In his January 2024 newsletter titled Global Warming Acceleration: Causes and 
Consequences, Professor James Hansen stated that reduced albedo since 2015 is 
equivalent to a sudden increase of atmospheric CO2 from 420 to 530 ppm (bolded 
text in email below).

 

I am writing to seek comment on this remarkable statement.  If albedo loss over 
the last decade has the same warming effect as 110 ppm CO2, this appears to be 
¾ of the effect of the historic CO2 rise from 280 to 425 ppm, equal to 145 ppm. 
 110/145 = 75.8%.

 

Does this mean darkening of the world in the last decade has had three quarters 
of the warming effect of all emissions since the Industrial Revolution?

 

If so, that suggests an urgent impetus for solar geoengineering to slow this 
accelerating feedback.

 

Regards

 

Robert Tulip

From: James Hansen <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > 
Sent: Saturday, January 13, 2024 3:01 AM
Subject: Global Warming Acceleration: Causes and Consequences

 




        






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Fig. 1. Global temperature relative to 1880-1920 based on the GISS 
analysis.[1],[2] 

 




Global Warming Acceleration: Causes and Consequences

12 January 2024
James Hansen, Makiko Sato, Reto Ruedy

 


        


Abstract. Record global temperature in 2023 helps reveal acceleration of global 
warming on decadal time scales. The proximate cause of the acceleration is 
increase of Earth’s energy imbalance, specifically a substantial darkening of 
the planet (decreased albedo) equivalent to a CO2 increase of more than 100 
ppm, although it is difficult to apportion the albedo change between aerosol 
forcing and cloud feedbacks because of limited global measurements. Large 2023 
warming is consistent with key findings in Global Warming in the Pipeline:[3] 
reduced aerosol cooling and high climate sensitivity. We expect record monthly 
temperatures to continue into mid-2024 due to the present large planetary 
energy imbalance, with the 12-month running-mean global temperature reaching 
+1.6-1.7°C relative to 1880-1920 and falling to only +1.4 ± 0.1°C during the 
following La Nina. Considering the large planetary energy imbalance, it will be 
clear that the world is passing through the 1.5°C ceiling, and is headed much 
higher, unless steps are taken to affect Earth’s energy imbalance.

 




Global temperature in the GISS analysis increased 0.28°C in 2023, from 1.16°C 
to 1.44°C (Fig. 1), the largest annual increase in the 144-year record. This 
annual rise is largely due to the ongoing tropical El Nino warming, but no 
prior El Nino engendered as much warming, which points to an additional drive 
for global warming acceleration. We have argued[3] that the imminent threat of 
human-made climate change is understated in IPCC[4] assessments, which are 
based predominately on global climate models (GCMs). We suggest that the IPCC 
best estimate for climate sensitivity (3°C for 2×CO2 or 0. 75°C per W/m2) is an 
underestimate, as we find real-world (paleoclimate) evidence for a sensitivity 
of 4.8°C ±1.2°C for 2×CO2 (1.2°C per W/m2). In addition, we suggest that IPCC 
underestimates (negative) aerosol climate forcing and global cooling by 
aerosols that partly counterbalances greenhouse gas (GHG) warming. These two 
errors compensate and allow GCMs with low sensitivity to match observed warming 
of the past century by using an unrealistically small aerosol effect. 
Compensation is not an accident; it is a result of overreliance on GCMs. With 
aerosol forcing unmeasured, it is natural for modelers to focus on an aerosol 
forcing that yields agreement with global warming of the past century. Some 
clarification will be possible in 2024.

Global surface temperature is well measured since about 1950,[5] but there are 
large interannual fluctuations of temperature that make it difficult to confirm 
a change in the rate of global warming until the change is large. Given that 
the El Nino/La Nina cycle is the main cause of interannual variability, 
comparison of global temperatures at the well-defined peaks of strong El Ninos 
may provide potential for early detection of global warming acceleration.[6] 
The three most recent strong El Ninos are 1997-98, 2015-16, and 2023-24. The 
first of these was prior to reduction of human-made aerosols. The second 
occurred just after the January 2015 imposition of restrictions on sulfur 
content of ship fuels by the International Maritime Organization (IMO), and the 
third occurred after strengthening of the restrictions in January 2020. Fig. 2 
compares global temperatures during these years (red lines) with the prior 
record monthly temperatures (gray area). 

 



  
<https://mcusercontent.com/0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1/images/9bb51990-7c3c-f784-2b05-d61b16a13782.png>
 

 




Fig. 2. Global temperature during El Nino origin years (left side) and El Nino 
peak years, compared with monthly record high temperatures prior to the last 
three strong El Ninos.

 




The strong 1997-98 “El Nino of the century” produced 8-9 clear global 
temperature records, the 2015-2016 El Nino produced 10 clear record months, and 
the 2023-24 El Nino has already produced 7 record months about half way through 
the period of Nino-elevated temperature. The rate of warming between the first 
two El Ninos, i.e., between 1998 and 2016, was 0.23°C/decade, moderately larger 
than the 0.18°C/decade warming rate during 1970-2010. Another eight months of 
temperature data are needed to assess the warming rate between the last two El 
Ninos. 

 



  
<https://mcusercontent.com/0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1/images/25fa4597-0f6c-7be6-48bd-219fd0922243.png>
 

 




Fig. 3. Nino3.4 SST (upper panel) and temperature of ocean upper 300m in 
equatorial region.[7]

 




Use of El Ninos as a measuring stick depends on the El Ninos being comparable. 
The Nino3.4 temperature (Fig. 3) may be a flawed measure of El Nino strength. 
It implies that the 2015-16 El Nino was stronger than the “El Nino of the 
(20th) century” in 1997-98. A better measure is probably the heat content 
anomaly in the upper 300m of the equatorial Pacific (Fig. 3, bottom) because 
the 300m heat anomaly is a direct measure of the excess heat available for 
expulsion to the atmosphere. The 300m heat content shows that the three El 
Ninos successively decrease in magnitude, with the 2023-24 El Nino notably 
unimpressive. Further discussion and illustration of this matter is in a prior 
communication.[8] A declining strength of the El Ninos only enhances our 
conclusions.

How do we know global temperature will continue to grow in the next 5-8 months, 
carrying the 12-month running-mean to at least 1.6-1.7°C? The main reason is 
the large increase of global absorbed solar radiation (ASR) since 2015 (Fig. 
4), which is a decrease of Earth’s albedo (reflectivity) by 0.4% (1.4/340).[9] 
This reduced albedo is equivalent to a sudden increase of atmospheric CO2 from 
420 to 530 ppm. Increase of EEI (Fig. 5) is smaller than the increase of ASR 
because the warming increases thermal emission to space. The increase of ASR 
since 2015 is particularly important because it acts as a “fresh forcing,” 
regardless of whether it is a forcing, a persistent feedback, or a combination 
thereof. Given the absence of monitoring of global aerosol forcing, ASR 
provides our best clue as to the changing drives for global warming. These 
assertions warrant discussion. 

 



  
<https://mcusercontent.com/0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1/images/e45d9670-ac4c-5120-b9d6-c4b959a76c02.png>
 

 




Fig. 4. Global absorbed solar radiation and Earth’s energy imbalance relative 
to the mean of the first 120 months of CERES data. CERES data[10] are available 
at  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=9b2861a13c&e=f99fbe43ae>
 http://ceres.larc.nasa.gov/
 

 



  
<https://mcusercontent.com/0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1/images/9dcf5244-3101-b7bf-7e98-7478fdfd5c0c.png>
 

 




Fig. 5. Percent of equilibrium global surface temperature response to instant 
CO2 doubling.[11]

 




Almost half of the global temperature change in response to a climate forcing 
occurs within the first decade after imposition of the forcing (Fig. 5), the 
remaining response requiring many decades and centuries.[10] Earth’s energy 
imbalance was about 0.7 W/m2 in the first 15 years of this century[12] and 
solar radiation absorbed by Earth was relatively constant (Fig. 4). The change 
since 2015, especially the increase of absorbed solar radiation, is a BFD (a 
big deal).[13] The magnitude, longevity, and growth of the phenomenon rule 
against some unexplained natural climate oscillation. Instead, it is likely a 
combination of a climate forcing(s) and feedbacks. Our interpretation[3] is 
that a reduction of human-made aerosols, especially the two-step (2015 and 
2020) reduction of marine aerosols, causes an increase of climate forcing of at 
least ~0.5 W/m2, possibly as great as 1 W/m2. Aerosol modeling studies[14] 
report a global climate forcing due to the change of regulations on ship 
emissions only of the order of O(0.1 W/m2), while we suggest a forcing O(1 
W/m2), i.e., at least ~0.5 W/m2. Despite the absence of global monitoring of 
the aerosol climate forcing, it should be possible to resolve this issue within 
the next few years with the help of the great inadvertent aerosol experiment 
caused by the sharp imposition by the International Maritime Organization of 
rule changes on ship emissions.

The significant climate feedbacks that affect ASR are changes of sea ice and 
clouds. There is little trend of Arctic sea ice since 2015. The large loss of 
Antarctic sea ice in the past year may contribute to the spike in absorbed 
solar radiation in the last few months of data in Fig. 4, which will be 
testable from the geographic and seasonal variation of the observed ASR. 
Analysis of cloud feedbacks will be more difficult because both the aerosol 
forcing and cloud feedbacks operate via cloud changes, but superficial 
examination of the ASR data supports the idea of an aerosol forcing O(1 W/m2) 
as well as a significant cloud feedback (Fig. 22 in Pipeline paper).

Our interpretation – that aerosol forcing changes constitute a substantial 
fraction of the change of ASR, not ~ 0.1 W/m2 – seems to place us at odds 
against another community: aerosol/climate modeling. We wonder, however, 
whether the small values from aerosol models are not influenced by the expected 
results based on IPCC aerosol estimations. There is still large uncertainty in 
aerosol modeling. As noted above, the situation may be clarified within the 
next few years, which will be none too soon, as better understanding is 
required for policy considerations. 

 



  
<https://mcusercontent.com/0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1/images/65e9629d-f1e3-caa5-4917-be228c38746c.png>
 

 




Fig. 6. Global temperature relative to 1880-1920 based on the GISS 
analysis.[1],[2] Projected El Nino warming and La Nina cooling discusses in 
text and decadal acceleration in Pipeline.[3]

 




Summary.

Empirical evidence related to aerosol climate forcing will become clearer soon. 
If the forcing change is as large as we believe, it will push global warming to 
at least +1.6-1.7°C (Fig. 6), well above the level that would be expected for 
the moderate ongoing El Nino, and it should also limit the decline of global 
temperature following the El Nino.

The coupled aerosol forcing & climate sensitivity issue is not unrelated to the 
coupled ocean overturning & sea level issue that spurred the writing of the 
Pipeline paper. In both cases, we assert that IPCC has excessive reliance on 
global models with inadequate attention to analyses that pay comparable 
attention to paleoclimate information, global models, and evidence from ongoing 
observed climate changes. A case in point is the present tug-of-war occurring 
in the Southern Ocean. Global warming seems to be pushing the sea ice boundary 
south, diminishing sea ice cover. But we found in our Ice Melt paper[15] that 
freshwater injection from observed shrinking of ice shelf volume was already 
sufficient to begin cooling of the Southern Ocean mixed layer, pushing the sea 
ice area north. This topic is discussed in one of our recent communications.[16]

This story is to be continued. The climate situation needs to be clarified in 
the next several years, as that clarification will help define the actions that 
are needed to assure a bright future for young people and future generations. 
We appreciate your concerns and support. We are grateful to the people who 
responded to our appeal for support[15] of Climate Science, Awareness and 
Solutions, thus helping assure an additional perspective in the discussion of 
actions needed to address ongoing global climate change. 

 




[1] Lenssen NJL, Schmidt GA, Hansen JE et al.  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=ebc5baab04&e=f99fbe43ae>
 Improvements in the GISTEMP uncertainty model, J Geophys Res Atmos 
2019;124(12):6307-26
[2] Hansen J, Ruedy R, Sato M et al.  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=5063fc5139&e=f99fbe43ae>
 Global surface temperature change. Rev Geophys 2010;48:RG4004
[3] Hansen J, Sato M, Simons L et al.  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=c167fec112&e=f99fbe43ae>
 Global warming in the pipeline. Oxford Open Clim Chan 2023;3(1):kgad008, 
doi.org/10.1093/oxfclm/kgad008 <http://doi.org/10.1093/oxfclm/kgad008> 
[4] IPCC. Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis [Masson-Delmotte V, 
Zhai P, Pirani A et al. (eds)]. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University 
Press, 2021
[5] There were still significant flaws in the World War II period because of 
limited and changing sources for sea surface temperature data. See Hansen J, 
Sato M, Kharecha P et al.  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=9fe03810e7&e=f99fbe43ae>
 Young people's burden: requirement of negative CO2 emissions. Earth Syst Dyn 
2017;8:577-616
[6] Grantham, J.,  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=bb89d85861&e=f99fbe43ae>
 The Race of Our Lives Revisited, GMO White Paper, August 2018
[7] Nino3.4 data are  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=146ba2a470&e=f99fbe43ae>
 ERSSTv5 (1991-2020 base period) for 5°S-5°N, 170-120°W, while the equatorial 
upper 300m temperature data  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=7ac9f59ef9&e=f99fbe43ae>
 use 1981-2010 base period.for 5°S-5°N, 180-100°W1744
[8] Hansen, J, Sato M, Ruedy, R 
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=6c348cff61&e=f99fbe43ae>
 . Global warming acceleration: El Nino measuring stick looks good, 14 December 
2023
[9] The average solar energy incident on Earth is about 340 W/m2.
[10] Loeb NG, Johnson GC, Thorsen, TJ et al.  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=7ac1e00654&e=f99fbe43ae>
 Satellite and ocean data reveal marked increase in Earth’s heating rate. 
Geophys Res Lett 2021;48:e2021GL09304
[11] The graph shows results for two Goddard Institute for Space Studies GCMs 
defined in the Pipeline paper, but the approximate 100-year e-folding time for 
surface temperature response is common to most global climate models.
[12] Miniere A, von Schuckmann K, Sallee JB, Vogt L.  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=09c8f92297&e=f99fbe43ae>
 Robust acceleration of Earth system heating observed over the past six 
decades. Nature Sci. Rept;13: 22975. 2023/ 
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-49353-1
[13] Climate Emergency Forum. Nov 26, 2023. Dr. James E. Hansen in Conversation 
with Paul Beckwith [Video]. YouTube:  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=acb104ce62&e=f99fbe43ae>
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WTWUJ8Lvl-U&t=1s
[14] Diamond MS.  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=f84966a10e&e=f99fbe43ae>
 Detection of large-scale cloud microphysical changes and evidence for 
decreasing cloud brightness within a major shipping corridor after 
implementation of the International Maritime Organization 2020 fuel sulfur 
regulations, Atmos Chem Phys 2023;23:8259-69
[15] Hansen J, Sato M, Hearty P et al.  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=2fd2b03b9a&e=f99fbe43ae>
 Ice melt, sea level rise and superstorms: evidence from paleoclimate data, 
climate modeling, and modern observations that 2 C global warming could be 
dangerous. Atmos Chem Phys 2016;16:3761-812
[16] Hansen J, Kharecha P, Sato M.  
<https://columbia.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0ebaeb14fdbf5dc65289113c1&id=ee0b7593c8&e=f99fbe43ae>
 "A Miracle Will Occur" Is Not Sensible Climate Policy, 7 December 2023

 


        






 
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Columbia University Earth Institute

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