This month’s open thread. Please stay on climate topics and try to be constructive.
Reader Interactions
12 Responses to "Unforced variations: Jun 2025"
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Final hours: 100 Hours to Save America’s Forecasts, Weather and Climate
https://www.youtube.com/@wclivestream/live
– 2:30pm ET/11:30am PT: Jhordanne Jones
– 3:15 ET/12:15pm PT: Marshall Shepherd
– 4:15 ET/1:15pm PT: Zack Labe
Re my https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/05/unforced-variations-may-2025/comment-page-2/#comment-833994
Oops!
1. Some of that was re some of what William & Thessalonia have said.
2. “ and at least then we can then have some energy sources that don’t (on their own) add to the problems” – admittedly too strong of a statement; there are some environmental impacts eg. birds, bats, fish, scenery, mining – but some of that might be mitigatable, there may be some positive side effects in some cases (solar agrivoltaics, and solar panels reducing evaporation from canals – I think I saw that somewhere, pollinators…), and of course this has to be weighed against trade-offs of other options, etc. CO2 and fugitive CH4 are not the only problems with fossil fuels, for that matter.
Also, clarification: https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/05/unforced-variations-may-2025/comment-page-2/#comment-833986 : AIUI, Jerry Falwell was a segregationist.
in Re to Paul Pukite, 14 May 2025 at 11:26 AM,
https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/05/unforced-variations-may-2025/#comment-833252
Dear Paul,
As you might have missed my post of 23 May 2025 at 11:43 AM,
https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/05/unforced-variations-may-2025/#comment-833676
I would like to repeat my question regarding the planned PubPeer thread on the 6-year paper herein:
It appears that you could convince broader scientific public about your theory if you showed that in the frequency spectrum, the respective signals are not only present but have also sufficient strength.
Do I understand correctly that these signals are indeed well-known (due to their amplitudes that make them remarkable), however, they were still omitted for some reason as possible modulators of the ENSO / QBO / AMOC oscillations?
Thank you in advance and best regards
Tomáš
The 6-year cycle is a bit of a canard. The frequency spectrum of an ENSO time-series such as NINO4 is loaded with tidal artifacts, it’s just that no one seems to have a deep understanding of how frequency modulation works. Here’s a clue: spectral components in NINO4 are found close to 0.42, 0.58, 1.42, 1.58, 2.42 (in 1/yr units) — not hard to figure out what’s happening.
In Re to Paul Pukite, 2 Jun 2025 at 2:24 AM,
https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/06/unforced-variations-jun-2025/#comment-834070
Dear Paul,
Thank you very much for your prompt response.
As a layman, I am, however, somewhat confused thereby. It was my understanding to your post of 14 May 2025 at 11:26 AM, reading
“because of the symmetry above and below the equator, the first transform that must take place is at least some rectification in the signal so that the 6 year signal will likely appear as a 3 year result”
that there should be a 3 year period (instead of the 6 year one) in the frequency spectrum.
Do I guess correctly that the respective spectral component in NINO4 should be 0.33?
If so, is it or is it not present (as a sufficiently strong signal) in the spectrum?
Please consider that I may not be the single reader for whom it is, in fact, really difficult to “figure out what’s happening”. I will be very grateful if you could explain in more detail.
Greetings
Tomáš
I thought David Rind’s guileless account of how climate modeling’ ascended from one to three dimensions wonderfully lucid, but the indoctrination in the art of story telling of many of the speakers was all too apparent.
In Re to Russell Seitz, 1 Jun 2025 at 9:51 PM,
https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/06/unforced-variations-jun-2025/#comment-834054
Dear Russell,
May I ask if you refer to the livestream announced by Ms. Anderson?
What kind of indoctrination have you noticed / could you offer a specific example?
Best regards
Tomáš
A Review of the Recent “Conversation” on RealClimate — May 2025
(ref: https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/05/the-most-recent-climate-status/#comments)
What began as a reasonable and important question from Ken Towe quickly spiraled into an increasingly hostile and intellectually dishonest exchange. The constant denial of what was actually said and meant, combined with a barrage of insults posing as debate, made for a disturbing spectacle.
Here’s the timeline in brief:
Ken Towe began with a sober and technically sound comment on 15 May:
“What realistic actions can be taken that would not otherwise create difficulties for all economies? Conventional vehicles do all of the transportation to feed billions of people as well as making the energy transition to renewables and EVs possible. Rapid reductions in CO₂ emissions takes none of the CO₂ already added out of the atmosphere to lower global temperatures. Carbon capture technologies are costly and energy intensive. Scaled up globally they can’t even store one part-per-million of CO₂ by 2050. The real enemy… root cause is population growth.”
Piotr responded the next day, but notably clipped out the rest of Ken’s argument. When Ken pointed this out and reiterated the physical reality that GHG emission reductions don’t remove legacy CO₂ already in the system, Piotr and others began misrepresenting both his statements and the fundamental science behind them.
Let’s clarify, point by point:
1 Transportation Reality
“Conventional vehicles do all of the transportation to feed billions…”
✅ Correct. This remains a fact of global logistics. The energy transition cannot occur without fossil-fueled machinery — at least for now.
2 Legacy CO₂ Remains in the Atmosphere
“Reducing emissions does not remove past emissions.”
✅ Correct. That’s basic physics. Only active carbon removal (via sinks or DAC) can do that.
3 Limits of Carbon Capture
“Scaled up globally, DAC can’t even remove one ppm by 2050.”
✅ Correct. Piotr and nigelj themselves admitted this in other comments. DAC is nascent and barely scratches the surface.
4 Sink Stability Is Assumed — Without Proof
No one has offered evidence that Earth’s natural sinks — already under stress — will remain effective in drawing down CO₂, especially as climate feedbacks worsen. This undermines the foundation of most “Net Zero” assumptions.
4 Insults in Lieu of Arguments
Repeated personal attacks (notably from nigelj) replaced thoughtful engagement. Dismissing Ken as a “denialist” — despite his fact-based concerns — shows the deterioration of debate into tribal performance.
5 Energy Transition Is Energy-Intensive
Ken pointed out that fossil fuels are ironically required to build the infrastructure for an energy transition. This is rarely acknowledged, let alone addressed in strategy documents.
6 Population Growth as the Core Issue
Ken correctly identified population growth as the engine behind emissions, resource depletion, and ecological stress. This point was ignored — likely because it’s politically inconvenient, despite being ecologically central.
Conclusion: In Defense of Reason — and Physics
Ken Towe is not a climate denier, science denier, or troll. He is one of the few who raised foundational questions based on physical limits and known realities. Disagreeing with political orthodoxy or marketing slogans like “Net Zero by 2050” does not make one a denier — it makes one honest.
Over the past 15+ years, global warming has accelerated. Atmospheric CO₂ levels are increasing faster than ever, not only from fossil fuel emissions — which haven’t meaningfully declined — but increasingly due to amplifying feedbacks like permafrost melt, soil respiration, and forest degradation. Peer-reviewed work by scientists such as James Hansen now suggests climate sensitivity may be 4–5°C, not the 2–3°C once assumed. Meanwhile, declining aerosol levels and Earth’s albedo further reduce natural cooling.
Against this backdrop, the idea that we are “on track” for Net Zero by 2050 is not just optimistic — it borders on fantasy. Many credible voices have pointed out that this narrative leans heavily on speculative carbon removal technologies and evasive carbon accounting. The numbers don’t add up — and pretending they do helps no one.
Ken Towe asked the right questions. The reaction he received tells us more about the state of public climate discourse than it does about the substance of his arguments.
Troll impersonating Pedro Prieto: “ Ken Towe began with a sober and technically sound comment
Compliments coming from you – mean so much …:-) . Talk about the kiss of death.
TiPP: “ Piotr responded the next day, but notably clipped out the rest of Ken’s argument.”
1. That’s how discussions work, Genius – you are supposed to respond to the specific points you are addressing, and NOT litter your answer with the rest of text you are NOT commenting – if anybody is interested in that “rest” – they are in the Ken’s original.
2. I didn’t have to address EVERY point of your Ken – it was enough to falsify two major ASSUMPTIONS on which he built his attack on renewables and reductions in GHG emissions:
===
Ken Towe: “GHG reductions, reducing emissions, will take none of the CO2 already added out of the atmosphere”
Piotr 18 May: “First – if large enough – they WILL result in the taking down CO2 already in the atmosphere – as natural uptake will no longer be overpowered by the new human emissions – currently only half of the emitted CO2 stays in the air the reset is absorbed by the natural sinks.
Second – yours is a typical denier/doomer all-or-nothing argument – if we can’t reduce the current levels of CO2 then let’s do nothing and keep increasing atm. Co2. The obvious and fallacy here is that the world at 425ppm won’t be as hellish as the world at 850 ppm.
==================== end of quote =============
See? You remove two pillars supporting the house that Ken built, and the house crumbles like a house of cards. No need to describe and discuss details of every shingle.
Incidentally, the second point – not only collapses Denier Ken argument above but ALSO destroys the all-or-nothing fallacy at the basis of the doomers attacks on renewables, EVs, and other technologies and mechanisms (carbon pricing) of GHG reductions.
=======
P.S. Your insinuations – quite rich coming from you:
– I QUOTED the Towe’s sentence I was challenging –
– while YOU “clipped” EVERY SINGLE word in Nigel’s and my arguments, and REPLACED them with … your “description” of our arguments. as …. supporting Ken’s claims.
But please do lecture OTHERS on their intellectual dishonesty. ;-)
Handle: “Pedro Prieto”:
Here’s the timeline in brief: […]
6. Ken correctly identified population growth as the engine behind emissions, resource depletion, and ecological stress.
Hmm, I thought it was correctly identified by “William” and “the Prieto Principle” (the same one who claimed that whoever posts as Pedro Prieto is an imposter). No? Could you provide then a link to Ken’s post to which you refer in your “timeline” ?
I am asking because when I searched for the word “population” in recent discussions – the only Ken’s post I found was this:
====== Ken Towe 16 May =============
“The 20th century average temperature for the US 48 states at ~40°N. is 52° F. The same value for the globe at the Equator? is 57° F. Five degrees F warmer. Where is global population’s energy use centered?”
=============================
which is … not only a perfect example of your Ken’s Towe “ sober and technically sound” thinking, but also, since he believes that “the global population’s energy use” is NOT correlated with the Earth temperature thus reducing the population would achieve NOTHING climatewise!
Thus blowing the argument by “William”, “the Prieto Principle who Says that troll” Pedro Prieto” is an Imposter”, and of the said “Pedro Prieto” – out of the water.
So – to which OTHER words of Ken have you referred in your timeline?
Pedro Prieto.
Why do you persist with this farsical nonsense? Is it an act of continuing trolling, sock-puppeteering, or do you enjoy displaying your stupidity to the world?
Firsetly, what began with what-you-call a Ken Towe’s “reasonable and important question” was provided with an answer by Ken Towe himself.
Question – “What realistic actions can be taken that would not otherwise create difficulties for all economies?”
Answer – “The real enemy/root cause is population growth. The correlation between Mauna Loa CO2 and global population numbers is almost perfect.”
That said, I’m not sure what to make of this idea that some “almost perfect … correlation between Mauna Loa CO2 and global population numbers” makes global population the “real enemy/root cause” of the rising atmospheric CO2 levels. And were it the case, given that world population is accelerating while CO2 levels are decelerating, presumably the way to cut CO2 is to quickly increase poulation which will then quickly reduce CO2 levels. Thus, using these numbers below, a rapid doubling of population would return CO2 to pre-industrial levels.
Five-year percentage increases in world population & MLO CO2
1965 – 1969 … 11.0% … 1.2%
1970 – 1974 … 10.6% … 1.7%
1975 – 1979 ….. 9.7% … 1.8%
1980 – 1984 ….. 9.4% … 2.3%
1985 – 1989 ….. 9.5% … 2.3%
1990 – 1994 ….. 9.0% … 2.0%
1995 – 1999 ….. 7.6% … 2.2%
2000 – 2004 ….. 7.0% … 2.5%
2005 – 2009 ….. 6.6% … 2.8%
2010 – 2014 ….. 6.6% … 2.7%
2015 – 2019 ….. 6.1% … 3.1%
2020 – 2024 ….. 5.0% … 3.1%
Secondly, your attempted “timeline in brief” of the comment thread interchange failed to relate details of the response to Ken Towe’s “reasonable and important question” that immediately followed it in the thread. This pointed to the obsurdity of the repeatingly-proposed “almost perfect … correlation between Mauna Loa CO2 and global population numbers”.
So there is really no need whatever to continue this CO2/population farce, unless you wish to explain why you feel the need to defend the undefensible?
I have get back to my question on lapse rate feedback from april..
https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/04/unforced-variations-apr-2025/#comment-832376
Barrry E Finch was so kind to answer..
“For a Forcing of 3.7 w/m**2 the climate scientists’ assessment of Lapse Rate change -ve Feedback is -4.1 w/m**2 from a plot I saw presented on UTube either by Jennifer Francis or (more likely) by Mark Zelinka, not https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kE1VBCt8GLc evidently,”
I looked up the video and there we have a “temperature feedback” (?) of -4.02W/m2 around the 11:20 mark. While the graph shows different kinds of feedbacks, it does not mention lapse rate feedback at all. I assume their “temperature feedback” will account for planck feedback (making up the bulk of it) plus lapse rate feedback. Their total feedback of -0.98W/m2 would then equate to an ECS of say 3.7/0.98 = 3.77K, or something like it. Anyhow, it does not address my issue.
The fundamental problem I have is still the same and simple: If the troposphere warms significantly faster than the surface, then the emission temperature (Te) will do so as well and you get a very large LRF. For instance, even if Te would only increase a 50% more than Ts (it should be more in theory!), it would go from 255K to 256.5K per K in Ts. And so we can do a little calculation…
255^4*5.67e-8 = 239.74
256.5^4*5.67e-8 = 245.43
245.43 – 239.74 = 5.69W/m2
Accounting for a planck feedback of 3.3W/m2 we get..
5.69 – 3.3 = 2.39W/m2 for LRF
That is a huge negative feedback of 2.39W/m2, kind of dominating positive feedbacks. Striktly following the theory (as in the emagram) you will get even larger figures above 3W/m2.
An LRF of a mere -0.5W/m2, as is the central estimate in AR6, is only compatible with a minimal lapse rate shrink, where Te outpaces Ts by only ~13%, or 0.13K per K in Ts. But that is not the theory, nor what we have in the models.
So that is the mistery. How can we have a strong tropospheric warming, as compared to Ts, including the “tropical hot spot” and so on, while not having this large negative LRF. It made no sense. But then I found this quote in AR6:
“Feedback parameters in climate models are calculated assuming that they are independent of each other, except for a well-known co-dependency between the water vapour (WV) and lapse rate (LR) feedbacks”
Given the problem, what this suggests is, LRF will not depend on the change in the lapse rate, which logically it has to, but instead would be coupled with WV and their sum then be a hard coded positive feedback of ~1W/m2. But that is not very elegant, to say at least. Also it would violate logic and physics..