Solar Fluctuations and Global Warming?

Book excerpt from Spencer Weart’s excellent The Discovery of Global Warming.

Table of Contents at the webpages of the American Institute of Physics:
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/index.html#contents

Summary of chapter on the Sun’s role in setting climate on Earth:
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/solar.htm

Chapter summary: Since it is the Sun’s energy that drives the
weather system, scientists naturally wondered whether they might
connect climate changes with solar variations. Yet the Sun seemed to
be stable over the timescale of human lifetimes. Attempts to discover
cyclic variations in weather and connect them with the 11-year
sunspot cycle, or other possible solar cycles ranging up to a few
centuries long, gave results that were ambiguous at best. These
attempts got a well-deserved bad reputation. Jack Eddy overcame this
with a 1976 study that demonstrated that irregular variations in
solar surface activity, a few centuries long, were connected with
major climate shifts. The mechanism remained uncertain, but plausible
candidates emerged. The next crucial question was whether a rise in
the Sun’s activity could explain the global warming seen in the 20th
century? By the 1990s, there was a tentative answer: minor solar
variations could indeed have been partly responsible for some past
fluctuations… but future warming from the rise in greenhouse gases
would far outweigh any solar effects.

Read the whole chapter
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/solar.htm

Check out the table of contents of the whole book:
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/index.html#contents

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http://www.aip.org/history/climate/solar.htm

“The consensus of most scientists, arduously
hammered out in a series of international
workshops, flatly rejected the argument that the
global warming of the 1990s could be dismissed as
a mere effect of changes on the Sun. The pioneer
of historical solar influences, Jack Eddy, wrote
that if the Sun were “the only agent of climatic
change, we would live in a world where the mean
global surface temperature varied, in any
century, through limits of at most about 0.5°C.”

Similarly, in 2004 when a group of scientists
published evidence that the solar activity of the
20th century had been unusually high, they
nevertheless concluded that “even under the
extreme assumption that the Sun was responsible
for all the global warming prior to 1970, at most
30% of the strong warming since then can be of
solar origin.” When Foukal reviewed the question
in 2006, he agreed that there was no good
evidence that the Sun had played a role in any
climate change back to the Little Ice Age.
(Meanwhile, new historical evidence suggested
that the cold of the early modern centuries might
have been partly due to a spate of volcanic
eruptions.)(57a)

“Some experts persevered in arguing that slight
solar changes (which they thought they detected
in the satellite record) had driven the
extraordinary warming since the 1970s. Most
scientists expected that these correlations would
follow the pattern of every other subtle
solar-climate correlation that anyone had
reported over the past century – fated to be
disproved by the next decade or two of data. A
few scientists persevered in studying possible
mechanisms, for example devising experiments that
they hoped would show how cosmic rays could
affect climate. Yet even if somebody did finally
manage to show an influence on climate from
changes in the Sun, it could not be very great.
Greenhouse warming was bound to swamp any solar
effects as the quantities of the gases in the
atmosphere soared ever higher. Willson, the
leader of the satellite experts, explained that
in the future,”solar forcing could be
significant, but not dominant.”(58*)”

http://www.aip.org/history/climate/solar.htm

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Obituary: Dr. Burt Bolin, Pioneer Climate Scientist

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“The greatest disturbances of which we are aware are
those now being introduced by man himself. Since his
tampering with the biological and geochemical balances
may ultimately prove injurious — even fatal — to himself,
he must understand them better than today.”

Bert Bolin. “The Carbon Cycle.”
Scientific American, September 1970
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NATURE
Vol 451
7 February 2008

OBITUARY
Bert Bolin (1925-2008)
Pioneering climate scientist and communicator.

As the first chair of the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC), and one of the first
scientists to understand the environmental impact
of carbon dioxide produced by human activities,
Bert Bolin left an indelible mark. A pioneer of
climate science, he died in Stockholm on 30
December 2007, aged 82.

Bolin was born in Nyköping, Sweden, on 15 May
1925. He completed his PhD at the University of
Stockholm in 1956, and was within five years
professor of meteorology there – a post he held
until his retirement in 1990. During that time,
he published more than 160 papers related to the
meteorology and chemistry of the atmosphere,
contributing to an improved understanding of
numerical weather models and acid deposition.

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Big Bio-Fuel Industry A Climate Bust!

Science / www.sciencexpress.org / 7 February 2008 /

Use of U.S. Croplands for Biofuels Increases Greenhouse Gases Through
Emissions from Land Use Change
Timothy Searchinger, Ralph Heimlich, R. A. Houghton, Fengxia Dong,
Amani Elobeid, Jacinto Fabiosa, Simla Tokgoz,Dermot Hayes, Tun-Hsiang
Yu

Abstract
Most prior studies have found that substituting biofuels for gasoline
will reduce greenhouse gases because biofuels sequester carbon
through the growth of the feedstock. These analyses have failed to
count the carbon emissions that occur as farmers worldwide respond to
higher prices and convert forest and grassland to new cropland to
replace the grain (or cropland) diverted to biofuels. Using a
worldwide agricultural model to estimate emissions from land use
change, we found that corn-based ethanol, instead of producing a 20%
savings, nearly doubles greenhouse emissions over 30 years and
increases greenhouse gases for 167 years. Biofuels from switchgrass,
if grown on U.S. corn lands, increase emissions by 50%. This result
raises concerns about large biofuel mandates
and highlights the value of using waste products.

Land Clearing and the Biofuel Carbon Debt
Joseph Fargione, Jason Hill, David Tilman, Stephen Polasky, Peter Hawthorne

Abstract
Increasing energy use, climate change, and carbon dioxide (CO2)
emissions from fossil fuels make switching to low-carbon fuels a high
priority. Biofuels are a potential low-carbon energy source, but
whether biofuels offer carbon savings depends on how they are
produced. Converting rainforests, peatlands, savannas, or grasslands
to produce food-based biofuels in Brazil, Southeast Asia, and the
United States creates a ‘biofuel carbon debt’ by releasing 17 to 420
times more CO2 than the annual greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions these
biofuels provide by displacing fossil fuels. In contrast, biofuels
made from waste biomass or from biomass grown on abandoned
agricultural lands planted with perennials incur little or no carbon
debt and offer immediate and sustained GHG advantages.

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Proposed Nuke Mining Near Grand Canyon, Native Lands

Western Shoshone Defense Project

So-Ho-Bi (South Fork) office:

775-744-2565 (fax and phone)

Main office:

P.O. Box 211308

Crescent Valley, NV  89821

Newe Sogobi

775-468-0230

775-468-0237 (fax)

Uranium Exploration Near Grand Canyon

By FELICITY BARRINGER
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/felicity_barri
nger/index.html?inline=nyt-per>

Published: February 7, 2008

With minimal public notice and no formal environmental review, the Forest
Service has approved a permit allowing a British mining company to explore
for uranium just outside Grand Canyon National Park, less than three miles
from a popular lookout over the canyon’s southern rim.

If the exploration finds rich uranium deposits, it could lead to the first
mines near the canyon since the price of uranium ore plummeted nearly two
decades ago. A sharp increase in uranium prices over the past three years
has led individuals to stake thousands of mining claims in the Southwest,
including more than 1,000 in the Kaibab National Forest, near the Grand
Canyon.

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