likes to say, "Saved some good woman (or, occasionally, man) a lot of trouble." Glad to know you're fine - I'm not sure why I thought you lived closer to Houston. Sadly, a sexual eruption affects a very small number of people - climate change will affect 6 billion.
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n2oral
n2oral 9 years ago
to talonequ : I'm up in north Texico (DFW) and though we've had our share of local flash flooding, mostly those who have suffered have been victims of their own stupidity (driving into flooded streets or bridges - I consider that evolution in action!) it has been relatively minor. I have a friend with the Army Corps of Engineers flood control division and he said their data show a 50 year trend toward more extreme weather events; fewer "average" years, more periods of extended drought followed by extremely wet conditions. There was an article in Scientific American many years ago that I cannot forget, about the deep ocean return currents that are the counterpoint to the Gulf Stream, Humboldt Current and similar surface currents. It pointed out that those currents have stopped or reversed in past eons with dramatic effects upon climate. The melting of Antarctic and especially the Arctic ice packs could shift those flows in a very short (geological) time frame with unforseeable consequences. Denial of climate change is like denial of sex - sooner or later it's going to cause an eruption!
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talonequ
talonequ Publisher 9 years ago
Good response, my friend. I've been meaning to ask you - has the awful flooding in Southern Texas been a problem for you? What we've been seeing up here looks pretty bad but I'm not sure if it's totally localized to Houston because of its connection to the Gulf. Hoping you're OK.
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n2oral
n2oral 9 years ago
To Cruz and many of his cohort, "if it ain't in the Bible, it ain't truth." Beware of any person who believes all Truth can be found in one Book. What we have here is not a failure to communicate (apologies to Cool Hand Luke) but rather denial of reality if it conflicts with irrational beliefs. Or in this case, political fantasy (we can continue driving our behemoth SUVs without worrying about the consequences) over well documented facts.
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