https://mailchi.mp/caa/global-warming-is-accelerating-why-will-we-fly-blind?fbclid=IwAR20XAIBpQXY6Av_0CC121ddIPL9KE3UmnvgDyLxRuEGlY7lLBuk352vKhs

*Fig. 1. Global temperature (relative to 1880-1920 mean for each month)
during the El Nino origin year for the 1997-98, 2015-16 and 2023-24 El
Ninos. The impact of El Nino on global temperature usually peaks early in
the year following the year when the El Nino originated.*

*Global Warming is Accelerating. Why? Will We Fly Blind?*

*14 September 2023*
*James Hansen, Makiko Sato, Reto Ruedy, and Leon Simons*
*Abstract.* Global temperature in the current El Nino exceeds temperature
in the prior (2015-16) El Nino by more than the expected warming (0.14°C in
8 years) for the global warming rate since 1970 (0.18°C/decade). Proximate
cause of accelerated warming is an increase of Earth’s Energy Imbalance
(EEI), but what caused that? Indirect evidence points to a decline in the
cooling effect of human-made aerosols. Failure to measure aerosol climate
forcing is partly compensated by precise monitoring of EEI details.
However, there are no adequate plans to continue even this vital EEI
monitoring – which will become even more important as humanity realizes its
predicament and the fact that we must cool the planet to avoid disastrous
consequences and restore a bright future for young people – let alone plans
for adequate aerosol monitoring.
*Fig. 2. Global temperature relative to 1880-1920 based on the GISS
analysis.[1],[2] *
*Fig. 3. Temperature in the tropical Pacific region used to define El Nino
strength. El Nino (La Nina) is nominally defined to occur when Nino 3.4 is
> 0.5°C (< –0.5°C).*
Suspicion that global warming was accelerating was created by the warming
rate between the 1997-98 and 2015-16 El Ninos.[3] The rate of warming
between those super El Ninos was 0.24°C/decade, exceeding the 1970-2010
rate of 0.18°C/decade (Fig. 2). So far, the present El Nino, only 8 years
after the 2015-16 El Nino, suggests substantial further increase in the
rate of global warming. It is too soon to say how strong the present El
Nino will be, but its seasonality is normal (Fig. 3). Global temperature
anomalies lag the Nino3.4 index by several months, so it is also early to
estimate the peak warming, which is expected to occur in the first half of
2024. However, global temperature in the first few months of the El Nino is
so extreme (Fig. 1) it is now almost certain that the 12-month running mean
temperature will exceed 1.5°C by May 2024 or earlier.

The proximate cause of the global warming is Earth’s energy imbalance
(EEI): there is more energy coming in (absorbed sunlight) than energy going
out (heat radiated to space). EEI increased greatly in the past decade
(Fig. 4). The imbalance so far in the 2020s (1.36 W/m2) is almost double
the rate (0.71 W/m2) during the calibration period (mid-2005 through
mid-2015) in which satellite data[4] for EEI (with great precision in
temporal change) are put on an absolute scale via decadal-mean in situ
(Argo float) ocean heat storage data.[5] The principal mechanism for global
warming over the past century has been the reduction of Earth’s outgoing
heat radiation caused by increasing greenhouse gases, which makes the
atmosphere more opaque at infrared wavelengths that emit heat radiation.
Heat radiation to space thus arises from higher, colder, levels, which
reduces energy loss to space, causing the planetary energy imbalance and
therefore global warming.

*Fig. 4. 12-month running-mean of Earth’s energy imbalance from CERES
satellite data[4] normalized to 0.71 W/m2 mean for July 2005 – June 2015
(blue bar) from in situ data.[5]*
*Fig. 5. Global absorbed solar radiation (W/m2) relative to mean of the
first 120 months of CERES data. CERES data are available
at http://ceres.larc.nasa.gov/order_data.php
<http://ceres.larc.nasa.gov/order_data.php> Global absorbed solar radiation
anomalies are 0.99 and 1.29 W/m2 in the indicated intervals.*
However, greenhouse gases are not the cause of increased EEI since 2015.
How do we know? The (CERES) satellite instrument measures both the change
of emitted heat radiation and the change of reflected solar radiation. The
change since 2015 is a decrease of sunlight reflected by Earth, thus an
increase of solar radiation absorbed by Earth (Fig. 5). Absorbed solar
radiation in 2015-2019 was 0.99 W/m2 greater than in the calibration period
(2005-15), and since January 2020, the imbalance is even greater (1.29 W/m2).
Increased EEI did not occur because of an increase of solar irradiance. On
the contrary, during the 5 years 2015-19 the Sun’s brightness declined by
an amount decreasing absorbed solar radiation by about 0.15 W/m2, followed
by an increase since 2020 of about 0.2 W/m2 (Fig. 6, right scale). Changes
of sea ice area affect EEI, but sea ice changes in the past decade have
been small, except the decrease of Southern Hemisphere sea ice in the past
2 years.[6] The Hunga Tonga volcanic eruption in early 2022 also affects
the past two years. Jenkins *et al*.[7] estimate that water vapor injected
into the stratosphere caused a small warming forcing (+0.12 W/m2), but
Schoeberl *et al*.[8] found that the cooling effect of stratospheric
aerosols injected by Hunga Tonga yielded a net cooling effect, with forcing
peaking in mid-2022 at about –0.5 W/m2. Averaged over 2022, Hunga Tonga may
have been about –0.3 W/m2, but by today it is smaller.

*Fig. 6. Solar irradiance and climate forcing, the latter being 0.175
×irradiance change, where 0.175 = (1 – Earth’s albedo)/4, where Earth’s
albedo = 0.3. Data sources: **Physikalisch Meteorologisches Observatorium,
Davos*
<https://www.pmodwrc.ch/en/research-development/solar-physics/tsi-composite/>*,
University of Colorado **Solar Radiation and Climate Experiment*
<https://lasp.colorado.edu/sorce/data/tsi-data/>*, and **Total Irradiance
Monitor* <https://disc.gsfc.nasa.gov/datasets/TSIS_TSI_L3_24HR_03/summary>* on
the International Space Station (GES DISC).*
*Fig. 7. Absorbed solar radiation for indicated regions relative to first
120 months of CERES data. Southern Hemisphere 20-60°S is 89% ocean. North
Atlantic is (20-60°N, 0-60°W) and North Pacific is (20-60°N, 120-220°W).
Data source: http://ceres.larc.nasa.gov/order_data.php*
We conclude that, although the solar and Hunga Tonga forcings are not
negligible, they do not account for the large, persistent increase of
absorbed solar radiation since 2015. The only known mechanism capable of
such a large forcing is a decrease of cloud albedo. Indeed, we concluded
elsewhere[9] that decreased particulate air pollution in the past decade
should cause such a decrease of cloud albedo and thus an acceleration of
global warming in the post-2010 period. The most distinct and probably the
most effective aerosol reduction is due to limitations on the sulfur
content of ship fuels imposed by the International Maritime Organization
(IMO) in January 2015 and strengthened in January 2020. The change of
global absorbed solar radiation suggests that the 2015 change had the
larger effect, but that appearance may be misleading. Clouds, and thus
planetary albedo (reflectivity), have a large natural variability, e.g.,
cloud change correlated with the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO). The PDO
shifted to its positive phase in 2015, which favors decreased cloud cover
and increased global absorption of solar radiation.[10] The PDO shifted
back to its negative phase in 2020 (Fig. 8), which favors increased clouds
and reduced absorption of solar radiation. Yet the post 2020 EEI has
increased (Fig. 4), as has absorbed solar radiation (Fig. 5).

The upshot is strong indirect evidence that an ongoing decrease of
particulate air pollution is in the process of increasing absorption of
solar energy by Earth, which adds to greenhouse gas global warming. We
predict at least a 50 percent increase of the post-2010 global warming
rate, compared to the 1970-2010 rate of 0.18°C/decade.[9] This is a partial
payment in return for the Faustian bargain that humanity made when it chose
to build its economies on fossil fuel energy.[11]

*Fig. 8. Pacific Decadal Oscillation.[12] *
*Fig. 9. Total sulfate (parts per trillion by volume) and percentage of
total sulfate provided by shipping in simulations of Jin et al.[13] prior
to IMO regulations on sulfur content of fuels.*
Absorbed solar radiation measured by the CERES satellite instruments,
together with the IMO regulations on ship sulfate emissions, provides
another indirect way to evaluate aerosol effects. The fraction of total
sulfate emissions that arise from ships is large in the North Pacific and
North Atlantic (Fig. 9), so study of that region should help quantify the
aerosol effect. Fig. 9b suggests that the aerosol effect on cloud albedo is
large, although a longer record is needed to overcome the “noise” due to
natural variability of clouds.

*“This is crazy,” you must be saying,* “why don’t you measure the aerosol
climate forcing, instead of this round-about inference via detailed effect
on EEI and absorbed solar energy?” Good question. The short answer is that
we (the first author and others) tried, but, in career-long failure could
not persuade NASA to fly a small satellite with the two instruments (a high
precision polarimeter and an infrared spectrometer) needed to monitor the
aerosol and cloud microphysics that define the aerosol climate
forcing.[14] The short explanation is that NASA preferred large, slow,
multi-billion dollar missions as needed to support the budgets of the large
NASA Centers. Throw in a climate-denier NASA Administrator, who, in angry
response to our persistence, struck out the first line of the NASA Mission
Statement “To Understand and Protect the Home Planet.”[15]

It's still worth pursuing aerosol and cloud monitoring of the required
precision, but the most urgent task is assuring continuation of the CERES
or CERES-like monitoring of Earth’s radiation balance. As yet there are no
firm adequate plans for long-term continuation of these observations. NASA
tends to think of itself as an agency that develops scientific and
instrumental techniques, while long-term observations should be carried on
by others. However, long-term observations are the climate science. It is
crucial that NASA make plans to continue these essential measurements.

Measurements in the ocean are equally essential. The Argo program that
distributed about 4,000 autonomous, deep-diving floats around the world
ocean needs to be continued and enhanced. More measurements are needed
especially in the polar regions where some of the most significant climate
changes are beginning to occur, changes that will affect the entire planet.
The U.S. National Atmospheric and Oceanic Administration (NOAA) has
provided a large fraction of the Argo floats, but many other nations
contribute; the programs should continue their development.

Without such data, we will be flying blind into a future fraught with
dangers. At the very least, we owe young people the knowledge of what we
are getting them into.


------------------------------
[1] Lenssen NJL, Schmidt GA, Hansen JE *et al.* Improvements in the GISTEMP
uncertainty model
<https://drive.google.com/open?id=1Pc_y1vIIzo06VvfvAiZzDNiShrcn6Vg_>,* J
Geophys Res Atmos* 2019;*124(12)*:6307-26
[2] Hansen J, Ruedy R, Sato M *et al.* Global surface temperature change
<https://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/abs/ha00510u.html>. Rev Geophys 2010;*48*:RG4004
[3] Grantham, J., The Race of Our Lives Revisited
<https://www1.columbia.edu/~jeh1/Documents/Grantham.2018.the-race-of-our-lives-revisited.pdf>,
GMO White Paper, August 2018.
[4] Loeb NG, Johnson GC, Thorsen, TJ *et al.* Satellite and ocean data
reveal marked increase in Earth’s heating rate
<https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2021GL093047>. *Geophys
Res Lett* 2021;*48*:e2021GL093047
[5] von Schuckmann K, Cheng L, Palmer MD *et al.* Heat stored in the Earth
system: where does the energy go?
<https://essd.copernicus.org/articles/12/2013/2020/>, *Earth System Science
Data* 2020;*12*:2013-41
[6] http://www.columbia.edu/~mhs119/SeaIceArea/
[7] Jenkins S, Smith C, Allen M *et al*. Tonga eruption increase chance of
temporary surface temperature anomaly above 1.5°C
<https://www.nature.com/articles/s41558-022-01568-2>. *Nature Climate
Change* 2022;*13*:127-9
[8] Schoeberl M, Schoeberl MR, Wang Y, *et al*. The estimated climate
impact of the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai eruption plume 1
<https://essopenarchive.org/users/543714/articles/644623-the-estimated-climate-impact-of-the-hunga-tonga-hunga-ha-apai-eruption-plume-1>
. *Geophys Res Lett* (in press).
[9] Hansen J, Sato M, Simons L *et al*. Global warming in the pipeline.
Submitted to *Oxford Open Climate Change*, we are hopeful that the revised
version recently submitted will be approved and published soon.
[10] Loeb NG, Johnson GC, Thorsen, TJ *et al.* Satellite and ocean data
reveal marked increase in Earth’s heating rate
<https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2021GL093047>. *Geophys
Res Lett* 2021;*48*:e2021GL093047
[11] Hansen J. *Storms of My Grandchildren*
<http://digamo.free.fr/hansen2010.pdf>. ISBN 978-1-60819-502-2. New York:
Bloomsbury, 2009
[12] *https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monitoring/pdo/
<https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monitoring/pdo/>*
[13] Jin Q, Grandey BS, Rothenberg D *et al.* Impacts on cloud radiative
effects induced by coexisting aerosols converted from international
shipping and maritime DMS emissions
<https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/18/16793/2018/>. *Atmos Chem Phys*
 2018;*18*:16793-16808
[14] Hansen J, Rossow W, Fung I. *Long-term monitoring of global climate
forcings and feedbacks*. Washington: NASA Conference Publication 3234
<http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/Documents/Hansen.1993.MonitoringForcings+Feedbacks.NASAConfPubl3234.pdf>,
1993
[15] Hansen J, Swiftboating, stealth budgeting, and unitary executives
<http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/Documents/Hansen.2006.SwiftBoating.WorldWatch.pdf>
. World Watch., *19(6)*, Nov-Dec, 2006

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