date: Mon Feb 21 14:30:11 2005
from: Phil Jones
subject: Fwd: FYI: Scripps Study Finds Greenhouse Gases Proximate Cause of
to: "Peter Mayes"
Peter,
There are some links in this one. There isn't a study as such, as Tim Barnett
just gave a talk to the annual AAAS meeting. The AAAS web site is given.
I suspect this study just updated one Tim had in Science in 2002 or 2001.
Cheers
Phil
X-Sender: schlesin@mail.atmos.uiuc.edu
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2005 08:13:43 -0600
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From: Michael Schlesinger
Subject: FYI: Scripps Study Finds Greenhouse Gases Proximate Cause of
Ocean Warming (N.B. Source is Insurance Journal; see links at bottom)
Cc: schlesin@atmos.uiuc.edu
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[1]http://www.insurancejournal.com/news/international/2005/02/21/51777.htm?print=1
International News
Scripps Study Finds Greenhouse Gases Proximate Cause of Ocean Warming
February 21, 2005
Researchers at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California,
San Diego, and their colleagues have produced the first clear scientific evidence that
human activity-and very little else- is warming the world's oceans.
The Scripps' report, coming from one of the world's leading ocean research institutions,
may turn out to be the "smoking gun" that finally establishes the link between
greenhouse gases (carbon dioxide and other pollutants) and the increase in temperature
worldwide, or global warming.
The authors contend that their results clearly indicate that the oceans' warming is
produced "anthropogenically," i.e. by human activities. The study, conducted by Tim
Barnett and David Pierce, along with colleagues at Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory's Program for Climate Model Diagnosis and Intercomparison (PCMDI), used a
combination of computer models and real-world "observed" data to capture signals of the
penetration of greenhouse gas-influenced warming in the oceans, a Scripps bulletin
stated.
The findings were reported at the annual conference of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science (AAAS), held in Washington D.C. Dr. Barnett, a research marine
physicist in the Climate Research Division at Scripps, stated: "This is perhaps the most
compelling evidence yet that global warming is happening right now and it shows that we
can successfully simulate its past and likely future evolution." He admitted to being
"stunned" by the results because the computer models reproduced the penetration of the
warming signal in all the oceans. "The statistical significance of these results is far
too strong to be merely dismissed and should wipe out much of the uncertainty about the
reality of global warming," he continued.
In an interview with the BBC Barnett noted that the world's oceans cover around 71
percent of the earth's surface, and that what happens in them therefore has significant
consequences on the world's weather and climate. The study used advanced computer models
of climate "to calculate human-produced warming over the last 40 years in the world's
oceans," said Scripps' bulletin. "In all of the ocean basins, the warming signal found
in the upper 700 meters predicted by the models corresponded to the measurements
obtained at sea with confidence exceeding 95 percent. The correspondence was especially
strong in the upper 500 meters of the water column."
The bulletin noted that it is this "high degree of visual agreement and statistical
significance that leads Barnett to conclude that the warming is the product of human
influence. Efforts to explain the ocean changes through naturally occurring variations
in the climate or external forces- such as solar or volcanic factors--did not come close
to reproducing the observed warming."
If the observations Barnett and his colleagues have identified continue, they will
"produce broad-scale changes across the atmosphere and land." Rapidly melting glaciers
in South America and China could greatly reduce the amount of water available in the dry
summer months. In the Western U.S. warmer conditions could fundamentally alter the snow
pack upon which many Western States rely for water.
"The new ocean study, taken together with the numerous validations of the same models in
the atmosphere, portends far broader changes," Barnett stated. "Other parts of the world
will face similar problems to those expected--and being observed now--in the western
U.S. The skill demonstrated by the climate models in handling the changing planetary
heat budget suggests that these scenarios have a high enough probability of actually
happening that they need to be taken seriously by decision makers."
While it may be an exaggeration to say that the world's decision makers have been
"dithering" over climate change, the only concrete result so far has been the Kyoto
protocol, which went into force last week (See IJ Website Feb.17), at least for the
countries that have signed up to it. The United States, Brazil and China are notably
absent. If the Scripps report convinces those who are still unsure about the causes of
global warming that it originates from greenhouse gases, the world will owe Dr. Barnett
and his colleagues a great debt.
More details concerning the report and the effects of global warming can be obtained on
the Scripps' Website at: [2]http://scripps.ucsd.edu[3]/; or on the AAAS Website at:
[4]http://www.aaas.org/news/releases/2005/0217warmingwarning.shtmle. For general
information, see also the United Nations Environment Program Web site at:
[5]http://www.unep.org/, and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change at:
[6]http://www.ipcc.ch/index.htm.
Find this article at:
[7]http://www.insurancejournal.com/news/international/2005/02/21/51777.htm
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