Reconciling estimates of climate sensitivity

The most important number in climate science is not 400 ppm or 2ºC. It’s climate sensitivity, the amount of warming we’ll get from doubling CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere. Curiously the IPCC AR5 report declined to give a number.

Remember, the base level for the pre-industrioal era is 280ppm, so doubling would make that 560ppm.

The fourth IPCC report in 2007 estimated that the planet will warm between 2 and 4.5°C warming in response to a doubling of the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere, with a best estimate of 3°C. In the following years a number of studies suggested a lower sensitivity, leading the IPCC’s fifth report of 2013 to extend the range to 1.5°C at the lower end and omit a best estimate entirely. Now a study by Kate Marvel et al has taken a new look at the issue.

Here we need to distinguish between TCR (transient climate response), the effect over the first 70 years, and ECS (equilibrium climate response), the effect over centuries.

Their best estimate is 1.8°C for TCR and a mean of 3°C for ECM.

They separated out some of the main factors – greenhouse gases, natural and man-made aerosols, ozone concentrations, and land use changes – and looked at the effects separately. This is necessary because each has its own conditions and distribution. Greenhouse gases are essentially well-mixed over the planet, for example, but sulphate aerosols from coal-fired power plants are thickest near the point of emission and don’t last very long.

They suggest that studies yielding a lower climate sensitivity had overestimated the effects of cooling agents.

That’s a simple summary of the story. Other than the article itself you can get increasing levels of complexity at …and Then There’s Physics, at NASA GISS Research News, and at RealClimate.

David Biello has a useful post on climate sensitivity at the Scientific American, stressing the uncertainty.

Back in June 2014, David Spratt looked at this issue. He referred to a paper by Sherwood, Bony et al. (2014) looking at clouds and atmospheric convective mixing which they found pushes the likely long-term global warming towards the upper end of model ranges.

    Taking “the available observations at face value,” they write, “implies a most likely climate sensitivity of about 4°C, with a lower limit of about 3°C”.

Then:

    Writing in the Guardian, Skeptical Science’s Dana Nuccitelli explains that these “results are consistent with Fasullo & Trenberth (2012), who found that only the higher sensitivity climate models correctly simulated drying in key cloud-forming regions of the atmosphere. Likewise, preliminary results by scientists at the California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory presented at the 2013 AGU meeting showed that higher sensitivity models do the best job simulating observed cloud changes. These results are also consistent with Lauer et al. (2010) and Clement et al. (2009), which looked at cloud changes in the Pacific, finding the observations consistent with a positive cloud feedback”

Spratt then points out that none of the above take into account “slow” feeedbacks:

    such as the decay of large ice sheets, changes in the carbon cycle (changed efficiency of carbon sinks such as permafrost and methane clathrate stores, as well as biosphere stores such as peatlands and forests), and changes in vegetation coverage and reflectivity (albedo).

The measure of these effects for a doubling of CO2 is known as Earth System Sensitivity (ESS), which can play out over millennia. Climate sensitivity under these circumstances is more likely to be around 6°C.

The standard assumption is that civilisation as we know it is threatened at 4°C, while 6°C threatens the continuance of homo sapiens as a species.

In a post in July 2014 I referred to Spratt’s material and added what James Hansen had published in 2011:

Here’s a table from page 17 of the 2011 paper Earth’s Energy Imbalance and Implications where he gives four categories of climate sensitivity:

Climate sensitivity_cropped_600

Hansen gives priority to paleoclimate data in looking at the very long term implications of what we are doing. Of course there are uncertainties there also. Hansen’s sweep is the last 65 million years, during which the shape of the planet’s surface, the disposition of the continents, the shape of the ocean basin and the ocean currents, have all changed. Of course this introduces new risks.

There is no room for complacency, especially now that the nations of the world have accepted that we really should be aiming at keeping the temperature rise to 1.5°C. Places like Tuvalu are already living on the edge:

TO GO WITH AFP STORIES ON THE UN CLIMATE CONFERENCE IN BALI. (FILES) The South Pacific pounds the serpentine coastline of Funafuti Atoll, 19 February 2004, home to nearly half of Tuvalu's entire population of 11,500, as king tides threaten to inundate the tiny island nation. Leaders of small Pacific island states on 04 December 2007 demanded that a key climate change conference in Bali do more than talk, calling for urgent action to stop sea levels from rising due to global warming.  AFP PHOTO/Torsten BLACKWOOD
TO GO WITH AFP STORIES ON THE UN CLIMATE CONFERENCE IN BALI. (FILES) The South Pacific pounds the serpentine coastline of Funafuti Atoll, 19 February 2004, home to nearly half of Tuvalu’s entire population of 11,500, as king tides threaten to inundate the tiny island nation. Leaders of small Pacific island states on 04 December 2007 demanded that a key climate change conference in Bali do more than talk, calling for urgent action to stop sea levels from rising due to global warming. AFP PHOTO/Torsten BLACKWOOD

2 thoughts on “Reconciling estimates of climate sensitivity”

  1. Six degrees? Surfing should be pretty good at Penrith and Ipswich. Fishing should be pretty good around the Tuvalu Shoals too. See? It’s not all bad news …. except for those living in the path of rising sea-levels and whatever the new Equatorial climate brings.

  2. Give it a few thousand years, of course. We are 7 km from the Brisbane GPO, in the Mt Coot-tha foothills. I think we are about 80 metres above sea level, but at 14 metres the sea comes in the other end of our suburb.

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