Many people have spent a lot of time
trying to show that much of our recent climate change is just natural.
So far, these studies have died as fast as they’ve been born.
A recent attempt was made to liken our
climate to fans in a stadium, you know those annoying “waves” that fans
make? Could our climate just be like that? Not likely; let me explain.
The so-called “stadium wave”, as
described by the scientists who coined the phrase, is “a hypothesized
multi-decadally varying climate signal that propagates across the
Northern Hemisphere.” It is basically a signal that travels throughout
the Earth’s climate, in the ocean and atmosphere, and can be sensed by
measurements. From author Dr. Marcia Wyatt’s own website, you can find a
more detailed description.
So, could our recent changes in climate
be somehow associated with these “waves”? The great thing about science
is these hypotheses can be checked. In fact, a very recent study did
just that and found the stadium wave hypothesis lacking.
In the study, authors Michael Mann, Byron
Steinman, and Sonya Miller estimate the low-frequency internal
variability of the Northern Hemisphere (the stadium waves) by evaluating
observed signals. These observations include the impacts of both forced
(mainly human-caused) variations and natural variability (energy
naturally “sloshing around” the Earth). They generated a set of
alternative histories based on the statistics of past observations to
show that the recent Northern Hemisphere variations are within the range
of expected uncertainty.
The authors then show that past analyses
which have been used to estimate internal variability have failed to
find appropriate variability when it was known ahead of time. These
methods errantly show natural variability which is too high and which
has a biased phase. As a result, the claims of stadium waves are made
based on an incorrectly methodology; they are likely an “artifact of
this flawed procedure.”
To get into the weeds a bit, the primary
natural fluctuation that was focused on is called the Atlantic
Multi-decadal Oscillation (AMO for short). The recent studies promoting
large natural climate variability deduced the AMO by detrending the time
series of North Atlantic sea surface temperatures, and then
interpreting the left-over low-frequency variation as the AMO. This
means they removed a linear variation. Prior works (here and here for
instance) have shown that this method causes artifacts to appear. For
instance, if you aren’t careful, you might conclude that atmospheric
aerosol cooling was actually a natural climate fluctuation. That is, you
might confuse human-caused cooling effects with natural fluctuations.
The researchers Mann, Steinman and
Miller, further showed that the detrended AMO method yields a climatic
variability that is approximately twice as large as prior estimates and
outside the 95% error range. They also found that the detrending method
got the timing wrong (biasing error in the phase). They compared the
true AMO signal and the detrended AMO signal. The detrended signals have
amplitudes which are too large by a factor of 2 and they are all in
phase. As the authors write, this suggests, “an artifact of the common
forced signal masquerading as coherent low-frequency noise.”
As I’ve written about before, studies
which purport to show that significant recent climate variability is
just natural are taken seriously by the scientific community. In fact, I
think we would all like to conclude that the current climate change is
just natural. During the course of scientific investigation, these
claims are given their fair hearing. Unfortunately, they have not borne
scientific scrutiny well. Distinguished Professor of meteorology Michael
E. Mann told me.
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