Read the sunspots

The mud at the bottom of B.C. fjords reveals that solar output drives 
climate change - and that we should prepare now for dangerous global 
cooling

R. TIMOTHY PATTERSON, Financial Post

Published: Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Politicians and environmentalists these days convey the impression 
that climate-change research is an exceptionally dull field with 
little left to discover. We are assured by everyone from David Suzuki 
to Al Gore to Prime Minister Stephen Harper that "the science is 
settled." At the recent G8 summit, German Chancellor Angela Merkel 
even attempted to convince world leaders to play God by restricting 
carbon-dioxide emissions to a level that would magically limit the 
rise in world temperatures to 2C.

The fact that science is many years away from properly understanding 
global climate doesn't seem to bother our leaders at all. Inviting 
testimony only from those who don't question political orthodoxy on 
the issue, parliamentarians are charging ahead with the impossible 
and expensive goal of "stopping global climate change." Liberal MP 
Ralph Goodale's June 11 House of Commons assertion that Parliament 
should have "a real good discussion about the potential for carbon 
capture and sequestration in dealing with carbon dioxide, which has 
tremendous potential for improving the climate, not only here in 
Canada but around the world," would be humorous were he, and even the 
current government, not deadly serious about devoting vast resources 
to this hopeless crusade.

Climate stability has never been a feature of planet Earth. The only 
constant about climate is change; it changes continually and, at 
times, quite rapidly. Many times in the past, temperatures were far 
higher than today, and occasionally, temperatures were colder. As 
recently as 6,000 years ago, it was about 3C warmer than now. Ten 
thousand years ago, while the world was coming out of the thou-sand-
year-long "Younger Dryas" cold episode, temperatures rose as much as 
6C in a decade -- 100 times faster than the past century's 0.6C 
warming that has so upset environmentalists.


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Andrew Barr, National Post

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Font: ****Climate-change research is now literally exploding with new 
findings. Since the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, the field has had more 
research than in all previous years combined and the discoveries are 
completely shattering the myths. For example, I and the first-class 
scientists I work with are consistently finding excellent 
correlations between the regular fluctuations in the brightness of 
the sun and earthly climate. This is not surprising. The sun and the 
stars are the ultimate source of all energy on the planet.

My interest in the current climate-change debate was triggered in 
1998, when I was funded by a Natural Sciences and Engineering 
Research Council strategic project grant to determine if there were 
regular cycles in West Coast fish productivity. As a result of wide 
swings in the populations of anchovies, herring and other 
commercially important West Coast fish stock, fisheries managers were 
having a very difficult time establishing appropriate fishing quotas. 
One season there would be abundant stock and broad harvesting would 
be acceptable; the very next year the fisheries would collapse. No 
one really knew why or how to predict the future health of this 
crucially important resource.


Although climate was suspected to play a significant role in marine 
productivity, only since the beginning of the 20th century have 
accurate fishing and temperature records been kept in this region of 
the northeast Pacific. We needed indicators of fish productivity over 
thousands of years to see whether there were recurring cycles in 
populations and what phenomena may be driving the changes.

My research team began to collect and analyze core samples from the 
bottom of deep Western Canadian fjords. The regions in which we chose 
to conduct our research, Effingham Inlet on the West Coast of 
Vancouver Island, and in 2001, sounds in the Belize-Seymour Inlet 
complex on the mainland coast of British Columbia, were perfect for 
this sort of work. The topography of these fjords is such that they 
contain deep basins that are subject to little water transfer from 
the open ocean and so water near the bottom is relatively stagnant 
and very low in oxygen content. As a consequence, the floors of these 
basins are mostly lifeless and sediment layers build up year after 
year, undisturbed over millennia.

Using various coring technologies, we have been able to collect more 
than 5,000 years' worth of mud in these basins, with the oldest 
layers coming from a depth of about 11 metres below the fjord floor. 
Clearly visible in our mud cores are annual changes that record the 
different seasons: corresponding to the cool, rainy winter seasons, 
we see dark layers composed mostly of dirt washed into the fjord from 
the land; in the warm summer months we see abundant fossilized fish 
scales and diatoms (the most common form of phytoplankton, or single-
celled ocean plants) that have fallen to the fjord floor from 
nutrient-rich surface waters. In years when warm summers dominated 
climate in the region, we clearly see far thicker layers of diatoms 
and fish scales than we do in cooler years. Ours is one of the 
highest-quality climate records available anywhere today and in it we 
see obvious confirmation that natural climate change can be dramatic. 
For example, in the middle of a 62-year slice of the record at about 
4,400 years ago, there was a shift in climate in only a couple of 
seasons from warm, dry and sunny conditions to one that was mostly 
cold and rainy for several decades.

Using computers to conduct what is referred to as a "time series 
analysis" on the colouration and thickness of the annual layers, we 
have discovered repeated cycles in marine productivity in this, a 
region larger than Europe. Specifically, we find a very strong and 
consistent 11-year cycle throughout the whole record in the sediments 
and diatom remains. This correlates closely to the well-known 11-
year "Schwabe" sunspot cycle, during which the output of the sun 
varies by about 0.1%. Sunspots, violent storms on the surface of the 
sun, have the effect of increasing solar output, so, by counting the 
spots visible on the surface of our star, we have an indirect measure 
of its varying brightness. Such records have been kept for many 
centuries and match very well with the changes in marine productivity 
we are observing.


In the sediment, diatom and fish-scale records, we also see longer 
period cycles, all correlating closely with other well-known regular 
solar variations. In particular, we see marine productivity cycles 
that match well with the sun's 75-90-year "Gleissberg Cycle," the 200-
500-year "Suess Cycle" and the 1,100-1,500-year "Bond Cycle." The 
strength of these cycles is seen to vary over time, fading in and out 
over the millennia. The variation in the sun's brightness over these 
longer cycles may be many times greater in magnitude than that 
measured over the short Schwabe cycle and so are seen to impact 
marine productivity even more significantly.

Our finding of a direct correlation between variations in the 
brightness of the sun and earthly climate indicators 
(called "proxies") is not unique. Hundreds of other studies, using 
proxies from tree rings in Russia's Kola Peninsula to water levels of 
the Nile, show exactly the same thing: The sun appears to drive 
climate change.

However, there was a problem. Despite this clear and repeated 
correlation, the measured variations in incoming solar energy were, 
on their own, not sufficient to cause the climate changes we have 
observed in our proxies. In addition, even though the sun is brighter 
now than at any time in the past 8,000 years, the increase in direct 
solar input is not calculated to be sufficient to cause the past 
century's modest warming on its own. There had to be an amplifier of 
some sort for the sun to be a primary driver of climate change.

Indeed, that is precisely what has been discovered. In a series of 
groundbreaking scientific papers starting in 2002, Veizer, Shaviv, 
Carslaw, and most recently Svensmark et al., have collectively 
demonstrated that as the output of the sun varies, and with it, our 
star's protective solar wind, varying amounts of galactic cosmic rays 
from deep space are able to enter our solar system and penetrate the 
Earth's atmosphere. These cosmic rays enhance cloud formation which, 
overall, has a cooling effect on the planet. When the sun's energy 
output is greater, not only does the Earth warm slightly due to 
direct solar heating, but the stronger solar wind generated during 
these "high sun" periods blocks many of the cosmic rays from entering 
our atmosphere. Cloud cover decreases and the Earth warms still more.

The opposite occurs when the sun is less bright. More cosmic rays are 
able to get through to Earth's atmosphere, more clouds form, and the 
planet cools more than would otherwise be the case due to direct 
solar effects alone. This is precisely what happened from the middle 
of the 17th century into the early 18th century, when the solar 
energy input to our atmosphere, as indicated by the number of 
sunspots, was at a minimum and the planet was stuck in the Little Ice 
Age. These new findings suggest that changes in the output of the sun 
caused the most recent climate change. By comparison, CO2 variations 
show little correlation with our planet's climate on long, medium and 
even short time scales.


In some fields the science is indeed "settled." For example, plate 
tectonics, once highly controversial, is now so well-established that 
we rarely see papers on the subject at all. But the science of global 
climate change is still in its infancy, with many thousands of papers 
published every year. In a 2003 poll conducted by German 
environmental researchers Dennis Bray and Hans von Storch, two-thirds 
of more than 530 climate scientists from 27 countries surveyed did 
not believe that "the current state of scientific knowledge is 
developed well enough to allow for a reasonable assessment of the 
effects of greenhouse gases." About half of those polled stated that 
the science of climate change was not sufficiently settled to pass 
the issue over to policymakers at all.

Solar scientists predict that, by 2020, the sun will be starting into 
its weakest Schwabe solar cycle of the past two centuries, likely 
leading to unusually cool conditions on Earth. Beginning to plan for 
adaptation to such a cool period, one which may continue well beyond 
one 11-year cycle, as did the Little Ice Age, should be a priority 
for governments. It is global cooling, not warming, that is the major 
climate threat to the world, especially Canada. As a country at the 
northern limit to agriculture in the world, it would take very little 
cooling to destroy much of our food crops, while a warming would only 
require that we adopt farming techniques practiced to the south of us.

Meantime, we need to continue research into this, the most complex 
field of science ever tackled, and immediately halt wasted 
expenditures on the King Canute-like task of "stopping climate 
change." 

 
R. Timothy Patterson is professor and director of the Ottawa-Carleton 
Geoscience Centre, Department of Earth Sciences, Carleton University.


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