I
was puzzled when I read the ex- change of Letters on global warming in the January 2005 issue of PHYSICS
TODAY (page 13). George Smith suggested that the recent carbon dioxide increase could be the result
of a century of global warmingin particular, by the degassing of the ocean. Spencer Weart
answered (correctly, but see below) that scientists with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) have calculated the budget between the carbon input with the sinks in different reservoirs
of the carbon cycle: ocean, forest, soil, and so forth
Besides technicalities implying that the global CO2
budget still has second-order uncertainties, I'm surprised Weart didn't cite first-order proofs
demonstrating that the recent CO2 increase cannot be due to ocean warming. Those killing
proofs are well-known in the climatology communityfor example, in the IPCCbut it
is crucial to emphasize them again for a wider audience.
The recent CO2 increase280 to 380 parts
per million by volume between 1800 and 2005is accompanied by three phenomena that completely
rule out ocean warming as the main cause:
Parallel decline of the 14C/12C ratio of atmospheric CO2. Strictly speaking, this is the "Suess effect," first observed, and correctly interpreted, by Hans Suess of the University of California, San Diego, in the early 1950s. The Suess effect occurs because fossil fuels do not contain 14C precisely because they are fossilmuch older than 10 half-lives of 14C.
Parallel decline of the 13C/12C ratio of atmospheric CO2. This phenomenon is linked to the fact that fossil fuels, forests, and soil carbon come from photosynthetic carbon, which is strongly depleted in 13C.
Parallel decline in the oxygen concentration of the atmosphere, which is the inescapable signature of an oxidation of carbon. If ocean warming were responsible for the CO2 increase, we should also observe an increase in atmospheric O2.
Nonspecialists will not easily be impressed by model calculations
and complex budgets that contain often large uncertainties. Moreover, I have seen dishonest skeptics
using "old hat" arguments such as ocean CO2 outgassing to refute the responsibility
of human activities in the recent CO2 increase and the forthcoming large global warming.
One crucial note about the global budget of inputs and outputs
that Weart should have stated: Known CO2 emissions from fossil fuels and deforestation
largely exceed (by about a factor of two) what remains in the atmosphere. Hence, if warming were
the cause of the CO2 increase, how would we account for the hundreds of gigatons of carbon
generated by human activity?
I was surprised by Spencer Weart's comments on my previous letter. I had explained that when floating
sea ice melts, the sea level would actually go down and not up, as the general public has been led to
believe. I further stated that the Vostok and Dome-C ice cores from Antarctica show that the main
Antarctic ice mass has not melted in the past 730 000 years. That evidence would seem to remove
most of the planet's ice as a possible factor in coastal flooding in the event of global warming.
Instead of addressing those statements, Weart chose to
introduce a completely different situation, namely what happens when the ocean's mean temperature
risessomething I never mentioned.
Of course, warming the ocean could raise the sea level due
to expansion, as evidently happens during El Niño events, but no one suggests that ocean warming
could raise ocean levels by tens of meters and flood low-lying areas. Increased evaporation has
apparently lowered ocean levels in some warmed areas.
Weart replies: A notable feature of climate science is that most of its issues, unlike most questions
in physics, involve evidence and arguments that are scattered among many specialties. People
in one specialty are rarely familiar with the details of evidence from another, and the public grasps
still less. A letter in this space of a few centimeters must miss a lot, and both letter writers are
correct that I failed to go into details of serious concernfor example, I mentioned carbon
isotopes only in passing. I thank Edouard Bard for rightly pointing out that the Suess effect was
historically the most important demonstration that human activity is rapidly adding CO2
to the atmosphere. His letter offers this and other good ways to answer some questions raised by
uninformed people who can grasp physics arguments.
George Smith's concerns are among many issues in the study
of sea-level rise, a subject that scientists have discussed for half a century without reaching
consensus on all points. Still, nearly all students of the topic have come to agree that the rise
in the next couple of centuries will almost certainly be greater than zero, with a significant component
due to thermal expansion; the expansion, in fact, is the surest thing in the whole business. Experts
have also long agreed, as Smith rightly says, that the main Antarctic ice dome will not play a significant
role in the next few centuries. Still under discussion is a possible large component of future sea-level
rise caused by the slow collapse of other ice sheetsWest Antarctica and Greenland. In the
last five years, new field evidence has caused some experts to change their opinion of such a collapse
from "highly unlikely, scarcely worth worrying about," to "possible, worth seriously worrying
about." (For history and references, see http://www.aip.org/history/climate/floods.htm,
end of page.)