logo

Welcome


AboutZoos, Since 2008





201205Aug19:49

Global warm­ing and human-​caused green­house gases go hand in hand

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 05 August 2012 | mod­i­fied 05 August 2012
Archived

250 Years of Global Warm­ing: Berke­ley Earth Releases New Analysis

Accord­ing to a new Berke­ley Earth study released July 29, 2012, the aver­age tem­per­a­ture of Earth’s land has risen by 1.5 °C over the past 250 years. The good match between the new tem­per­a­ture record and his­tor­i­cal car­bon diox­ide records sug­gests that the most straight­for­ward expla­na­tion for this warm­ing is human green­house gas emis­sions. Together with their most recent results and papers, Berke­ley Earth also released their raw data and analy­sis pro­grams. They are avail­able online at BerkeleyEarth​.org since July 30.

The new analy­sis from Berke­ley Earth goes all the way back to 1753, about 100 years ear­lier than pre­vi­ous groups’ analy­ses. The lim­ited land cov­er­age prior to 1850 results in larger uncer­tain­ties in the behav­ior of the record; despite these, the behav­ior is significant.

Robert Rohde, Lead Sci­en­tist for Berke­ley Earth and the per­son who car­ried out most of the analy­sis, noted that “Sud­den drops in the early tem­per­a­ture record (1753 to 1850) cor­re­spond to known vol­canic events.” Vol­ca­noes spew par­ti­cles into the air, which then reflect sun­light and cool the earth for a few years. In the Berke­ley Earth tem­per­a­ture plot, sud­den dips in tem­per­a­ture caused by large vol­canic explo­sions are evi­dent back to the late 1700s.

Berke­ley Earth com­pared the shape of the grad­ual rise over 250 years to sim­ple math func­tions (expo­nen­tials, poly­no­mi­als) and to solar activ­ity (known through his­tor­i­cal records of sunspot num­bers), and even to ris­ing func­tions such as world population.

Much to my sur­prise, by far the best match was to the record of atmos­pheric car­bon diox­ide, mea­sured from atmos­pheric sam­ples and air trapped in polar ice
Richard Muller, Founder and Sci­en­tific Direc­tor of Berke­ley Earth »

Muller empha­sises that the match between the data and the the­ory doesn’t prove that car­bon diox­ide is respon­si­ble for the warm­ing, but the good fit makes it the strongest con­tender. “To be con­sid­ered seri­ously, any alter­na­tive expla­na­tion must match the data at least as well as does car­bon dioxide.”

In its 2007 report the IPCC con­cluded only that “most” of the warm­ing of the past 50 years could be attrib­uted to humans. It was pos­si­ble, accord­ing to the IPCC, that increased solar activ­ity could have con­tributed to warm­ing prior to 1956. Berke­ley Earth analysed about 5 times more sta­tion records than were used in pre­vi­ous analy­ses, and this expanded data base along with its new sta­tis­ti­cal approach allowed Berke­ley Earth to go about 100 years far­ther back in time than pre­vi­ous stud­ies. By doing so, the Berke­ley Earth team was able to con­clude that over 250 years, the con­tri­bu­tion of solar activ­ity to global warm­ing is negligible.

Berkeley earth resultsSome of the sci­en­tists on the Berke­ley Earth team admit sur­prise that the new analy­sis has shown such clear agree­ment between global land‐temperature rise and human‐caused green­house gases. “I was not expect­ing this,” says Richard Muller, “but as a sci­en­tist, I feel it is my duty to let the evi­dence change my mind.” Eliz­a­beth Muller, co‐Founder and Exec­u­tive Direc­tor of Berke­ley Earth, says that “One of our goals at Berke­ley Earth is com­plete trans­parency — we believe that every­one should be able to access raw cli­mate data and do their own analy­sis. Sci­en­tists have a duty to be ‘prop­erly skep­ti­cal’, and we are try­ing to lower the bar­ri­ers to entry into the field.”

Robert Rohde cre­ated an online fea­ture that allows look up tem­per­a­ture records by loca­tion. “If you want to know what the tem­per­a­ture change has been in your city, your state, or even your coun­try, you can now find this online at BerkeleyEarth​.org” says Rohde. He adds, “We hope peo­ple will have a lot of fun inter­act­ing with the data.” This fea­ture should be avail­able to the pub­lic by Mon­day, July 30.

A pre­vi­ous Berke­ley Earth study, released in Octo­ber 2011, found that the land-​surface tem­per­a­ture had risen by about 0.9 °C over the past 50 years (which was con­sis­tent with pre­vi­ous analy­ses) and directly addressed sci­en­tific con­cerns raised by skep­tics, includ­ing the urban heat island effect, poor sta­tion qual­ity, and the risk of data selec­tion bias.

The Berke­ley Earth team val­ues the sim­plic­ity of its analy­sis, which does not depend on the large com­plex global cli­mate mod­els that have been crit­i­cised by cli­mate skep­tics for their hid­den assump­tions and adjustable para­me­ters. The con­clu­sion that the warm­ing is due to humans is based sim­ply on the close agree­ment between the shape of the observed tem­per­a­ture rise and the known green­house gas increase. Eliz­a­beth adds, “The cur­rent data does not include ocean tem­per­a­tures; these will be added in the next phase of the Berke­ley Earth stud­ies. Another next step for our team is to think about the impli­ca­tions of our findings.”

(Source: Berke­ley Earth press release, 29.07.2012)

UN Biodiversity decade
WWF Stop Wildlife Crime
Fight for Flight campaign
End Ivory-funded Terrorism
Support Rewilding Europe
NASA State of Flux

Goal: 7000 tigers in the wild

Tiger range countries map

Tiger map” (CC BY 2.5) by Sander­son et al., 2006.

about zoos and their mis­sion regard­ing breed­ing endan­gered species, nature con­ser­va­tion, bio­di­ver­sity and edu­ca­tion, which of course relates to the evo­lu­tion of species.
Fol­low me on: