By Greg Laden
Look at the graph at the top of the post. This is a graph from the now
famous Exxon documents that date to 1981, explaining how Exxon
scientists were projecting global warming with continued release of the
greenhouse gas CO2 into the atmosphere.
There is a lot written about
that work which remained secret until just a few days ago. The timing
of this expose is interesting because it comes at about the same moment
as a
call to use US RICO laws to investigate and possibly prosecute those
who seem to have been conspiring for a long time muddy the waters about
the science of climate change in order to put off taking action that
might financially hurt Big Petrol. (See also this.)
There are several interesting things about this graph. First, it was
made in the 1980s, which proves that an IBM Selectric can make graphs.
But never mind that. The graph shows the range of global surface
temperature (vertical axis) over time (horizontal axis) in the past and
future. If there was no effect from the human generated greenhouse gas
CO2, global surface temperature would range, and had previously ranged,
between about a half a degree C (Kelvin in the graph, but one degree K
is one degree C) above and below a hypothetical baseline. However, given
the influence of human generated greenhouse gas, the temperature rises.
When I saw this graph, I was reminded of several other graphs, such
as the current surface temperature graphs showing rather shocking
warming over the last few decades (since the Exxon graph was first
typed). I was also reminded of the IPCC projections for warming, and the Hockey Stick graph of Mann, Hughes and others.
It is notable that Exxon scientists, even before the marriage of the
increasingly refined paleo-record with the increasingly detailed
instrumental record that clearly demonstrated global warming,
essentially had it right.
So I decided to see how right they were. To do this I made a graph
that I’ll call a “Thumbsuck Estimate” (a phrase I picked up working in
South Africa) of what the instrumental record of global surface warming,
the IPCC projections, and Exxon ca 1981 indicated. My source graphs,
other than the one shown above, included a graph of NOAA’s instrumental
record (moving 12 month average) put together by my colleague John
Abraham to include the most recent data:
And the graph found in Michael Mann’s book, “Dire Predictions” showing the instrumental record and the various IPCC projections.
For
all three graphs, I estimated the center line of the variation
indicated (the midpoint of the range shown on the Exxon graph, the
midpoint of the range of IPCC estimates, the midpoints of relevant
clusters of observed temperature values from NOAA) using simple
interpolation with the help of a graphic application with moveable
guides. I then recorded the available numbers (using years that matched
across the graphics) in a spreadsheet, and specified for each data
series a second order polynomial. The reason I used the second order
polynomial is simply that the data consist of two parts, the background
(roughly, pre-industrial though not quite) variation in surface
temperature, and the upward swing of surface temperatures under
anthropogenic global warming. By using the polynomial I’d get a curve
that approximated this transition without using fancy statistics.
Thumbsuck methodology.
This is the graph I got:
Notice
that Exxon 1981 had it right. The revelations of the Exxon research,
and the fact that it was kept secret and all that, is an interesting
story. And, that story will develop over coming days, week, and months.
But I don’t want to lose track of the other story, in some ways even
more interesting. How surprised should we be, after all, that a major
corporation would both look into and ignore, possibly even repress, the
science associated with their primary activity? Not at all, really. But
what is surprising is that we (and by “we” I mean scientists who have
studied climate change) have understood the basic problem for a very
long time, and decades of research have confirmed early findings, and of
course, added important details.
With respect to the existential nature of global warming, we knew then what we know now, in broad outline.
There are some great uncertainties associated with anthropogenic
climate change. For example, we don’t know how much sea levels will
ultimately rise, or how long that will take. We don’t actually know in
detail what will happen to specific coastlines that are inundated. We
don’t know everything we need to now about how weather, especially as it
relates to important endeavors such as food production, will change. We
know it has already changed and will change more, but we can’t at this
point confidently predict exactly what will happen, where, and when. And
there are other things we don’t know.
But the basic relationship between greenhouse gasses and surface
temperature rise, given a certain (not small but not huge) amount of
variability, is something we do have a good idea of. Our knowledge of
this problem predates concerted efforts by science deniers to distract,
ignore, and avoid the science. The actual amount of surface temperature
increase given a certain amount of CO2 and other greenhouse gasses added
to the atmosphere is of course subject to multiple variables, and I
don’t want to give the impression that we know the precise march of
surface temperatures over time. But if you stand back a way, squint just
a little, and look at what science could have said in 1981 and what it
says now, they are pretty much the same.
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/09/25/global-warming-what-did-we-know-and-when-did-we-know-it/
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