NATS 101 06 Lecture 20 Anthropogenic Climate Change

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NATS 101 -06 Lecture 20 Anthropogenic Climate Change

NATS 101 -06 Lecture 20 Anthropogenic Climate Change

What is Climate Change? • Climate change - A significant shift in the mean

What is Climate Change? • Climate change - A significant shift in the mean state and event frequency of the atmosphere. • Climate change has been a normal component of the Earth’s natural variability. • Climate change occurs over a wide range of time and space scales. • A plethora of evidence exists that indicates the climate of the Earth has changed over time. • Humans are radically altering the concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere which is likely causing a new type of climate change

Our changing climate: Key Questions • Climate modelers have predicted the Earth’s surface will

Our changing climate: Key Questions • Climate modelers have predicted the Earth’s surface will warm because of manmade greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions • So how much of the warming is manmade? • How serious are the problems this is creating? • What, if anything, can and should we do?

Climate Change: Changing Earth’s Energy Balance • Changing the – Incoming solar energy –

Climate Change: Changing Earth’s Energy Balance • Changing the – Incoming solar energy – Outgoing energy (IR emitted to space) – Internal transport of energy within the Earth; s atmosphere and oceans will cause a shift in climate

Global Energy Balance In a stable climate, Solar Energy IN = IR Energy OUT

Global Energy Balance In a stable climate, Solar Energy IN = IR Energy OUT IR Out Ahrens, Fig. 2. 14 Solar in

Global Energy Imbalance Increasing GHG concentrations decrease the IR Energy out So Energy IN

Global Energy Imbalance Increasing GHG concentrations decrease the IR Energy out So Energy IN > Energy OUT and the Earth warms IR Out is reduced Ahrens, Fig. 2. 14 Solar in Atmosphere

Change in IR Emission to Space • Notice that because of the greenhouse gases

Change in IR Emission to Space • Notice that because of the greenhouse gases in Earth’s atmosphere, 91% (=64/70) of the IR emitted to space comes from the atmosphere and only 9% (=6/70) comes from Earth’s surface • When additional GHG’s are added to the atmosphere, the altitude of IR emission to space rises and less IR from the surface makes it to space • Since air temperature in the troposphere decreases with altitude, the temperature of the emission to space decreases • Therefore Earth’s energy emission to space decreases because the IR energy flux emitted by an object decreases with decreasing temperature • Therefore total Energy flux IN > Energy flux OUT • Earth warms until Energy flux IN = Energy flux OUT

Change in IR Emission to Space BEFORE GHG increase: IN=OUT AFTER GHG increase Altitude

Change in IR Emission to Space BEFORE GHG increase: IN=OUT AFTER GHG increase Altitude IR emission to space NHAltitude of IR 3. IR emission to space decreases because of colder emission temperature SH Ahrens, Fig. 2. 21 emission to space Temperature of IR emission to space Temperature 1. Altitude of IR emission to space rises 2. Temperature of IR emission to space decreases

Change in IR Emission to Space (cont’d) AFTER GHG increase IN>OUT Eventual solution IN=OUT

Change in IR Emission to Space (cont’d) AFTER GHG increase IN>OUT Eventual solution IN=OUT 6. IR emission to space increases until it matches the original IR emission before GHG increases 3. IR emission to space decreases because of colder emission temperature SH Ahrens, Fig. 2. 21 Temperature 1. Altitude of IR emission to space rises 2. Temperature of IR emission to space decreases SH Ahrens, Fig. 2. 21 4. Atmosphere warms until… 5. Temperature of IR Temperature emission to space increases to original temperature

Change: Atmo IR Emission to Surface Altitude BEFORE GHG increase: Energy DOWN=UP at surface

Change: Atmo IR Emission to Surface Altitude BEFORE GHG increase: Energy DOWN=UP at surface Atmospheric IR emission. NH to surface Altitude of IR emission to surface Temperature of IR emission to space AFTER GHG increase more IR emission into surface SH Ahrens, Fig. 2. 21 Temperature 3. Atmo IR emission to surface increases because of warmer emission temperature 1. Altitude of IR emission to surface decreases 2. Temperature of IR emission to surface increases

Out-of-Equilibrium Issues • Land temperature increases faster than Ocean temperature • Atmospheric lifetime of

Out-of-Equilibrium Issues • Land temperature increases faster than Ocean temperature • Atmospheric lifetime of CO 2 is ~50 years • System response is NOT instantaneous • System takes a while to heat up in response to increase in CO 2 • Initial temperature increase is smaller than final

Anthropogenic Climate Change The data indicate that global-mean land sea-surface temperatures have warmed about

Anthropogenic Climate Change The data indicate that global-mean land sea-surface temperatures have warmed about ~0. 6 o. C during the last 35 years. Is this the early stages of a man-made global warming? Two main anthropogenic forcing mechanisms: Greenhouse gas concentrations => rising. Aerosol concentrations => also increasing. We will focus attention on CO 2 increases.

Greenhouse Gas Concentrations • The two dominant greenhouse gases are H 2 O and

Greenhouse Gas Concentrations • The two dominant greenhouse gases are H 2 O and CO 2. • There are several other GHGs with smaller concentrations: O 3, CH 4, N 2 O • H 2 O vapor is categorized separately because it is controlled indirectly by evaporation and condensation and changes in response to other changes in climate (temperature, circulation)

Absorption Visible IR Ahrens, Fig. 2. 9 20% of incident Visible (0. 40. 7

Absorption Visible IR Ahrens, Fig. 2. 9 20% of incident Visible (0. 40. 7 m) is absorbed O 2 an O 3 absorb UV (shorter than 0. 3 m) Infrared (5 -20 m) is selectively absorbed H 2 O & CO 2 are strong absorbers and emitters of IR Little absorption of IR around 10 m – atmospheric window

Global Warming Potential (GWP) Different gases has different warming potentials which are defined relative

Global Warming Potential (GWP) Different gases has different warming potentials which are defined relative to the warming effect of CO 2 Gas Carbon dioxide (CO 2) Methane (CH 4) Nitrous oxide (N 2 O) Hydrofluorocarbons Ahrens, Fig 2. 10 Perfluorocarbons Sulfur hexafluoride GWP 1 21 310 560 -12, 100 6, 000 -9, 200 23, 900

CO 2 makes the biggest contribution to the climate forcing

CO 2 makes the biggest contribution to the climate forcing

Ice Core from Vostok, Antarctica During last ice age (>18, 000 years ago) Temps

Ice Core from Vostok, Antarctica During last ice age (>18, 000 years ago) Temps 6 o. C colder CO 2 levels 30% lower CH 4 levels 50% lower H 2 O levels were lower than current interglacial. 135, 000 years ago it was a bit warmer than today 50% increase in CO 2 was associated with 6 -8 o. C increase in temperature 6 -8 o. C decrease in temperature produced incredibly different climate: Ice Age

Changing CO 2 concentrations • CO 2 concentrations have varied naturally by ~30 -50%

Changing CO 2 concentrations • CO 2 concentrations have varied naturally by ~30 -50% over the past few hundred thousand years (ice ages) • Fossil fuel burning since the industrial revolution has created a recent sharp increase in CO 2 concentrations • CO 2 concentrations are now higher than at any time in past few hundred thousand years • And concentrations are increasing faster with time Last 4 Ice Age cycles: 400, 000 years Man made You are here See http: //epa. gov/climatechange/science/recentac. html

Changing CO 2 concentrations • CO 2 concentrations measured very precisely since 1958 •

Changing CO 2 concentrations • CO 2 concentrations measured very precisely since 1958 • Over past 45 years they’ve increased by ~21% • Presently increasing at 0. 6%/yr You are here See http: //www. cmdl. noaa. gov/ccgg/trends/co 2_data_mlo. php

US (5% of world population) now causes 24% of total pollution. See http: //en.

US (5% of world population) now causes 24% of total pollution. See http: //en. wikipedia. org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_carbon_dioxide_emissions

 • Currently, 7 gigatons per year of CO 2 are injected into the

• Currently, 7 gigatons per year of CO 2 are injected into the air by burning fossil fuels (80%) and forests (20%). • Half accumulates in atmosphere, where it resides for 50+ years. • If the burning fossil fuels and forests totally ceased, it would still take 50 years for CO 2 levels to return to 50% above preindustrial levels.

Missing Carbon Sink • CO 2 is accumulating in the atmosphere more slowly than

Missing Carbon Sink • CO 2 is accumulating in the atmosphere more slowly than expected (believe it or not) • Based on our understanding of CO 2 emissions and ocean and atmosphere uptake, there is a missing sink/uptake of about 25% NASA OCO mission

Natural Variations in Climate

Natural Variations in Climate

Milankovitch Theory of Ice Ages • Attempts to explain ice ages by variations in

Milankovitch Theory of Ice Ages • Attempts to explain ice ages by variations in orbital parameters • Three cycles: Eccentricity (100, 000 yrs) Tilt (41, 000 yrs) Precession (23, 000 yrs) • Changes the latitudinal and seasonal distributions of solar radiation.

Milankovitch Theory of Ice Ages • Most recent Ice Ages have occurred for past

Milankovitch Theory of Ice Ages • Most recent Ice Ages have occurred for past 2 million years • Ice Ages occur when there is less radiation in summer to melt snow. • Partially agrees with observations, but many questions unanswered. What caused the onset of the first Ice Age?

Milankovitch Theory Change in daily solar radiation at top of atmosphere at June solstice

Milankovitch Theory Change in daily solar radiation at top of atmosphere at June solstice Changes as large as ~15% occur

Global Temperatures and CO 2 There is a very strong relationship between CO 2

Global Temperatures and CO 2 There is a very strong relationship between CO 2 levels and past global temperatures. CO 2 levels are now higher than during any period of the past 450, 000 years. Will global temperatures responding accordingly?

Long-Term Climate Change NA E-A SA Af 180 M BP India Aus Ant NA

Long-Term Climate Change NA E-A SA Af 180 M BP India Aus Ant NA SA Today E-A Af India Aus Ant Ahrens, Fig 13. 6 250 million years ago, the world’s landmasses were joined together and formed a super continent termed Pangea. As today’s continents drifted apart, they moved into different latitude bands. This altered prevailing winds and ocean currents.

Long-Term Climate Change • Circumpolar ocean current formed around Antarctica 4055 MY ago once

Long-Term Climate Change • Circumpolar ocean current formed around Antarctica 4055 MY ago once Antarctica and Australia separated. • This prevented warm air from warmer latitudes to penetrate into Antarctica. • Absence of warm air accelerated growth of the Antarctic ice sheet. http: //www. ace. mmu. ac. uk/eae/Climate_Change/Older/Continental_Drift. html

Long-Term Climate Change • Circumpolar seaway leads to large latitudinal temperature gradient. • Circum-equatorial

Long-Term Climate Change • Circumpolar seaway leads to large latitudinal temperature gradient. • Circum-equatorial seaway leads to small latitudinal temperature gradient http: //www. ace. mmu. ac. uk/eae/Climate_Change/Older/Continental_Drift. html

Climate System Feedbacks

Climate System Feedbacks

CO 2 and the Greenhouse Effect If the atmosphere were dry, we could predict

CO 2 and the Greenhouse Effect If the atmosphere were dry, we could predict with high confidence that a doubling of CO 2 (likely before 2100) would increase the global mean surface temperature by ~2 C. Ahrens, Fig 2. 10 The presence of oceans, ice, water vapor and clouds complicates the analysis significantly.

Complexity of Climate System The climate system involves numerous, interrelated components.

Complexity of Climate System The climate system involves numerous, interrelated components.

Closer Look at Climate System

Closer Look at Climate System

Climate Feedback Mechanisms

Climate Feedback Mechanisms

Climate System Feedbacks • Feedbacks are what makes the climate problem so difficult •

Climate System Feedbacks • Feedbacks are what makes the climate problem so difficult • Positive: Increase the impact of the original change • Negative: Reduce the impact of the original change • EXAMPLE: Ice albedo (Positive Feedback): – Temperatures increase because of increased CO 2 1. Ice melts 2. Reduces Earth’s reflectivity (albedo) 3. Earth absorbs more sunlight 4. Earth warms 5. More ice melts….

Positive and Negative Feedbacks • Assume that the Earth is warming. - Warming leads

Positive and Negative Feedbacks • Assume that the Earth is warming. - Warming leads to more evaporation from oceans, which increases water vapor in atmosphere. -More water vapor increases absorption of IR, which strengthens the greenhouse effect. -This raises temperatures further, which leads to more evaporation, more water vapor, warming… “Runaway Greenhouse Effect” Positive Feedback Mechanism NET EFFECT: Water vapor feedback increases the warming of the Earth, roughly doubling the effect of CO 2 increase alone

Positive and Negative Feedbacks • Again assume that the Earth is warming. - Suppose

Positive and Negative Feedbacks • Again assume that the Earth is warming. - Suppose as the atmosphere warms and moistens, more low clouds form. - More low clouds reflect more solar radiation, which decreases solar heating at the surface. - This slows the warming, which would counteract a runaway greenhouse effect on Earth. Negative Feedback Mechanism

Cloud Feedback • Clouds affect both solar & IR radiation – Clouds increase solar

Cloud Feedback • Clouds affect both solar & IR radiation – Clouds increase solar reflection (albedo) cooling the Earth – Clouds absorb and emit IR radiation like a GHG • Currently their net effect is to cool the Earth – Solar effect > IR effect • Not clear what they will do in the future – If the amount of low clouds increases, the albedo effect wins and they cool the Earth (Negative feedback) – If the amount of high clouds increases, the IR effect wins and the Earth warms (Positive feedback) • There are other subtler cloud feedbacks as well involving aerosols in particular

Positive and Negative Feedbacks • Atmosphere has a numerous checks and balances that counteract

Positive and Negative Feedbacks • Atmosphere has a numerous checks and balances that counteract climate changes. • All feedback mechanisms operate simultaneously. • All feedback mechanisms work in both directions. • The dominant effect is difficult to predict. • Cause and effect is very difficult to prove at the “beyond a shadow of a doubt” level.

Climate Model Predictions

Climate Model Predictions

Projections of Global Warming • Atmosphere and coupled Atmo-Ocean models are run for hundreds

Projections of Global Warming • Atmosphere and coupled Atmo-Ocean models are run for hundreds of years to simulate future climates • They assume continued increases in the levels of greenhouse gasses in the atmosphere. • The models have sophisticated physics… But they have coarse spatial grid separations! Atmosphere: 250 km horizontal, 30 levels vertical Ocean: 125 -250 km horizontal, 200 -400 m vertical

How Well Do Models Capture Current Observed Climate? • Performance Varies by Weather Element

How Well Do Models Capture Current Observed Climate? • Performance Varies by Weather Element In general… Excellent for Surface Temperature Skillful for Sea-Level Pressure (SFC Winds) Marginal Skill for Precipitation Fig. 8. 4 IPCC Report

Global Temperature Outlook Fig. 9. 3 IPCC Report Assume CO 2 levels rise at

Global Temperature Outlook Fig. 9. 3 IPCC Report Assume CO 2 levels rise at rate of 1% per year until 2070. • Good agreement for past climate and CO 2 levels leads to high confidence. • Rather close agreement among models. Consensus of several model runs indicates an average warming of 2 o. C

Global Precipitation Outlook Fig. 9. 3 IPCC Report • Marginal performance for past climate

Global Precipitation Outlook Fig. 9. 3 IPCC Report • Marginal performance for past climate and CO 2 levels means low confidence in outlook. • Large differences exist among models. Consensus of several model runs indicates an average increase of 2% in global precipitation

Regional Consistency: Warming Fig. 10. 1. 1 IPCC Report A + or - symbol

Regional Consistency: Warming Fig. 10. 1. 1 IPCC Report A + or - symbol denotes 7 out of 9 models agree. A 2: no sulphate aerosols; B 2: has sulphate aerosols

Regional Consistency: Rainfall Fig. 10. 1. 2 IPCC Report A + or - symbol

Regional Consistency: Rainfall Fig. 10. 1. 2 IPCC Report A + or - symbol denotes 7 out of 9 models agree. A 2: no sulphate aerosols; B 2: has sulphate aerosols

GDFL Model Lets look at some details from a 500 -year simulation by a

GDFL Model Lets look at some details from a 500 -year simulation by a specific climate model. Examine Two Scenarios: 1% CO 2 increase per year for 70 years 2 X Total Increase in CO 2 1% CO 2 increase per year for 140 years 4 X Total Increase in CO 2

Good agreement for CO 2 levels of the past 150 yrs Mandatory before use

Good agreement for CO 2 levels of the past 150 yrs Mandatory before use as global warming model www. gfdl. noaa. gov

CO 2 Increases 1% per Year Average Global Surface Temperatures… Warm 2 o. C

CO 2 Increases 1% per Year Average Global Surface Temperatures… Warm 2 o. C for 2 X CO 2 Warm 4 o C for 4 X CO 2 Sea Level Rises… Equilibrium Not Reached until after 500 years North Atlantic Ocean… Circulation Weakens www. gfdl. noaa. gov

CO 2 Increases 1% per Year • Surface Temperatures for GFDL Model 2 X

CO 2 Increases 1% per Year • Surface Temperatures for GFDL Model 2 X CO 2 Temperature Animation Remote 2 X CO 2 Temperature Animation Local Disk BIG File (8. 2 MB)!!!

Climate response is out of equilibrium for a while • Continental temperatures rise faster

Climate response is out of equilibrium for a while • Continental temperatures rise faster than ocean temperatures – Water has much larger heat capacity than land – Evaporation cools the ocean surface • Ocean temperatures take long time to reach a new equilibrium 1. Warming we have seen thus far is NOT the total warming even if GHG concentrations stop increasing • Water saturation vapor pressure over land increases faster than that over the oceans • Most of the atmospheric water vapor ultimately comes from the ocean • Therefore expect the relative humidity over land to decrease in general, at least until ocean temperatures catch up with the land temperatures. 2. Continental interiors will get drier in general

Annual Energy Balance Radiative Cooling NH Radiative Warming Ahrens, Fig. 2. 21 Radiative Cooling

Annual Energy Balance Radiative Cooling NH Radiative Warming Ahrens, Fig. 2. 21 Radiative Cooling SH Latitudinal imbalance between visible in and IR out is compensated by meridional energy fluxes Heat transfer from low latitudes to high latitudes is accomplished by winds and ocean currents Differential heating and spinning Earth drive winds and currents This horizontal energy transfer will likely change as climate changes

Mid-Latitude Cyclones • Winter storms move tropical air poleward and polar air toward the

Mid-Latitude Cyclones • Winter storms move tropical air poleward and polar air toward the tropics. • Net result is to transport energy poleward m. P c. P m. T Ahrens, Meteorology Today, 5 th Ed.

Ocean Currents of World Ahrens Fig. 7. 24

Ocean Currents of World Ahrens Fig. 7. 24

www. gfdl. noaa. gov 4 X CO 2 Sea Ice Animation 4 X CO

www. gfdl. noaa. gov 4 X CO 2 Sea Ice Animation 4 X CO 2 Sea Ice Local Link

CO 2 Increases 1% per Year July Temperature over Southeastern U. S. • Warms

CO 2 Increases 1% per Year July Temperature over Southeastern U. S. • Warms 5 -9 o. C July Heat Index over Southeastern U. S. • Rises 7 -14 o. C due to increase H 2 O vapor Consistent Signal Warmer Southern U. S. www. gfdl. noaa. gov

CO 2 Increases 1% per Year Soil Moisture • Much Drier over U. S.

CO 2 Increases 1% per Year Soil Moisture • Much Drier over U. S. 60% Soil Moisture Decrease Higher Evapo-Transpiration Altered Balance between Evaporation-Precipitation • Agricultural Implications How do we hydrate and feed ourselves? www. gfdl. noaa. gov

Increasing CO 2 concentrations • How high will they go? How warm will it

Increasing CO 2 concentrations • How high will they go? How warm will it get? ? ? • If CO 2 concentrations stay within factor of 2 of pre-industrial, then warming of 3+1 o. C is expected • If concentrations go still higher => larger uncertainty because the climate is moving into unprecedented territory See http: //epa. gov/climatechange/science/futureac. html You are going to be somewhere in here Last 4 Ice Age cycles: 400, 000 years Man made You are here Ice age CO 2 range