A rival model of ‘climate change’ part 1

This week we launch a new series exploring a rival theory of global warming proposed by Professor Qing-Bin Lu of the University of Waterloo Department of Physics here in Canada

Lu believes that 20th and 21st century ‘climate change’ was man made, but not from CO2 emissions.

The culprit, he argues in a 2023 paper, was another class of ‘greenhouse gases’ called ‘halo-GHG’s, which climate models do allow to play a role in warming but they assume it’s small compared to CO2, whereas Lu’s work on the physics of halo-GHGs convinced him that the reverse was true, that the interactions of cosmic rays and electrons with ‘halo-GHG’s cause relatively large climatic effects, which he calls the CRE model.

By comparison, in his estimation, CO2 hardly matters. And it’s a theory that’s relatively easy to test empirically because halo-GHGs including the famous CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) used to be used as refrigerants and foam aerators until it was discovered they could migrate up into the stratosphere and damage the ozone layer which protects us from harmful ultraviolet radiation, so the 1987 Montreal Protocol was signed that banned their use globally.

And the Protocol worked, so halo-GHGs began declining while CO2 kept increasing. And since they are trending in different directions, we can now begin to figure out which matters more. Lu has proposed six indicators that we need to examine.

This week we look at #1, the question of Outgoing Longwave Radiation or OLR at the top of the atmosphere.

Before we get to that indicator, we need to review some principles. Even if the term halo-GHGs isn’t familiar you’ve heard of the most famous example, those CFCs that were blamed back in the 1980s for creating ‘holes’ in the ozone layer and exposing people to too much UV radiation leading to sunburns and skin cancer.

But as is so often the case the metaphors created a lot of inaccurate pictures in peoples’ heads.

There isn’t an ozone “layer” separate from the rest of the atmosphere and working as a shield unless it gets a hole torn in it. Instead that gas (O3, itself also a greenhouse gas and ironically a dangerous pollutant at ground level though a helpful protection higher up) is present in varying concentrations from the surface to the top of the stratosphere.

And so of course there aren’t “holes,” there are areas with more or less of it mixed in with all the other gases that make up the atmosphere including, predominantly, nitrogen (78.08 percent, with 20.95 percent oxygen, 0.93 percent argon and everything else a trace although these numbers from NASA exclude water vapour, at 0.25 percent).

During the “ozone hole” scare the maximum reduction in ozone concentration happened over Antarctica which, if it had to happen anywhere, was as good a place as any because even in the summer there is so little sunshine and so few people that the risk of widespread sunburn was minimal.

Another important point is that halo-GHGs are widely considered to have strong greenhouse properties. The reason conventional models treat them as minor is that they’re pretty rare in the atmosphere even compared to CO2’s roughly 400 parts per million.

But unlike CO2 they aren’t “crowded out” by water vapour.

For a gas to have a greenhouse effect its molecules need to have bands in the infrared spectrum where they can absorb energy. And water vapour has a whole lot of those, occupying most of the spectrum in fact, so the other GHGs only matter if they have bands to themselves.

It’s comparable to a window much of which has been painted over with black paint (water vapour), so if you add a patch of red paint (another GHG) to part of the black area it doesn’t make it any harder to see through because it’s already opaque.

Now, CO2 does absorb in several bands, but only one tiny one isn’t also occupied by water vapour, whereas halo-GHGs have wide bands. Moreover, Lu argues, CO2 levels are already high enough that adding more doesn’t do much warming, whereas changes in the halo-GHGs do have a big effect, according to his analysis and that of many other studies he cites.

If he’s right, it’s very good news for any alarmists who don’t actually like being alarmed. Because of the Montreal Protocol, the levels of halo-GHGs in the atmosphere began to level off in the 1990s and their “radiative forcing” (in common parlance “greenhouse”) effect has slowed down.

And it could happen not only because some politicians made high-sounding pledges, but because there were a range of cheap, reliable alternatives to CFCs in particular. CO2, by contrast, necessarily comes from burning ‘fossil fuels’ and so far no one has figured out a cheap and reliable substitute for them.

So CO2 keeps going up and according to the IPCC so does the radiative forcing from it. If they’re wrong, and CO2 is mostly harmless while easily eliminated gases are dangerous, the crisis suddenly becomes easy to solve with no painful, controversial and uncertain “green transition”.

If. But how do we tell? It’s often easy to propose a plausible theory and a lot harder to find reliable evidence. And here Lu proposes six markers for us to examine of which the first, finally, is the measure of the greenhouse effect itself, namely outgoing long-wave radiation (OLR) from the top of the atmosphere.

A critical element of real global warming theory, as opposed to the childish cartoons of a space blanket way up at the edge of the sky, is that as GHG levels rise infrared energy radiating back from the Earth after incoming visible and UV light warmed it gets absorbed in the relevant bands of the spectrum by various GHGs and then scattered, so less gets back out into space at those frequencies than would with fewer or no such gases.

OK, says Lu, let’s look. Is OLR actually decreasing as CO2 rises, and is it decreasing in the specific bandwidth where CO2 operates and water vapour does not?

He reports on three satellite studies using satellite data covering 1970-1997 that measured changes in the OLR from the top of the atmosphere. He charts their findings relative to climate model predictions as follows, with the black line being observed data and the red one model predictions:

The horizontal axis shows the frequency of the energy from low to high (sort of like bass to treble) across the infrared part of the spectrum (so relative bass to treble in what is all bass compared to visible light).

The vertical axis shows changes in radiation as measured in units called “brightness temperature” here denoted delta T. The black line shows the observed data. If the line is above zero that means there was an increase in outgoing radiation at that frequency between 1970 and 1997, while if it is below zero there was a decrease.

The unique absorption band of CO2, the orthodox main culprit in man-made global warming, is at around 650 on the horizontal axis. And naturally from 600 to 700 cm the red line showing model predictions is below zero.

Since atmospheric CO2 levels rose so much over that time the energy escaping to space in those bands should have gone down, according to the models and the theory they embody and uphold. Indeed it must have. But it didn’t.

The black line showing actual empirical observation of data is above zero, meaning radiation escaping in that part of the spectrum actually went up. Which means, fairly directly, that increased CO2 forcing could not have played a role in climatic changes during that time because CO2 forcing did not increase.

By contrast with CO2, halo-GHGs are active in a broad band in the 800-1,300 region, where the models predict little or no overall change and the data show an increase at the lower end from 800 to 1,000 or so, then nothing from there to 1,200 and a drop from 1,200 to 1,300.

However, as we will learn, that pattern over the period from 1970 and 1997 that these charts combine (there is no time axis) matches the pattern where during this period they first increased, depleting ozone as they did, and then decreased while ozone recovered.

The specific fingerprints of halo-GHGs will become clearer as we go through the remaining five key indicators in the weeks to come.

See more here climatediscussionnexus

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Comments (6)

  • Avatar

    Wisenox

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    I read an article this morning stating that a small AI data center uses as much electricity as 7 million laptops running 8 hours a day.

    They regulate carbon, you get trashy renewables, and they use the grid. Control carbon and you control the future.

    Ever wonder why there are blackouts occurring? Maybe electricity is being diverted away from the people in some kind of ‘streaming war’ like South Park’s special.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Herb Rose

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    “Experts” repeat what other “experts” say without any thought so, eventually, as in this case, they are spewing utter nonsense.
    Argon is confined to the troposphere because with a molecular weight of 40 the energy in the troposphere cannot overcome gravity and spread it unto the upper atmosphere. Yet here he is saying that CFC with molecular weights in the hundreds are getting into the upper atmosphere and destroying ozone molecule (which are extremely unstable).
    Ozone is formed in the upper atmosphere because uv light coming from the sun splits oxygen molecules into oxygen atoms. Above the stratosphere these oxygen atoms combine with nitrogen molecules to form N-O molecules. while in the stratosphere the oxygen molecules become dense enough so oxygen atoms can combine with oxygen molecules to form ozone.
    The level of ozone in the “ozone layer” is 10 ppm and yet they believe that these few molecules can block over 90% of the uv coming from the sun. Instead of buying expensive shades to block visible light they should blacken 1 out of ever 100,000 square cm of window and block over 90% of the visible light from coming through the glass.
    The only reason CFC s are found in the atmosphere is because they are used as fuel in satellites to change orbits and fall back to the surface like all heavy molecules. These molecules are extremely stable and are not oxidized by the active oxygen compounds in the upper atmosphere.
    The whole ozone threat was created by Dupont because their FREON patents were expiring, so to preserve their market they needed to eliminate it, in or to sell the more expensive replacements they had patents on.
    If this professor believes the Earth is warming the Grand Solar Minimum we are entering will come as a shock. Fortunately he probably has tenure due to all the similar idiotic papers he has published and will not have to face any consequences for perpetuating this utter bullshit.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    crackpot

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    Wow. Two hoaxes in one, plus a new magic word to gaslight those with low verbal IQ.

    There is no such thing as a “greenhouse gas effect.” A clear violation of the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics, if the “back-radiative forcing” behind it were true you would burn your face with your own reflection in the mirror.

    The ozone hole over the Antarctic appears to be healing, but saying that’s due to banning CFCs is like taking credit for the sun rising. First of all, the hole was observed well before the widespread use of air conditioning. Second, CFCs do affect ozone in a lab on the ground, but they’re four times heavier than air so can’t make it up to ozone in the stratosphere. What can inject ozone-depleting chemicals that high? Active volcanos, like Mt Erebus in Antarctica. Banning CFCs made DuPont richer replacing all that Freon, and made the world poorer due to the crappy refridgerants they replaced it with.

    The left grabs more and more control over our lives with these enviro scares, fattening soulless corporate wallets in the process, and they can’t do it without cover from grifters like this at universities.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Charles Higley

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    I call BS on all of this as no gas at a colder temperature in the upper troposphere can warm the surface—it’s simple thermodynamics. No gas at any concentration can do this, period.

    The CFC ozone fiasco was perpetrated by a funded scientist who admitted the lie many years later after the patent of the new refrigerant was up.

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Herb Rose

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      Hi Charles,
      The hottest part of the atmosphere is the thermosphere with a temperature of 900 C to 2000 C.. It is not being heated by the surface of the Earth. There are very few molecules there and that energy is being radiated in all directions. As that energy descends towards the surface, the density of molecules increases and the energy is distributed to more mass causing the energy per unit mass to decease. Hence the lower temperature.
      If you divide the temperature at an altitude by the density at that altitude you will see that the energy per unit mass increases with increasing altitude. The temperature at the top the troposphere may be cool but the kinetic energy of the molecules is greater than that of the molecules at the surface. The sun heats the atmosphere, not the Earth.
      Herb

      Reply

  • Avatar

    Kevin Doyle

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    The author of this rubbish needs to be taken to ‘the woodshed’ for a spanking.
    When Al Gore showed us images of the ozone layer being depleted over Antarctica, these were when it was winter in the Southern Hemisphere. No sunlight = No ozone creation.
    Thus, it changes seasonally over the North and South Poles.
    Is everyone in academia an uninformed chump?

    Reply

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