.

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Why did the water in the kettle boil? Because it got hot!

Sou | 3:04 AM Go to the first of 47 comments. Add a comment

WUWT has been really, really quiet since the fiasco with Tim Ball's latest conspiracy blurb and the response. Usually there are anything from three to eight articles a day. There have only been three articles in the past three days, including the fiasco article.

There's one by Willis Eschenbach about a buoy and temperatures. It's too trivial to archive. There's another by "Bob Tisdale", about an article on Ed Hawkins' blog by Geert Jan van Oldenborgh. "Bob's" article isn't worth reading, either, though if you want to do so it's archived here. The article on Ed Hawkin's blog is worth reading.

Dr. van Oldenborgh's article is explaining how there is more energy being stored on earth than is coming in from the sun. He writes how most of it is being accumulated in the ocean.

"Bob" on the other hand doesn't want his readers to hear about that. He's gone off on some tropospheric tangent. He's also gone down the route that deniers go down, foolishly writing:
As we can see, yes, the oceans to depths of 2000 meters (about 1.25 miles) have warmed according to the NODC data, but note the warming rate. It is only +0.03 deg C/decade. That’s read 3 one-hundredths of a deg C per decade, which is a very tiny warming rate. It would be even tinier if we had data for the oceans from the surface to the ocean floor.

"Bob" doesn't mention the enormous heat capacity of the ocean. Just tosses around words like "miniscule" to describe ocean warming, which demonstrates his ignorance or his deceit. Or a mix of the two. Globally, the oceans are now probably as hot as they've been at least since the beginning of civilisation - and it won't stop as long as we insist on turning up the heat. The oceans absorb more than 90% of the extra energy that's being built up in the system. It won't take much for the surface to get quite a bit warmer. Here's a chart I did a while back on the ocean heat content:

Data Source: NOAA


You might recall that scientists have figured out that the oceans in the southern hemisphere have been warming faster - which doesn't show in the above.

There are some interesting charts in Dr. van Oldenborgh's article. He's plotted anomalies of surface temperatures against CO2, putting in the years. Go over and have a look. And while you're there you might think of something worthwhile to add to the comments, to let them know it's not just deniers reading the article :)


"Bob's" circular thinking


"Bob" is getting his excuses lined up for the next bout of global warming, writing:
Global surface temperatures in 2014 are very likely to be at record high levels in 2014. We are going to see that framed in many ways in months to come. However, we understand the reason for those record high levels to be the unusual warming of the eastern North Pacific. 

That's a bit like claiming that the water in the kettle boiled because it got hotter. It didn't boil because you put it on the stove and lit the gas.


From the WUWT comments


There aren't a lot of comments. I'll just pick out two as typical:

Neillusion is very sure what is not causing this very rapid rise in temperatures;
November 29, 2014 at 5:32 am
It is a change, a change from warming to ‘no change’ in temp that has three possible future trends, to start warming again, to stay even, or to start cooling. Until it is known why it warmed in the first place (and was cooling before that), no-one knows which of the three futures it’s gonna be. The only thing I’m personally sure of is that the ‘why’ has nothing to do with CO2

david smith, for some inexplicable reason, thinks that we here will be annoyed about what he thinks is virtually undetectable warming, that has been detected:
November 29, 2014 at 5:02 am
Thank you Bob. Informative as always.
The essential message from this post is (quite correctly) that we have absolutely nothing to worry about, the ocean ‘warming’ is virtually undetectable, and the models have been useless.
They’ll be annoyed over at Hot Whopper. 

47 comments:

  1. It'd be nice to think that the quiet on WUWT is due to some feelings of shame over the awful Tim Ball post, but unfortunately it's probably just because of the Thanksgiving holiday in the US, which was Thursday and spreads across the whole weekend.

    Most everything comes to a stop, except for retail, because of the traditional start to the Christmas shopping season on "Black Friday", the day after Thanksgiving. I believe it's so named because retailers suddenly find their balance sheets to be in the black because of the crush of business, but it's also viewed with a certain amount of dread by the more rational and less materialistic among us -- there are always grotesque scenes somewhere of people camping out for days waiting for the doors to open, trampling others to get at the fantastic bargains, and so on.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I notice you write "", and I'm sure you've said before you're uncertain whether its a pseudonym or not. However, he has directly stated that its his real name (just recently in a comment on the blog-that-dare-not-speak-its-name) and I've been pointed at: http://1.usa.gov/1vwitF4 which says:

      Who Turned on the Heat?... Copyright Claimant: Robert F Tisdale, 1953- . Address: [address redacted - Sou]

      Which seems plausible.

      [Thanks, William. Bob's been caught out telling so many lies lately (eg that he was banned from here, that he tried to comment here in the past, which he hasn't until these past few days - or not as Bob Tisdale; and more) that I'd not take his word for anything. Your new info looks good though. So thanks. I've reposted your comment and redacted the actual address. Sou.]

      Delete
    2. What is the science behind scum gathering on the surface of a pond?
      It seems apposite to me.

      Delete
  3. Not sure why it seems so outrageous that someone would question the theory that we are warming at a record pace when it is well documented that the surface has stopped or virtually stopped warming. And I know that all the surface heat is now in the oceans. ..... but why did the surface stop warming? I tend to be a bit of a skeptic..... wondering how the non skeptics bridge that gap.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Did I say something along those lines? (The non-skeptics- ie fake sceptics - I come across aren't interested in finding out about science and aren't interested in bridging any gaps in their knowledge.) I imagine your question is about how the land and sea surface sometimes warms rapidly and sometimes not so rapidly and sometimes cools a bit as time goes by. What happens on earth is that oceans and air move a lot - there are currents and there is wind and there is rain and storms and evaporation and condensation. There are large changes in the system like ENSO and others, which shift energy around the earth system. Like a breeze that can cool even on a hot summer's day. That's the simple version.

      Read the article I pointed to. It's rather good. Re your question - why did the surface stop warming - well it depends on your time frame whether that's true or not. From day to night it's because of the sun. In the weekly/monthly time frame for people in the Northern Hemisphere, it's to do with the way the earth faces the sun over the year (the NH is approaching winter).

      For the earth as a whole, the last three months have been the hottest August, September and October in the record - but not every month or year is the hottest in the record. There's not been a hottest year on record since 2010. There's not been a hotter decade than the 2001 - 2010 decade for a very, very long time. It's also a very, very long time since there's been a hotter 30 year period than the last 30 years. The next 30 years will almost certainly be hotter still, and the next.

      If you are asking why the surface hasn't heated up as quickly these past few years as it has in some other periods, that's because proportionally more heat has gone into the ocean than into the atmosphere and land surface.

      I'm not sure it was me who said something about it being "outrageous" that someone would query anything. That's what scientists do every day. However, if I did and if it was in relation to questioning whether the greenhouse effect is real, then here's one response to your comment.

      It depends on who the "someone" is who's doing the questioning. If the someone is new to climate and its science, I'll point them to a description of the greenhouse effect, then to Geert's article or something similar: There are some articles in the link below:

      http://hotwhopper.com/Interesting.html

      If the "someone" is pretending to be an expert on things climate then yes, that's definitely outrageous. They are a fake expert or deliberately out to deceive readers.

      If the "someone" is pretending to be a climate pseudo-scientist who posts on denier blogs, the non-skeptic readers deserve what they get, because by now they know they are just reading denier rubbish to soothe their troubled minds.

      BTW some 3 pack-a-day tobacco smokers don't have emphysema, either - yet.

      Delete
    2. Sou.... when you say the land stopped warming because proportionally more heat went to the atmosphere and ocean than land..... are you suggesting that starting in 98.... or 2005 we jumped from the oceans absorbing 90% of the heat.... to 99.9% of the heat?

      Delete
    3. I don't recall saying that the land stopped warming. Can you point to where you think I said that? Where I live the land hasn't stopped warming. Last year was the hottest on record on this land. This spring was the hottest spring on record for the land down under.

      http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-12-01/australia-swelters-through-its-hottest-spring-on-record/5931282

      Delete
    4. Globally Sou. Everyone accepts that the land temperatures have been virtually stable (although high) for 9 years..... 18 years.... depending on who you talk to and which global measure you use.

      Delete
    5. So when you said "you" you meant "everyone", not me. Thanks for the fix.

      Delete
    6. Dogsledder

      Physical climatology is a holistic description of the Earth climate system.

      It is incorrect to use short-term variability in land surface temperature (or SSTs) as an argument against the physics of planetary energy imbalance. You have to include OHC and short-term variability in the rate of ocean heat uptake.

      Delete
    7. Not everybody accepts that land temperatures have been visrtually stable for 9 to 18 years - see the Oldenborgh article in climate-lab-book linked in the 3rd para above. You may be confusing "land" with "surface"; surface doesn't work anyway, you have to go to pretty poor Lower Troposphere temperatures to find any comfort these days. And that without an El Nino. Makes you think, doesn't it?

      Delete
    8. The global warming deniers are running out of temperature datasets to find zero trend lines in. I think RSS is the only one left.

      Delete
    9. "The global warming deniers are running out of temperature datasets to find zero trend lines in. I think RSS is the only one left."

      Don't worry. 2005 is the new 1998. Hopping from El Nino to El Nino as new start year for the cherry picking of the "downtrend" in the escalator.

      Delete
  4. I believe there were only a couple of articles in the last 3 days because of the U.S. Thanksgiving weekend.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Bob Tisdale: "As we can see, yes, the oceans to depths of 2000 meters ... have warmed ... but note the warming rate. It is only +0.03 deg C/decade."

    WUWT oceanographer Tisdale has discovered that sea level rise will continue for thousands of years after stabilizing the atmospheric temperature. The ocean will keep on warming and expanding until also the ocean has warmed as much as the atmosphere.

    ReplyDelete
  6. It is a very interesting article by Geert. Would you mind adding Ed Hawkin's blog to your blog roll?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Done. I don't know why I overlooked that one. I really like Ed Hawkin's blog.

      Delete
    2. I never said the oceans cool the world. Do you know what feedback is?

      Delete
  7. Bob Tisdale has written another article claiming HotWhopper comments as his inspiration.

    It's a little bizarre. He claims the ocean heating is insignificant, yet he claims in a previous article "However, we understand the reason for those record high levels to be the unusual warming of the eastern North Pacific."

    Now I don't know if his statement is true or not. And when they say "unusually warm" they would mean unusually warm for that part of the ocean. It begs the question doesn't it - the "unusual warming" has to come from somewhere. If it was just the moving of heat from one part of the ocean to another you would expect a balancing cooling elsewhere net average result zero.

    I think his attempt at a straw man is this. +0.03 deg C/decade may not sound like much, but it is not going to be spread uniformally. It's an average so some parts of the ocean are going to warm more than this. I would not be surprised if this explains a lot of the record sea surface temperature observations.

    Otherwise, how can he explain where the extra heat is coming from? It seems fanciful to say the heat has been lurking away somewhere and has only just now coincidentally decided to come to the surface to fool all those global warming alarmists.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Silly me. I usually don't bother reading articles from someone whom I consider to be dishonest. In my experience much brain power is wasted on something that just turns out to be a simple "shell game" and all I have accomplished it to figure out which shell the pea is hidden under.

      Unless I am wrong Bob Tisdale has attempted to put over this distraction:

      - treating satellite troposphere temperatures as if they are surface temperatures (they are not).

      - trying to make the +0.03 deg C/decade figure sound even smaller by "averaging" the 0-2000 metre data from the surface to the ocean floor (he gives a figure +0.015C/decade which he plucks out of thin air)

      - contradicts himself in his own article by saying the below 2000 metre ocean has shown no warming, yet calculating a positive trend for it!

      Delete
    2. Bob's nuts with his "That’s read 3 one-hundredths of a deg C per decade, which is a very tiny warming rate. It would be even tinier if we had data for the oceans from the surface to the ocean floor."

      At least this time he put up a chart of ocean heat content. So HW has taught him something :)

      At this rate, in about ten years time, Bob might start figuring out there is such a thing as the greenhouse effect. Or he might even start to twig that it's not ENSO that's caused all the global warming, it's CO2. Also, pigs might fly :(

      Delete
    3. Using the full NCDC ocean dataset and fitting a quadratic (R^2 = 0.78) shows the current SST warming to be ~0.12 degrees C/decade (all 3 coefficients significant at the 95% confidence interval).

      So just a factor of 4 misrepresentation.

      Delete
    4. Yes it dawned on me the particular pea he was trying to hide under the shell this time was the fact the ocean heat content is unevenly distributed.

      He then attempted to distract by creating a straw man out of the fact the average rate of temp increase for the whole ocean water column is insignificant on human timescales.

      Delete
    5. I wonder if Bob Tisdale got any "inspiration" from this recent article? It is a good article BTW.

      http://www.climate.gov/news-features/blogs/enso/role-ocean-tempering-global-warming

      Delete
    6. The title if nothing else, Harry. See my latest article.

      http://blog.hotwhopper.com/2014/12/warmer-oceans-matter.html

      Delete
  8. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You are mistaken, Anonymous. The oceans are warming very quickly, not slowly. You also appear to be confusing ocean warming with surface warming. TCR is used for surface temperature not ocean heat changes.

      You are partly correct about the oceans absorbing more relative to the surface. When that stops happening (eg during an El Nino) then the surface will heat up a lot more. That's partly why surface temperatures have been hitting new records this past three months. Not an El Nino, but close to.

      You ought to know by now that "it" is not warming slowly. We are on track to be warming ten times faster than has happened in the last 65 million years. In fact it's the pace of change that is what scientists and others are concerned about. If it were only warming at, say, 0.1 degrees every thousand years then life on earth would probably have time to evolve and adapt. Warming at one or two or more degrees in less than a century is going to make adaptation by evolution impossible. Most species just don't evolve that quickly.

      I don't know where you got your 0.03 degrees a decade from, either. To my way of thinking, it makes not a lot of sense to try to use temperature for the oceans because the heat gets dispersed at depth. It's even getting warmer below 700 m deep these days, which is quite phenomenal when you stop and think about it. Total heat content is a better measure IMO. And even then you need to know where in the ocean it is heating up and to what depth etc.

      Below is a link to the realclimate article on the subject:

      Ocean heat storage: a particularly lousy policy target

      An excerpt:

      Ocean heat content has increased by about 2.5 X 1023 Joules since 1970 (IPCC AR5). What would be the impact of that? The answer is: it depends. If this heat were evenly distributed over the entire global ocean, water temperatures would have warmed on average by less than 0.05 °C (global ocean mass 1.4 × 1021 kg, heat capacity 4 J/gK). This tiny warming would have essentially zero impact. The only reason why ocean heat uptake does have an impact is the fact that it is highly concentrated at the surface, where the warming is therefore noticeable (see Fig. 1). Thus in terms of impacts the problem is surface warming – which is described much better by actually measuring surface temperatures rather than total ocean heat content. Surface warming has no simple relation to total heat uptake because that link is affected by ocean circulation and mixing changes. (By the way, neither has sea-level rise due to thermal expansion, because the thermal expansion coefficient is several times larger for warm surface waters than for the cold deep waters – again it is warming in the surface layers that counts, while the total ocean heat content tells us little about the amount of sea-level rise.)

      Delete
    2. Anonymous,

      The global warming rate in the uppermost 100 meters of the oceans has been higher than 0.03 K/decade.

      The warming in the uppermost 2000 meters has been accelerating in recent decades.

      Look at the graphic representation of the change in the temperature anomalies over time:

      http://tinyurl.com/oc39oux

      This gives an indication where the planet is heading.

      You also have to keep in mind that the heat capacity of the about uppermost 3.5 meters of the ocean water body equals the heat capacity of the total mass of the atmosphere.

      BTW: Interesting are the big swings of the ocean temperatures in the uppermost 100 meters. I would say they can explain a lot why there are virtual "pauses" of the surface and tropospheric temperature trends w/o changing anything about the background global warming trend.

      Delete
  9. Sou,

    You say:
    "The oceans absorb more than 90% of the extra energy that's being built up in the system."

    I'm curious to know the mechanism by which the thermal energy enters the ocean, in your understanding.

    Also, where do you understand the surplus 10% 'extra' energy ends up and how?

    Thanks,

    Richard Treadgold
    www.climateconversation.wordshine.co.nz

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Here's a link to a section of an article I wrote recently on the subject of how the ocean warms, Richard. It has links to other sources.

      Below is a link to an graphic showing where energy goes.

      http://www.skepticalscience.com/graphics.php?g=12

      As for the "how", a detailed explanation would take more than could be adequately answered in a blog comment. I suggest you read up on the greenhouse effect. There are some links to good material near the top of this page.

      Happy reading.

      Delete
    2. Back under your bridge, Richard, and take your faux curiosity with you.

      The answers to your questions are standard stuff, and you know it. Read the literature. If you're sincere, go and read Realclimate, or do some googling, then come back with a more specific question. Sou's got better things to do than to respond to your make-work questions.

      Delete
    3. Kiwi global warming denier website? I had not seen that one before.

      Delete
    4. Yes, I didn't twig at first. You can read about those clowns at HotTopic. They sued the NZ weather bureau and lost, of course. Then didn't cough up the court costs they should have paid, dumping them on the NZ taxpayers.

      Bunch of rogues.

      http://hot-topic.co.nz/salinger-upsets-cranks-treadgolds-toys-exit-cot/

      Delete
    5. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

      Delete
    6. Sou, I went to some trouble to explain myself in that comment. Please tell us why you have declined to publish it.

      Delete
    7. I did publish it Richard. Since it contained rather odd ideas it was published in the HotWhoppery.

      Delete
    8. Oh, well, thank you. You might like to reconsider giving the entirely false impression that results when you say: "This comment has been removed by a blog administrator" which sounds just like deletion and gives no hint that the comment's been moved to a 'HotWhoppery' (hilarious name).

      Please tell me: what are the odd ideas you mention?

      Delete
    9. For one thing, you claimed "there is no evidence that the minuscule radiation from CO2 molecules might have a significant effect on the temperature of the ocean"

      There is more than one thing wrong with that silly statement, not least of which is the huge increase in ocean heat content. What do you think it was? Tamino's leprechauns? Tedious Tisdale's goblins?

      The other of course is that CO2 radiation is not "miniscule". It is around 19% of all LW radiation absorbers in all sky, including clouds. An increase in CO2 has a marked effect, not a miniscule effect.

      http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/docs/2010/2010_Schmidt_etal_1.pdf

      I mentioned another at the HotWhoppery.

      You ought to be thankful I entertain any comment from you at all, given your history.

      Delete
    10. Oh not that ocean "thermal skin" red herring/straw man thing again. It has been beaten to death elsewhere. Next!

      Delete
    11. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

      Delete
    12. As usual, Richard Treadgold is merely here playing to the home crowd, of course.

      http://www.climateconversation.wordshine.co.nz/2014/12/hotwhopper-wrong-on-ocean-heat/

      It's amazing how blatantly, tenaciously, persistently and sententiously wrong you really can be, but in the DEB (Denier Epistemic Bubble) all this is heroism...

      Delete
    13. You call an obvious troll a troll and they respond "who, me?"

      It's all theatre. I hope they get paid well for selling their soul.

      Delete
    14. Treadgold and cronies' responses to a 'Simon' stalwartly asking the obvious questions regarding ocean-atmosphere heat exchanges on that 'Hot Whopper wrong' thread are amusingly illustrative. You really could not make these people up!

      Delete
    15. You have to be desperate to quote JoNova and Bob Tisdale as a source! What a strange little sheltered garden these people live in.

      Delete
  10. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete

Instead of commenting as "Anonymous", please comment using "Name/URL" and your name, initials or pseudonym or whatever. You can leave the "URL" box blank. This isn't mandatory. You can also sign in using your Google ID, Wordpress ID etc as indicated. NOTE: Some Wordpress users are having trouble signing in. If that's you, try signing in using Name/URL. Details here.

Click here to read the HotWhopper comment policy.