Climate Change: 1998
Publications
Author: Idso,
S.B.
Title: CO2-induced global warming: a skeptic's view
of potential climate change.
Publication: Climate Research 10(1):69-82,
1998.
© Inter-Research.
Notes: Over the
course of the past 2 decades, I have analyzed a number of natural
phenomena that reveal how Earth's near-surface air temperature
responds to surface radiative perturbations. These studies all
suggest that a 300 to 600 ppm doubling of the atmosphere's CO2
concentration could raise the planet's mean surface air
temperature by only about 0.4 degrees C. Even this modicum of
warming may never be realized, however, for it could be negated by
a number of planetary cooling forces that are intensified by
warmer temperatures and by the strengthening of biological
processes that are enhanced by the same rise in atmospheric CO2
concentration that drives the warming. Several of these cooling
forces have individually been estimated to be of equivalent
magnitude, but of opposite sign, to the typically predicted
greenhouse effect of a doubling of the air's CO2 content, which
suggests to me that little net temperature change will ultimately
result from the ongoing buildup of CO2 in Earth's atmosphere.
Consequently, I am skeptical of the predictions of significant
CO2-induced global warming that are being made by state-of-the-art
climate models and believe that much more work on a wide variety
of research fronts will be required to properly resolve the
issue.
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