Hi

I've checked and I don't think this article has been published to the groups
before.  Apologies if I'm incorrect.  Broadly speaking, it supports my view
that climate sensitivity to rising CO2 is drastically underestimated.

You should note that the article doesn't look at methane releases and other
climate cycle feedbacks, and only considers (apparently) anthropogenic
feedbacks - so despite its hawkish stance, it's actually rather
conservative.

I'm becoming increasingly concerned about the apparent conservative bias in
the research literature.  I can't put my finger on one single study that
gives a realistic scenario for warming with ALL the feedback nasties
included (even roughly).  Has such a study been done?  Because if not, it
would seem a terrible omission.

A

http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=118363&WT.mc_id=USNSF_51&WT.mc_ev=click

The magnitude of climate change during Earth's deep past suggests that
future temperatures may eventually rise far more than projected if society
continues its pace of emitting greenhouse gases, a new analysis concludes.

The study, by National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) scientist
Jeffrey Kiehl, will appear as a "Perspectives" article in this week's issue
of the journal *Science*.

The work was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), NCAR's
sponsor.

Building on recent research, the study examines the relationship between
global temperatures and high levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere tens
of millions of years ago.

It warns that, if carbon dioxide emissions continue at their current rate
through the end of this century, atmospheric concentrations of the
greenhouse gas will reach levels that existed about 30 million to 100
million years ago.

Global temperatures then averaged about 29 degrees Fahrenheit (16 degrees
Celsius) above pre-industrial levels.

Kiehl said that global temperatures may take centuries or millennia to fully
adjust in response to the higher carbon dioxide levels.

Accorning to the study and based on recent computer model studies of
geochemical processes, elevated levels of carbon dioxide may remain in the
atmosphere for tens of thousands of years.

The study also indicates that the planet's climate system, over long periods
of times, may be at least twice as sensitive to carbon dioxide as currently
projected by computer models, which have generally focused on shorter-term
warming trends.

This is largely because even sophisticated computer models have not yet been
able to incorporate critical processes, such as the loss of ice sheets, that
take place over centuries or millennia and amplify the initial warming
effects of carbon dioxide.

"If we don't start seriously working toward a reduction of carbon emissions,
we are putting our planet on a trajectory that the human species has never
experienced," says Kiehl, a climate scientist who specializes in studying
global climate in Earth's geologic past.

"We will have committed human civilization to living in a different world
for multiple generations."

The Perspectives article pulls together several recent studies that look at
various aspects of the climate system, while adding a mathematical approach
by Kiehl to estimate average global temperatures in the distant past.

Its analysis of the climate system's response to elevated levels of carbon
dioxide is supported by previous studies that Kiehl cites.

"This research shows that squaring the evidence of environmental change in
the geologic record with mathematical models of future climate is crucial,"
says David Verardo, Director of NSF's Paleoclimate Program. "Perhaps
Shakespeare's words that 'what's past is prologue' also apply to climate."

Kiehl focused on a fundamental question: when was the last time Earth's
atmosphere contained as much carbon dioxide as it may by the end of this
century?

If society continues its current pace of increasing the burning of fossil
fuels, atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide are expected to reach about 900
to 1,000 parts per million by the end of this century.

That compares with current levels of about 390 parts per million, and
pre-industrial levels of about 280 parts per million.

Since carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that traps heat in Earth's
atmosphere, it is critical for regulating Earth's climate.

Without carbon dioxide, the planet would freeze over.

But as atmospheric levels of the gas rise, which has happened at times in
the geologic past, global temperatures increase dramatically and additional
greenhouse gases, such as water vapor and methane, enter the atmosphere
through processes related to evaporation and thawing.

This leads to further heating.

Kiehl drew on recently published research that, by analyzing molecular
structures in fossilized organic materials, showed that carbon dioxide
levels likely reached 900 to 1,000 parts per million about 35 million years
ago.

At that time, temperatures worldwide were substantially warmer than at
present, especially in polar regions--even though the Sun's energy output
was slightly weaker.

The high levels of carbon dioxide in the ancient atmosphere kept the tropics
at about 9-18 F (5-10 C) above present-day temperatures.

The polar regions were some 27-36 F (15-20 C) above present-day
temperatures.

Kiehl applied mathematical formulas to calculate that Earth's average annual
temperature 30 to 40 million years ago was about 88 F (31 C)--substantially
higher than the pre-industrial average temperature of about 59 F (15 C).

The study also found that carbon dioxide may have two times or more an
effect on global temperatures than currently projected by computer models of
global climate.

The world's leading computer models generally project that a doubling of
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would have a heating impact in the range of
0.5 to 1.0 degrees Celsius watts per square meter. (The unit is a measure of
the sensitivity of Earth's climate to changes in greenhouse gases.)

However, the published data show that the comparable impact of carbon
dioxide 35 million years ago amounted to about 2 C watts per square meter.

Computer models successfully capture the short-term effects of increasing
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

But the record from Earth's geologic past also encompasses longer-term
effects, which accounts for the discrepancy in findings.

The eventual melting of ice sheets, for example, leads to additional heating
because exposed dark surfaces of land or water absorb more heat than ice
sheets.

"This analysis shows that on longer time scales, our planet may be much more
sensitive to greenhouse gases than we thought," Kiehl says.

Climate scientists are currently adding more sophisticated depictions of ice
sheets and other factors to computer models.

As these improvements come on-line, Kiehl believes that the computer models
and the paleoclimate record will be in closer agreement, showing that the
impacts of carbon dioxide on climate over time will likely be far more
substantial than recent research has indicated.

Because carbon dioxide is being pumped into the atmosphere at a rate that
has never been experienced, Kiehl could not estimate how long it would take
for the planet to fully heat up.

However, a rapid warm-up would make it especially difficult for societies
and ecosystems to adapt, he says.

If emissions continue on their current trajectory, "the human species and
global ecosystems will be placed in a climate state never before experienced
in human history," the paper states.

-NSF-

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