Guest post by Steven Goddard

In his recent article, NSIDC’s Dr. Meier answered Question #9 “Are the models capable of projecting climate changes for 100 years?” with a coin flipping example.

However, Willis claims that such a projection is not possible because climate must be more complex than weather. How can a more complex situation be modeled more easily and accurately than a simpler situation? Let me answer that with a couple more questions:

1. You are given the opportunity to bet on a coin flip. Heads you win a million dollars. Tails you die. You are assured that it is a completely fair and unbiased coin. Would you take the bet? I certainly wouldn’t, as much as it’d be nice to have a million dollars. 2. You are given the opportunity to bet on 10000 coin flips. If heads comes up between 4000 and 6000 times, you win a million dollars. If heads comes up less than 4000 or more than 6000 times, you die. Again, you are assured that the coin is completely fair and unbiased. Would you take this bet? I think I would.

Dr. Meier is correct that his coin flip bet is safe. I ran 100,000 iterations of 10,000 simulated random coin flips, which created the frequency distribution seen below.

The chances of getting less than 4,000 or greater than 6,000 heads are essentially zero. However, this is not an appropriate analogy for GCMs. The coin flip analogy assumes that each iteration is independent of all others, which is not the case with climate.

[Note: Originally I used Microsoft’s random number generator, which isn’t the best, as you can see below. The above plot which I added within an hour after the first post was made uses the gnu rand() function which generates a much better looking Gaussian.]

Climate feedback is at the core of Hansen’s catastrophic global warming argument. Climate feedback is based on the idea that today’s weather is affected by yesterday’s weather, and this year’s climate is dependent on last year. For example, climate models (incorrectly) forecast that Arctic ice would decrease between 2007 and 2010. This would have caused a loss of albedo and led to more absorption of incoming short wave radiation – a critical calculation. Thus climate model runs in 2007 also incorrectly forecast the radiative energy balance in 2010. And that error cascaded into future year calculations. Same argument can be made for cloud cover, snow cover, ocean temperatures, etc. Each year and each day affects the next. If 2010 calculations are wrong, then 2011 and 2100 calculations will also be incorrect.

Because of feedback, climate models are necessarily iterative. NCAR needs a $500 million supercomputer to do very long iterative runs decades into the future. It isn’t reasonable to claim both independence (randomness) and dependence (feedback.) Climate model errors compound through successive iterations, rather than correct. How could they correct?

Speaking of Arctic ice cover and albedo, the sun is starting to get high in the sky in the Arctic, and ice extent is essentially unchanged from 30 years ago. How does this affect climate calculations?

Source: Cryosphere Today

GCMs are similar to weather models, with added parameters for factors which may change over time – like atmospheric composition, changes in sea surface temperatures, changes in ice cover, etc. We know that weather models are very accurate for about three days, and then quickly break down due to chaos. There is little reason to believe that climate models will do any better through successive iterations. The claim is that the errors average out over time and produce a regionally correct forecast, even if incorrect for a specific location.

A good example of how inaccurate climate forecasts are, is shown in the two images below. NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center issued a long range forecast for the past winter in February, 2009. Brown and orange represents above normal temperatures, and as you can see they got most of the US backwards.

NOAA CPC’s long range forecast for winter 2009-2010

NOAA’s reported results for winter 2009-2010

The UK Met Office seasonal forecasts have also been notoriously poor, culminating in their forecast of a warm winter in 2009-2010.

The Met Office has now admitted to BBC News that its annual global mean forecast predicted temperatures higher than actual temperatures for nine years out of the last 10.

The Met Office climate models forecast declining Antarctic sea ice, which is the opposite of what has been observed.

Met Office sea ice forecast

NSIDC’s observed increase in Antarctic sea ice

Conclusion : I don’t see much theoretical or empirical evidence that climate models produce meaningful information about the climate in 100 years.

However, Willis claims that such a projection is not possible because climate must be more complex than weather. How can a more complex situation be modeled more easily and accurately than a simpler situation? Let me answer that with a couple more questions:1. You are given the opportunity to bet on a coin flip. Heads you win a million dollars. Tails you die. You are assured that it is a completely fair and unbiased coin. Would you take the bet? I certainly wouldn’t, as much as it’d be nice to have a million dollars.2. You are given the opportunity to bet on 10000 coin flips. If heads comes up between 4000 and 6000 times, you win a million dollars. If heads comes up less than 4000 or more than 6000 times, you die. Again, you are assured that the coin is completely fair and unbiased. Would you take this bet? I think I would.

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