Bored Wombat said:
I know that it is coming from fossil fuel combustion, and the bulk of it is remaining in the atmosphere with the second largest lump dissolving in the oceans.
And I know that if you increase the partial pressure of a soluble gas, then more of it will dissolve in the oceans.
I also know that if you increase the temperature of the water, more CO2 will be released to the atmosphere. Currents can change. The relationship with the deep ocean can change. Plankton formation can change. Land coverage can change. Also, if you change the concentration in CO2 in the atmosphere, plankton can change, vegetation can change, chemistry can change.
If atmospheric CO2 is part of the global equivalent of a "buffer mixture" then there is a "set value" for its concentration, and any variation will be compensated by shifting reaction equilibria. If the set value of the mixture is changed, then the equilibria will shift in such a way as to vary towards the new set value, no matter whether or not there is a different source.
If one wants to demonstrate that a source is responsible for a level shift, then one has to demonstrate that all other sources and sinks in the cycle are not going to act as regulators, like a buffer mixture is in a simple chemistry experiment.
This is what I haven't seen in the arguments presented that are supposed to be a proof of the human origin of CO2 LEVEL in the atmosphere. It isn't sufficient to show that there is a source, you also have to demonstrate that all other systems coupled to it won't act as a regulator, and that it is not the regulator that has a different setting value.
That's not the usual meaning of source, but the oceanic efficiency as a sink is dropping. I can't speak for the terrestrial biosphere.
By what sort of mechanism?
Well, imagine the following. This is just a gedanken experiment. Imagine that there is a kind of plankton that grows strongly above a certain CO2 concentration, then dies off and drops to the ocean bottom. If that's the case, you can produce all the CO2 in the world, it will never get much higher than this threshold value, because beyond it, the plankton will grow exponentially and absorb all the excess CO2. But now, imagine for instance a virus that kills that plankton. Imagine that there is a second species of plankton, that acts the same, but at a higher threshold in CO2. Now that the low-threshold plankton is dead due to a pandemy, it is the second threshold that will be "set". During a certain period, the "set level" of CO2 will rise dramatically from the first to the second level. Then it will stabilize. It has nothing to do with sources and sinks. It is the regulated value by the big regulator which is plankton in this case which determines the CO2 level in the atmosphere, and you can pump as much extra CO2 in there, it won't change a thing.
As I said, that's just a gedanken experiment. But it illustrates what I mean with regulatory mechanisms which determine a certain concentration.
If you want to demonstrate that a simple in - out = result is effectively setting the level, then you have to demonstrate that there are no serious feedback mechanisms which tend to pull or push the result, but that it is just a passive balance of in - out.
So you need to know exactly the responses of all agents that could influence the in or out part as a function of the actual level in order to determine any feedback dynamics.
I haven't seen such a detailed analysis in the "proof of human caused CO2 level". Personally, I also think that it is human caused. But I wouldn't dare to make that a hard statement as many people do until all this was worked out. Fermat's last theorem was also believed to be correct, but it still took 400 years to prove it.
Okay, my case is that the oceans don't want anything. They'll outgass if the solubility for CO2 decreases, and otherwise dissolve some of any atmospheric increase and release some of any atmospheric decrease. This is how water behaves.
Yes, a pot of stationary water without anything. An ocean with currents, life in it, gradients of different kinds is totally different. You first have to understand exactly how it responds to changing CO2 levels, to changing temperature, to changing other parameters. The same (even harder) for land.
They are certainly both going on, and we know this not by looking at the graph, but because the physics is understood. CO2 is a greenhouse gas,
Physically, CO2 is a *weak* greenhouse gas in a stationary atmosphere (cfr MODTRAN), and it is even not clear how it behaves in a convective atmosphere or how it acts upon the much more important greenhouse gas which is water vapor, and which is entirely set by feedback mechanisms.
and it's solubility decreases with increasing water temperature at least around the sort of temperatures that the oceans are.
yes, again, in a simple pot of water. How about real oceans, and their life in it ?
No, I know from the fact that all the CO2 is coming from fossil fuel combustion, and that most of what is not remaining in the atmosphere is dissolving in the oceans, therefore the terrestrial biosphere is not setting the level of atmospheric CO2. It is largely set by an interaction between human activity and the oceans.
Isn't this circular, again ? You START with your assumption that the only source is fossil fuel combustion which is rising atmospheric concentration, then you say that oceans are only absorbing part of it (because the concentrations are rising) and then you conclude that hence the supplement is what oceans cannot absorb is what causes the rise, hence this is the cullprit.
Maybe. Or maybe if there wouldn't have been fossil fuel combustion, the oceans would have outgassed more (as they are heating up, for instance ?), and that would have made the CO2 levels also rise ...
Sorry, what proxy are we talking about here?
The O18 temperature proxy and the CO2 concentrations in the ice cores.
Where is it called an "undeniable proofs"? It is certainly true that a doubling of CO2 results in warming of over 1.5°C robustly throughout the last 420 million years. Is that what you mean by "drives" temperature?
Why don't you say that rising 1.5 degrees rising doubles CO2 concentration ?
Well, I don't think it is really an assumption, because we know where it comes from, and we know that it's concentration is 30% above what it normally peaks at during an interglacial, so we know well enough that this level is not due to some natural mechanism.
Uh. That's a weak argument. Who tells you that the dynamics is not changing (say, biological evolution, different land usage, changing ocean currents, solar activity, what ever...) ?
So now the argument "the CO2 levels are human-made" comes from "we didn't have those levels in the past" ??
I agree that all this is suggestive, but "I know that it is so" needs some more solid proof, don't you ?
In fact, it is easy to establish if atmospheric CO2 levels are human-caused or not. It is sufficient that humanity will decrease its fossil-fuel output, and this will happen anyway, because we will eventually (in one or two centuries) run out of them or don't need them anymore. When human fossil fuel combustion will stop, it will be sufficient to see whether atmospheric levels will decrease again with the same amount. Then (50 - 200 years from now) this point will be settled. So there is no scientific suspense: we will find out.
And I think it strange that we are looking for such a mechanism.
"We're putting 11Gt of Carbon into the atmosphere every year, but where is this 7Gt of carbon that is accumulating in the atmosphere every year coming from?" It doesn't seem to be that worthwhile a question to dwell on.
Yes, exactly like the guy on the shore who sees the tide rise, and thinks it is due to that other guy pooring water in the ocean... Of course, if it is a bath tub, he is right.
It is the very fact that you don't find that worthwhile a question to dwell on which worries me !
That's exactly what Feynman's remark was about. You're not trying to prove yourself wrong.
But if you consider the paleoclimatic reconstructions, I think there is sufficient support for the surely obvious to convince most juries beyond all reasonable doubt.
Depends on the standards of the jury. Knowing something scientifically means that there is no room for doubt.
If you want to persuade me that there is a reasonable chance that this atmospheric CO2 might have something to do with human activities, then there's no problem. It sounds reasonable. If however, you say that you "know" that this is so and that should be the end of the discussion, then I want scientific proof, and the LOGIC of what is presented as such proof is flawed, because it doesn't lead to an impossibility of it being otherwise.
It's not the other way around. They move simultaneously for the most part.
Simultaneously with 600 years lag between the cause and the effect...
A correlation between A and B means: A causes B or B causes A or there is a common cause C which causes A and B.
A causes B was the first obvious option, until it became clear that A came later in time than B. So now it is B causes A causes B (because we really NEED A causes B). And why not C ? And why not B causes A ?
Because CO2 is a strong greenhouse gas. Why ? Physically it is a week greenhouse gas. No, it is a strong one with the feedback! Look at the paleodata where A causes B !
Do you have an example of this previous argument in the words of the IPCC that was erroneous?
I've been looking all afternoon, and I don't find it. :shy: Nevertheless, I was convinced that at a certain point it was stated that the correlation between the temperature and the CO2 was supposed to indicate that the CO2 clearly drove the temperature (before the 600 year lag was discovered). Now, maybe this was not the IPCC. I thought that it was, but I cannot find it, so I might be wrong. I DID see however the Vostok icecore data being used as an argument that CO2 drives temperature *somewhere*.
You don't need to prove the greenhouse effect, it is a result of well understood optics. It has been proven a century or so. The world would average a chilly -15°C without it.
The well-understood optics gives you 0.77 degrees per CO2 doubling.