We have already reported on this
story, but Lawrence
goes a bit into the history of it all.
We now have a compelling model for abrupt global cooling that fits the
data and requires little in terms of earthly contribution which is wonderful
news.` Please note that I am not calling
this a model for global warming. Left on
its own and maintaining the output experienced over the past two decades, the
earth will warm up to a degree warmer than the present over the next few years.
The problem only begins when the
solar activity drops of as usually expressed in a collapse in sunspot activity
and a reduction in the strength of the solar magnetic field allowing a jump in
cosmic rays. That is when the Rhine and
the Hudson and the Thames
freeze over. As I have posted in the
past, this cycle seems to be a thousand years long and appears to be repeated in the scant
records available over five thousand years.
What we can now be comfortable
with is that we have a first class driver that is now proven to work on our
atmosphere in a manner that dwarfs CO2 guesses.
Lawrence Solomon Sep
2, 2011 – 8:16 PM ET | Last Updated: Sep 2, 2011 8:58 PM ET
CERN experiment overturns global-warming orthodoxy
The 20-year-long global warming debate is in its final stages, the
controversy having been settled over whether manmade causes such as carbon
dioxide or natural causes such as the Sun dominate climate change on Earth.
First, the global warming doomsayers lost the argument in the court of
public opinion — barely one-third of the U.S. public, for example, now
believes that human activity can lead to dangerous warming.
Then, the doomsayers lost the economic argument when attempts to
develop renewable energy proved utterly futile. The world is instead rapidly
developing its fossil fuels, recently discovered to be so plentiful that they
can meet mankind’s needs for centuries to come.
And now, the global warming doomsayers have lost their pretended monopoly on the official science. Their long-standing claim that only a scientific fringe denies the dominant role of humans — a claim that was never true — has ended. One of the world’s largest and most prestigious scientific organizations — more on that later — now formally opposes the IPCC’s official position that the Sun and other natural phenomena are all-but irrelevant to climate change.
And now, the global warming doomsayers have lost their pretended monopoly on the official science. Their long-standing claim that only a scientific fringe denies the dominant role of humans — a claim that was never true — has ended. One of the world’s largest and most prestigious scientific organizations — more on that later — now formally opposes the IPCC’s official position that the Sun and other natural phenomena are all-but irrelevant to climate change.
To understand the nature of the IPCC’s just-ended scientific
“monopoly,” place yourself in a meeting in Guangzhou , China
in 1992, shortly after the IPCC was created, involving 130 delegates from 47
countries. In comes the Danish delegation with exciting findings from Danish
scientists published just weeks earlier in the prestigious
journal Science, showing a blockbuster correlation between solar activity
and temperature on Earth. Not only did Science publish the findings,
to make sure no one could miss their significance, Science trumpeted the
findings in an accompanying article.
“Take a good look at the graph on this page, reproduced from a report
that appears on page 698. It’s giving climatologists goose
bumps,” Science’s accompanying article began. This “is the most
striking correlation ever found between climate and small variations in solar
activity — and the strongest suggestion ever of a casual link.” The
article, entitled Could the Sun Be Warming the Climate?, suggested that
the tables had now turned in the global-warming debate by including this
assertion from a prominent U.S.
scientist: “The burden of proof that something’s wrong [with the Danish
correlation] almost rests with the detractors.”
What does the IPCC decide at that Guangzhou
meeting when faced with this emphatic evidence that the Sun could be driving
climate? The IPCC outright refuses to consider the Danish findings, saying
it only has a mandate to investigate manmade causes of climate change. The IPCC
and its followers then spent some $80-billion over the next two decades trying
to establish that carbon dioxide and human activities explained climate change.
They came up empty-handed — they found not a scintilla of compelling
evidence, absolutely nothing, that could pin more than a dollop or two of
warming on human activities. All that the IPCC scientists have to show for
their efforts are endless computer models that don’t work — the models have not
only failed to predict the climate over the last 20 years, they can’t model the
past climate when they are run backwards.
While this 20-year dead-end research was turning up failure after
failure, the Danish science went from success to success. Geophysicist Eigil
Friis-Christensen, a co-author of the startling Science study,
continued his work with Henrik Svensmark and other Danish colleagues, making
more and more progress and hypothesizing the mechanism through which the Sun
heats and cools the planet. The answer could lie in the cosmic rays from
beyond the solar system that continually bombard Earth, they surmised.
Their theory was quite straightforward: The cosmic rays seed clouds.
When the cloud cover is great, the Earth tends to cool; when the cloud cover
dissipates, the Earth tends to warm. And why does the cloud cover vary? Here
the role of the Sun comes to play.
When the Sun is especially strong, its magnetic field tends to push the
cosmic rays away from Earth, preventing clouds from forming and leading to a
hotter planet. Likewise, when activity on the Sun weakens, so too does its
magnetic field, allowing more clouds to form and leading to a cooler planet.
“You’ll never prove cosmic rays can seed clouds,” the IPCC
establishment retorted, and embarked on a smear campaign to discredit the
Danes. The Danes were accused, falsely, of having made arithmetic errors, of
having mishandling data, even of having fabricated data.
But the Danes persevered. In 2006 they built a reaction chamber at
the Danish National Space Centre, filled it with gases that approximated the
composition of the lower atmosphere, added ultraviolet rays to mimic the rays
of the Sun, and presto — the chamber soon filled with a vast number of floating
microscopic droplets! These were ultra-small clusters of sulphuric acid and
water molecules — the building blocks for cloud condensation nuclei — that had
been catalyzed by the electrons released by the cosmic rays. “We were amazed by
the speed and efficiency with which the electrons do their work,” Svensmark
remarked of his breakthrough.
The scientists inside the IPCC bubble again discredited and discounted
the Danes’ findings, using the authority of the IPCC, a United Nations agency
with representation from the nations of the world, to trump the findings from
tiny Denmark .
But to their dismay, the IPCC — less a scientific body than a lobbying
organization — was itself soon trumped by the European Organization for Nuclear
Research, or CERN, a true scientific agency involving 60 countries and 8,000
scientists at more than 600 universities and national laboratories. CERN, which
is best known for having built the Large Hadron Collider — a
multi-billion-dollar instrument that collides subatomic particles head-on at
very high energy to recreate the conditions just after the Big Bang — decided
to build a Cadillac version of the Danish chamber. It did, releasing the
results last week and validating Danish findings that point to the role of
cosmic rays in seeding clouds. In doing so, it also buried future talk of
carbon dioxide as a significant driver of climate change. For good measure, CERN
also notes that independent satellite evidence points to the effect of cosmic
rays on clouds.
Because of these and other discoveries, “climate models will need to be
substantially revised,” CERN says, in its study and supplementary materials
that mention various avenues worth exploring but carbon dioxide not once. Much
more work will need to be done — CERN is now hot on the trail for what it
believes is a missing ingredient in its recipe for the lower atmosphere, for
example, and the Danes and others are also looking to the heavens, rather than
to our coal plants and SUVs, in their quest to unlock the mysteries of climate
change. As the lead author of the CERN study puts it, there is “strong
evidence” that the Sun affects the climate through some mechanism, and “a
cosmic ray influence on clouds is a leading candidate.” CO2 is not.
Financial Post
Lawrence Solomon is executive director of Energy Probe and Urban Renaissance Institute and author of The Deniers.
For CERN’s one-page description of the significance of its project,
click here.
1 comment:
If this article is not a lie, then it is actually very close to it.
Here is what the scientists who did the cloud (NON) seeding experiment said:
http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110824/full/news.2011.504.html
Wherein the actual scientist conducting the CERN experiment says:
Early results seem to indicate that cosmic rays do cause a change. The high-energy protons seemed to enhance the production of nanometre-sized particles from the gaseous atmosphere by more than a factor of ten. But, Kirkby adds, those particles are far too small to serve as seeds for clouds. "At the moment, it actually says nothing about a possible cosmic-ray effect on clouds and climate, but it's a very important first step," he says.
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