A Climate Cycle Delivered Our Cold Spring
by dennis t. avery
Churchville, VA: Lots of us are commenting on the U.S.
having the second coldest spring in the official thermometer record (starting
ca. 1860) and the coldest since 1975. Remember, too, that in 1975 major news
magazines were predicting a sudden return to the next Ice Age! This cold spring
highlights another climate cycle that has nothing to do with CO2.
The cycle that link the two coldest springs is the 60-year
Pacific Decadal Oscillation. Both of these cold springs occurred during a cold
phase in the Pacific, which is the planet’s largest heat sink. When the sun is
very warm, the Pacific absorbs much of that heat. When the sun is less warm,
the Pacific gradually cools. Scientists don’t yet understand clearly why the
sun varies in total activity. We do understand, however, that this is the
reason global temperatures move up and down in spurts of about 30 years. The
PDO is a relatively short cycle superimposed on the longer 1,500-year
Dansgaard-Oeschger cycle and the 100,000-year Ice Age cycle.
The PDO wasn’t discovered until 1996. Fish experts began to
realize that something was periodically shifting the salmon’s ocean food
(plankton and tiny crustaceans) north and south—from the Columbia River region
to the Gulf of Alaska and back. It happened about every 30 years. The salmon’s
food likes warmth better than cold, so when the Pacific is cooler, the salmon
and their food supply thrive farther south.
Fish catch records show the PDO was cool from 1890–1924,
warm from 1925–46, cool again from 1940–1976, and warm again from 1976 to about
2007. NASA’s Jason satellite confirmed in 2008 that the PDO had shifted cool
again in 2007. That means the cold springs are likely to remain a feature of
our weather until about 2037.
By the way, the salmon catches are erratically recovering in
the Pacific Northwest. Last year Oregon’s best run was Chinook salmon, with a
total catch of 380,000 compared to just 35,000 in 2008 as the cycle was just
beginning to turn cold. By the time the 1976 cooling was winding down Oregon
was catching more than 1 million Chinook per year.
Last week, Germany’s Green Radio (sponsored by its Federal
Department of the Environment) interviewed an expert identified as Henrik
Kirchof about the world’s interrupted global warming. He said, “A big role may
be played by the oceans . . . if the surface water temperatures increased
sharply until 15 years ago but now have stagnated, then it means that the ocean
is absorbing more heat than it did before. You can suspect this, it’s very
plausible, but you cannot prove it because of [measurement problems].”
Sorry, Dr. Kirchof, but there’s another possibility—that the
oceans are receiving less heat from a “quiet “ sun during a long and cool
sunspot cycle. What if the sun is in charge of our climate after all?
Be grateful for our moderate warming. When it stops warming,
history tells us the climate will get far colder and more violent. In history, Europe’s
population nearly tripled during the warm phases when food was plentiful, then
shrank radically as starvation and food wars arrived with the cold.
We should expect some additional global warming after this PDO
ends, as occurred from 1976–1998, but nothing as dangerous as the computers
models claim. Unless our paltry increase in human-emitted CO2 emissions
have somehow rearranged the whole universe, the sun will continue to be the
controlling factor in our climate.
Dennis T. Avery, a senior
fellow for the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C., is an environmental
economist. He was formerly a senior analyst for the Department of State. He is
co-author, with S. Fred Singer, of
Unstoppable Global Warming Every 1500 Years. Readers may write to him at PO Box 202 Churchville, VA 2442; email to cgfi@mgwnet.com.
Visit our website at www. cgfi.org
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