Perches farmland in southern Iraq |
By Justin Gillis, The New York Times, August 6, 2012
The percentage of
the earth’s land surface covered by extreme heat in the summer has soared in
recent decades, from less than 1 percent in the years before 1980 to as much as
13 percent in recent years, according to a new scientific paper.
The change is so drastic, the paper says, that scientists can claim
with near certainty that events like the Texas heat wave last year, the Russian heat wave of 2010 and the European heat wave of 2003 would not have
happened without the planetary warming caused by the human release of
greenhouse gases.
Those claims, which go beyond the established scientific consensus
about the role of climate change in causing weather extremes,
were advanced by James E. Hansen, a prominent NASA climate scientist, and two co-authors in a scientific paper published online on Monday
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“The main thing is just to look at the statistics and see that the
change is too large to be natural,” Dr. Hansen said in an interview. The findings provoked an immediate split among his
scientific colleagues, however.
Some experts said he had come up with a smart new way of understanding
the magnitude of the heat extremes that people around the world are noticing.
Others suggested that he had presented a weak statistical case for his boldest
claims and that the rest of the paper contained little that had not been
observed in the scientific literature for years.
The divide is characteristic of the strong reactions that Dr. Hansen
has elicited playing dual roles in the debate over climate change and how to
combat it. As the head of the Goddard Institute for Space Studies in Manhattan,
he is one of NASA’s principal climate scientists and the primary custodian of
its records of the earth’s temperature. Yet he has also become an activist who
marches in protests to demand new government policies on energy and climate.
The latter role — he has been arrested four times at demonstrations,
always while on leave from his government job — has made him a hero to the
political left, and particularly to college students involved in climate
activism. But it has discomfited some of his fellow researchers, who fear that
his political activities may be sowing unnecessary doubts about his scientific
findings and climate science in general.
Climate-change skeptics routinely accuse Dr. Hansen of manipulating
the temperature record to make global warming seem more serious, although there
is no proof that he has done so and the warming trend has repeatedly been
confirmed by other researchers.
Scientists have long believed that the warming — roughly 2.5 degrees
Fahrenheit over land in the past century, with most of that occurring since
1980 — was caused largely by the human release of greenhouse gases from burning
fossil fuels. Such emissions have increased the likelihood of heat waves and
some other types of weather extremes, like heavy rains and snowstorms, they
say.
But researchers have struggled with the question of whether any
particular heat wave or storm can be definitively linked to human-induced
climate change.
In the new paper, titled “Perception of Climate Change,” Dr. Hansen
and his co-authors compared the global climate of 1951 to 1980, before the bulk
of global warming had occurred, with the climate of the years 1981 to 2011.
They computed how much of the earth’s land surface in each period was
subjected in June, July and August to heat that would have been considered
particularly extreme in the period from 1951 to 1980. In that era, they found,
only 0.2 percent of the land surface was subjected to extreme summer heat. But
from 2006 to 2011, extreme heat covered from 4 to 13 percent of the world, they
found.
“It confirms people’s suspicions that things are happening” to the
climate, Dr. Hansen said in the interview. “It’s just going to get worse.”
The findings led his team to assert that the big heat waves and
droughts of recent years were a direct consequence of climate change. The
authors did not offer formal proof of the sort favored by many climate
scientists, instead presenting what amounted to a circumstantial case that the
background warming was the only plausible cause of those individual heat
extremes.
Dr. Hansen said the heat wave and drought afflicting the country this
year were also a likely consequence of climate change.
Some experts said they found the arguments persuasive. Andrew
J. Weaver, a climate scientist at the University of Victoria in British
Columbia who reviewed the paper before publication, compared the warming of
recent years to a measles outbreak popping up in different places. As with a
measles epidemic, he said, it makes sense to suspect a common cause.
“You can actually start to see these patterns emerging whereby in any
given year more and more of the globe is covered by anomalously warm events,”
Dr. Weaver said.
But some other scientists described the Hansen paper as a muddle. Claudia Tebaldi, a scientist with an
organization called Climate Central that seeks to make climate
research accessible to the public, said she felt that the paper was on solid
ground in asserting a greater overall likelihood of heat waves as a consequence
of global warming, but that the finding was not new. The paper’s attribution of
specific heat waves to climate change was not backed by persuasive evidence,
she said.
Martin P. Hoerling, a researcher with the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration who studies the causes of
weather extremes, said he shared Dr. Hansen’s general concern about global
warming. But he has in the past criticized Dr. Hansen for, in his view,
exaggerating the connection between global warming and specific weather
extremes. In an interview, he said he felt that Dr. Hansen had done so again.
Dr. Hoerling has published research suggesting that the 2010 Russian
heat wave was largely a consequence of natural climate variability, and a
forthcoming study he carried out on the Texas drought of 2011 also says natural
factors were the main cause.
Dr. Hoerling contended that Dr. Hansen’s new paper confuses drought,
caused primarily by a lack of rainfall, with heat waves.
“This isn’t a serious science paper,” Dr. Hoerling said. “It’s mainly
about perception, as indicated by the paper’s title. Perception is not a
science.”
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