Trakar
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2007
- Messages
- 12,637
AFAIK this statement is incorrect that way. every doubling after a doubling will bring less additional warming.
and according to the IPCC the best estimate is 3°C for a doubling of CO2, but most estimates range from 2 - 4.5°C.
Speaking of multiple doublings can get confusing, as in: are we talking 250 + 250 + 250 ... or, are we talking 250 + 500 + 1000 ...
Typically, most climate studies are looking at doubling (trebling, etc.) of the pre-industrial concentration. I, personally, think that we need a longer-term yardstick like the average interglacial atmospheric CO2 concentration over the last million or so years. Getting a good (well supported) assessment of that is a pet project I've been working on for most of the last year. I'm making some progress, but initially, it seems that the interglacial average (at least for several interglacial periods) is somewhat less than our pre-industrial average, but I don't want to go too far down the path of analysing and discussing implications until I get further along in my project.
In general, you are correct that there should be diminishing returns for each doubling, but at the current pressure and concentration range, the variation is minor. It isn't until we get to much higher partial pressures that the drop off in successive doublings is dramatic.
As I was mentioning in earlier posts climate sensitivity is a peculiar problem as it is dependant upon an entire spectrum of system feedbacks (some of which may be unknown), some that operate on a near instantaneous time scale, some that operate over a period of years and decades, some that operate over a period of centuries and millenia. Many climate sensitivity studies only give heavy weighting to the known fast feedbacks that express themselves over time-frames of seconds to several decades, and largely ignore the slow feedback effects that operate on longer term periods of impact.
All this said, I believe the mean of most studies puts the fast feedback sensitivity (STP) at right around 3ºC with an MoE of +/- 1.5º which is in accord with the latest IPCC findings (range probably approximate for at least a few doublings - or halvings).
I can see that I have become too comfortable in my postings here, so I will return to the practice of qualifying these remarks as reflective of my readings, considerations and understandings, all of which are subject to alteration and refinement by presently unknown and future researches and evidences.
