| February
17, 2005
Scripps Researchers Find Clear Evidence Of
Human-Produced Warming In World’s Oceans
Climate warming likely to impact water resources
in regions around the globe
By Mario Aguilera
Scientists at
Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California,
San Diego, and their colleagues have produced the first clear
evidence of human-produced warming in the world’s oceans,
a finding they say removes much of the uncertainty associated
with debates about global warming.
In a new study conducted
with colleagues at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s
Program for Climate Model Diagnosis and Intercomparison (PCMDI),
Tim Barnett and David Pierce of Scripps Institution used a combination
of computer models and real-world “observed” data
to capture signals of the penetration of greenhouse gas-influenced
warming in the oceans. The authors make the case that their
results clearly indicate that the warming is produced anthropogenically,
or by human activities.
“This is perhaps
the most compelling evidence yet that global warming is happening
right now and it shows that we can successfully simulate its
past and likely future evolution,” said Tim Barnett, a
research marine physicist in the Climate Research Division at
Scripps. Barnett says he was “stunned” by the results
because the computer models reproduced the penetration of the
warming signal in all the oceans. “The statistical significance
of these results is far too strong to be merely dismissed and
should wipe out much of the uncertainty about the reality of
global warming.”
At a news briefing
and symposium presentation during the 2005 American Association
for the Advancement of Science annual meeting in Washington,
D.C., Barnett will discuss the details of the study and explain
why the results hold implications for millions of people in
the near future.
According to Barnett,
the climate mechanisms behind the ocean study will produce broad-scale
changes across the atmosphere and land. In the decades immediately
ahead, the changes will be felt in regional water supplies,
including areas impacted by accelerated glacier melting in the
South American Andes and in western China, putting millions
of people at risk without adequate summertime water.
Similarly, recent research
by Barnett and his colleagues with the Accelerated Climate Prediction
Initiative analyzed climate warming impacts on the western United
States using one of the models involved in the new study. The
earlier study concluded that climate warming will likely alter
western snow pack resources and the region’s hydrological
cycle, posing a water crisis in the western U.S. within 20 years.
“The new ocean
study, taken together with the numerous validations of the same
models in the atmosphere, portends far broader changes,”
said Barnett. “Other parts of the world will face similar
problems to those expected—and being observed now—in
the western U.S. The skill demonstrated by the climate models
in handling the changing planetary heat budget suggests that
these scenarios have a high enough probability of actually happening
that they need to be taken seriously by decision makers.”

In the new study, Barnett
and his colleagues used computer models of climate to calculate
human-produced warming over the last 40 years in the world’s
oceans. In all of the ocean basins, the warming signal found
in the upper 700 meters predicted by the models corresponded
to the measurements obtained at sea with confidence exceeding
95 percent. The correspondence was especially strong in the
upper 500 meters of the water column.
It is this high degree
of visual agreement and statistical significance that leads
Barnett to conclude that the warming is the product of human
influence. Efforts to explain the ocean changes through naturally
occurring variations in the climate or external forces—
such as solar or volcanic factors—did not come close to
reproducing the observed warming.
In addition to Barnett
and Pierce, coauthors of the study include Krishna Achutarao,
Peter Gleckler and Benjamin Santer of Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory.
The global climate
models used in the study included the Parallel Climate Model
from the National Center for Atmospheric Research and Department
of Energy (DOE) and the HadCM3 from the Hadley Centre (United
Kingdom). The sharing of these model results made this study
possible, says Barnett. The work was a contribution on behalf
of the International Detection and Attribution Group (IDAG),
which is sponsored by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s
(NOAA) Climate Change Data Detection Program, a jointly funded
NOAA and DOE program. Additional support was provided by DOE
through support of PCMDI and Scripps.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
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