At least the weather in Copenhagen is likely to
be cooperating. The Danish Meteorological Institute predicts that
temperatures in December, when the city will host the United
Nations Climate Change Conference, will be one degree above the
long-term average.
Otherwise, however, not much is happening with
global warming at the moment. The Earth's average temperatures
have stopped climbing since the beginning of the millennium, and
it even looks as though global warming could come to a standstill
this year.
Ironically, climate change appears to have
stalled in the run-up to the upcoming world summit in the Danish
capital, where thousands of politicians, bureaucrats, scientists,
business leaders and environmental activists plan to negotiate a
reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. Billions of euros are at
stake in the negotiations.
Reached a Plateau
The planet's temperature curve rose sharply for
almost 30 years, as global temperatures increased by an average of
0.7 degrees Celsius (1.25 degrees Fahrenheit) from the 1970s to
the late 1990s. "At present, however, the warming is taking a
break," confirms meteorologist Mojib Latif of the Leibniz
Institute of Marine Sciences in the northern German city of Kiel.
Latif, one of Germany's best-known climatologists, says that the
temperature curve has reached a plateau. "There can be no argument
about that," he says. "We have to face that fact."
Even though the temperature standstill probably
has no effect on the long-term warming trend, it does raise doubts
about the predictive value of climate models, and it is also a
political issue. For months, climate change skeptics have been
gloating over the findings on their Internet forums. This has
prompted many a climatologist to treat the temperature data in
public with a sense of shame, thereby damaging their own
credibility.
"It cannot be denied that this is one of the
hottest issues in the scientific community," says Jochem Marotzke,
director of the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg.
"We don't really know why this stagnation is taking place at this
point."
Just a few weeks ago, Britain's Hadley Centre
for Climate Prediction and Research added more fuel to the fire
with its latest calculations of global average temperatures.
According to the Hadley figures, the world grew warmer by 0.07
degrees Celsius from 1999 to 2008 and not by the 0.2 degrees
Celsius assumed by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change. And, say the British experts, when their figure is
adjusted for two naturally occurring climate phenomena, El Niño
and La Niña, the resulting temperature trend is reduced to 0.0
degrees Celsius -- in other words, a standstill.
The differences among individual regions of the
world are considerable. In the Arctic, for example, temperatures
rose by almost three degrees Celsius, which led to a dramatic
melting of sea ice. At the same time, temperatures declined in
large areas of North America, the western Pacific and the Arabian
Peninsula. Europe, including Germany, remains slightly in positive
warming territory.
Mixed Messages
But a few scientists simply refuse to believe
the British calculations. "Warming has continued in the last few
years," says Stefan Rahmstorf of the Potsdam Institute for Climate
Impact Research (PIK). However, Rahmstorf is more or less alone in
his view. Hamburg Max Planck Institute scientist Jochem Marotzke,
on the other hand, says: "I hardly know any colleagues who would
deny that it hasn't gotten warmer in recent years."
The controversy sends confusing and mixed
messages to the lay public. Why is there such a vigorous debate
over climate change, even though it isn't getting warmer at the
moment? And how can it be that scientists cannot even arrive at a
consensus on changes in temperatures, even though temperatures are
constantly being measured?
The global temperature-monitoring network
consists of 517 weather stations. But each reading is only a tiny
dot on the big world map, and it has to be extrapolated to the
entire region with the help of supercomputers. Besides, there are
still many blind spots, the largest being the Arctic, where there
are only about 20 measuring stations to cover a vast area.
Climatologists refer to the problem as the "Arctic hole."
The scientists at the Hadley Center simply used
the global average value for the hole, ignoring the fact that it
has become significantly warmer in the Arctic, says Rahmstorf. But
a NASA team from the Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New
York, which does make the kinds of adjustments for the Arctic data
that Rahmstorf believes are necessary, arrives at a flat
temperature curve for the last five years that is similar to that
of their British colleagues.
Marotzke and Leibniz Institute meteorologist
Mojib Latif are even convinced that the fuzzy computing done by
Rahmstorf is counterproductive. "We have to explain to the public
that greenhouse gases will not cause temperatures to keep rising
from one record temperature to the next, but that they are still
subject to natural fluctuations," says Latif. For this reason, he
adds, it is dangerous to cite individual weather-related
occurrences, such as a drought in Mali or a hurricane, as proof
positive that climate change is already fully underway.
"Perhaps we suggested too strongly in the past
that the development will continue going up along a simple,
straight line. In reality, phases of stagnation or even cooling
are completely normal," says Latif.
Part 2: The Difficulties of Predicting the Climate