Source: American Geophysical Union Date:
2003-07-08
Leading
Climate Scientists Reaffirm View That Late 20th Century Warming Was
Unusual
WASHINGTON - A group of leading climate
scientists has reaffirmed the "robust consensus view" emerging
from the peer reviewed literature that the warmth experienced on at least
a hemispheric scale in the late 20th century was an anomaly in the
previous millennium and that human activity likely played an important
role in causing it. In so doing, they refuted recent claims that the
warmth of recent decades was not unprecedented in the context of the past
thousand years.
Writing in the 8 July issue of the
American Geophysical Union publication Eos, Michael Mann of the University
of Virginia and 12 colleagues in the United States and United Kingdom
endorse the position on climate change and greenhouse gases taken by AGU
in 1998. Specifically, they say that "there is a compelling basis for
concern over future climate changes, including increases in global-mean
surface temperatures, due to increased concentrations of greenhouse gases,
primarily from fossil-fuel burning."
The Eos article is a response to two
recent and nearly identical papers by Drs. Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas
of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, published in Climate
Research and Energy & Environment (the latter paper with additional
co-authors). These authors challenge the generally accepted view that
natural factors cannot fully explain recent warming and must have been
supplemented by significant human activity, and their papers have received
attention in the media and in the U.S. Senate. Requests from reporters to
top scientists in the field, seeking comment on the Soon and Baliunas
position, lead to memoranda that were later expanded into the current Eos
article, which was itself peer reviewed.
Paleoclimatologists (scientists who study
ancient climates) generally rely on instrumental data for the past 150
years and "proxy" indicators, such as tree rings, ice cores,
corals, and lake sediments to reconstruct the climate of earlier times.
Most of the available data pertain to the northern hemisphere and show,
according to the authors, that the warmth of the northern hemisphere over
the past few decades is likely unprecedented in the last 1,000 years and
quite possibly in the preceding 1,000 years as well.
Climate model simulations cannot explain
the anomalous late 20th century warmth without taking into account the
contributions of human activities, the authors say. They make three major
points regarding Soon and Baliunas's recent assertions challenging these
findings.
First, in using proxy records to draw
inferences about past climate, it is essential to assess their actual
sensitivity to temperature variability. In particular, the authors say,
Soon and Baliunas misuse proxy data reflective of changes in moisture or
drought, rather than temperature, in their analysis.
Second, it is essential to distinguish
between regional temperature anomalies and hemispheric mean temperature,
which must represent an average of estimates over a sufficiently large
number of distinct regions. For example, Mann and his co- authors say, the
concepts of a "Little Ice Age" and "Medieval Warm
Period" arose from the Eurocentric origins of historic climatology.
The specific periods of coldness and warmth differed from region to region
and as compared with data for the northern hemisphere as a whole.
Third, according to Mann and his
colleagues, it is essential to define carefully the modern base period
with which past climate is to be compared and to identify and quantify
uncertainties. For example, they say, the most recent report of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) carefully compares data
for recent decades with reconstructions of past temperatures, taking into
account the uncertainties in those reconstructions. IPCC concluded that
late 20th century warmth in the northern hemisphere likely exceeded that
of any time in the past millennium. The method used by Soon and Baliunas,
they say, considers mean conditions for the entire 20th century as the
base period and determines past temperatures from proxy evidence not
capable of resolving trends on a decadal basis. It is therefore, they say,
of limited value in determining whether recent warming in anomalous in a
long term and large scale context.
The Eos article started as a memorandum
that Michael Oppenheimer and Mann drafted to help inform colleagues who
were being contacted by members of the media regarding the Soon and
Baliunas papers and wanted an opinion from climate scientists and
paleoclimatologists who were directly familiar with the underlying issues.
Mann and Oppenheimer learned that a number
of other colleagues, including Tom Wigley of the University Corporation
for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) in Boulder, Colorado; Philip Jones of the
University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit in Norwich, United
Kingdom; and Raymond Bradley of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst
were receiving similar media requests for their opinions on the matter.
Their original memorandum evolved into a more general position paper
jointly authored by a larger group of leading scientists in the field.
Mann says he sees the resulting Eos
article as representing an even broader consensus of the viewpoint of the
mainstream climate research community on the question of late 20th century
warming and its causes. The goal of the authors, he says, is to reaffirm
support for the AGU position statement on climate change and greenhouse
gases and clarify what is currently known from the paleoclimate record of
the past one-to-two thousand years and, in particular, what the bearing of
this evidence is on the issue of the detection of human influence on
recent climate change.
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