This started as a dispute about whether in fact there had been a decade without warming, and clearly, according to NOAA, there had.
No, there
hadn’t. Why is this so hard to grasp? There quite clearly
was warming during that decade, whether you use HadCRUT (0.067 °C/decade), GISS (0.197 °C/decade), UAH (0.123 °C/decade), or RSS (0.034 °C/decade).
What
you want to use to support your claim that there “had been a decade without warming” was a set of
ENSO-adjusted temperatures that NOAA
themselves qualified as an
apparent lack of warming, which they then went on to explain.
What you continually
fail to acknowledge is that if you want to calculate
ENSO-adjusted temperatures on the basis that ENSO is a cyclic phenomenon, then there is no reason not to go further and take into account
other effects, like changes in solar insolation, which
declined during that decade. If you do
that then you get something like this:
http://img8.imageshack.us/img8/7228/pmodadjusted.jpg
Remember that graph?
Look carefully at the red line, showing the change in temperature
caused by the change in solar insolation using a value of 0.76 °C/(W/m[sup]2[/sup]).
When that is
also taken into account, it shows that the
actual global warming caused by CO2 was mostly masked by a cooling caused by the sun reaching the lowest solar minimum in a long time, creating a trend of 0.0 during that time. Then adding ENSO back on gives the actual
observed temperature change. But it is disingenuous to remove ENSO and then claim that temperatures “actually” did not change while ignoring the effect that the sun had on those same temperatures.
When correcting for both ENSO
and SOI, the trend for that same decade is 0.212 °C/decade — slightly
more than the long-term trend of similarly corrected data from 1979 to 2009 of 0.202 °C/decade.
The proper response to this would have been “True. So?” but you apparently felt the need to muddy the water and cast doubt about whether warming had actually ceased, even if only temporarily.
No, I needed to
clarify the point that global warming had
not “actually” ceased, both because you were misrepresenting what the NOAA report showed, and because even
if temperatures had been flat or gone
down for a decade it wouldn’t mean “global warming had ceased” because
it can do that purely due to internal climate variability. Not only do I have no problem admitting that the global temperature can actually
decline on short time spans,
I even provided a graph demonstrating that it had happened multiple times before even while global warming continued!
You were the one who kept making erroneous claims of conflict between what I was saying and what NOAA was saying, and what Jones was saying and what NOAA was saying.
The Jones period, which you helpfully provided, made the decade-without-warming disappear by including the 1998 anomaly. Since '99-'08 warmed by 0.0 degrees and '95-'08 warmed by 0.14 degrees, it must be that '95-'98 increased by … 0.14 degrees.
Actually it increased by a lot more than that. I see you still haven’t figured out how trends work. Here’s a hint: a trend of 0.0 from 1999 to 2008 does
not mean that 2008 was the same temperature as 1999. The ENSO-adjusted average temperature for 2008 was 0.153 degrees higher than the ENSO-adjusted average temperature for 1999.
This is the best explanation of all: even though no warming was measured we know that warming still continued because … the models predict it.
No, warming
was measured. But
modelling the effect of ENSO showed that ENSO was responsible for almost all of the
observed warming in the HadCRUT record if the effect of SOI was ignored. Modelling the effect of SOI showed that
it was responsible for the
lack of warming in the ENSO-adjusted data.
If you had presented the SOI-adjusted data and ignored ENSO (rather than the other way around) then it would look like warming was much
worse than was actually measured.
We know that warming still continued because the long term trend actually
accelerated during that decade, whether you talk about the actual temperatures (where adjusting for these other effects is less important because they cancel out in the longer term due to their cyclical nature) or adjusted temperatures.
NOAA simply showed that models exhibited exactly the same kinds of phenomena and therefore you
shouldn’t interpret the result to mean “global warming had stopped”.
That may well be true of course, but, despite your claim, there is no way to know whether the lack of warming was real or only apparent. We will learn that in the future, but we don’t know it now.
Of course we do.
If global warming
really did stop then it would take a couple of decades to notice it, but we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it. Right now it is clear that it hasn’t.
It is comforting to know that if the data conflict with this realization of his model he can tweak the parameters to make it more in line with the past while still predicting warming for the future.
What a ridiculous interpretation of what I said.