CLOUDS APPEAR TO BE BIG, BAD PLAYER IN GLOBAL WARMING
Rick Kerr, Science, July 24, 2009
Climate
researchers have long viewed clouds' reaction to greenhouse warming as
the key to understanding the world's climatic fate. As rising carbon
dioxide strengthens the greenhouse, will some clouds thicken and
spread, shading the planet and tempering the warming? Or will they thin
and shrink, letting in more
sunshine to amplify the warming? The first reliable analysis of cloud
behavior over past decades suggests -- but falls short of proving --
that clouds are strongly amplifying the warming. If that's true, then
almost all climate models have got it wrong.
The new study
"confirms with observations that low clouds are critical for the
climate system's response," says climate modeler Gerald Meehl of the
National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. But
"it's really a challenge for models" to simulate that response, he
adds. If real-world cloud amplification works the way the study
indicates, researchers say, global warming could be even worse than the
typical model predicts.
Clouds
have been a climate conundrum in part because no one has been keeping
an eye on them the way the weatherman has been recording temperature
for more than a century. On page 460, climate researcher Amy Clement of
the University of Miami in Florida and colleagues consider the two
best, longterm records of cloud behavior over a rectangle of ocean that
nearly spans the subtropics between Hawaii and Mexico. Other
researchers had compiled one of the records from eyeball estimates of
cloud cover made by mariners who passed through the region from 1952
to 2006. The other record, which runs from 1984 to 2005, came from
satellite measurements, which Clement and her colleagues adjusted to
account for calibration shifts from one satellite to the next.
Between
them, the observations recorded the two major climate shifts that
roiled the North Pacific during the periods they covered. In a warming
episode that started around 1976, the ship-based data showed that cloud
cover -- especially low-altitude cloud layers -- decreased in the study
area as ocean temperatures rose and atmospheric pressure fell. One
interpretation, the researchers say, is that the warming
ocean was transferring heat to the overlying atmosphere, thinning out
the lowlying clouds to let in more sunlight that further warmed the
ocean. That's a positive or amplifying feedback. During a cooling event
in the late 1990s, both
data
sets recorded just the opposite changes -- exactly what would happen if
the same amplifying process were operating in reverse. "All of the
elements of a positive feedback are there," Clement says.
Even
so, positive low-cloud feedback was only a supposition until the group
looked at another sort of satellite measurement of the second natural
climate shift. That showed that when decreasing cloud cover let the sun
leak through, the additional solar heating was large enough to account
for much of the ocean warming. A
positive feedback operating in the decades-long climate shifts "is real," Clement concludes.
And
other studies link cloud changes in the northeasterntropical Pacific to
atmospheric changes across the Pacific. But is such a feedback actually working
to amplify global warming? To get some indication, Clement and her
colleagues checked the archives of a study in which the international
Coupled Model Intercomparison Project compared the results of 18 global
climate models
run
under standardized conditions. Clement and her colleagues tested
whether each model was properly simulating each element of the positive
cloud feedback they had found in the northeastern Pacific.
When the results were in, only two models showed low clouds producing a positive feedback
as observed. One of them stood out from the pack. The HadGEM1 model
from the U.K. Met Office's Hadley Center in Exeter produced patterns of
warming and circulation changes during greenhouse warming that
resembled those of all 18 models averaged together -- the best guide
available. The group also concluded that HadGEM1's simulation of
meteorological processes in the lowermost kilometer or two of the
atmosphere --where the key low-lying clouds reside -- is particularly
realistic.
As it happens, the HadGEM1 model is among the most sensitive of the 18 models to added
greenhouse gases. When carbon dioxide is doubled, the model warms the
world by 4.4°C; the median of the models for a doubling is 3.1°C. That
gap raises a red flag for Clement. "We tend to focus on the middle of
the range of model projections and ignore the extremes," she says. "I
think it does suggest serious consideration should be given to the
upper end of the range."
Climate
researchers agree that Clement and her colleagues may be on to
something. "There's been a gradual recognition that this rather boring
type of [low-level] cloud is important in the climate system," says
climate researcher David Randall of Colorado State University, Fort
Collins. "They make a good case that in [decadal] variability there is
a positive feedback. The leap is that the same feedback would operate
in global climate change."
The
study tends to support an important role for marine low clouds in
amplifying global warming, he says, but it doesn't prove it. One clear
contribution of the study, Randall says, is to point the way toward
more reliable climate models. The paper "is definitely a reasonable
approach to deciding which models to pay the most attention to," he
says. In its previous international assessments, Randall notes,
the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change assumed that all models are
created equal. "I think we have to get away from that."
-- RICHARD A. KERR (Science Magazine)