Global warming can be far worse than thought, study warns

According to researchers earth could become hotter than previously predicted because clouds contain far more liquid by comparison with ice

An Adelie penguin stands atop a block of melting ice near the French station at Dumont d'Urville in East Antarctica.
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An Adelie penguin stands atop a block of melting ice near the French station at Dumont d'Urville in East Antarctica.

Global warming could make the planet far hotter than currently projected because today's scientific models do not correctly account for the influence of clouds, researchers said this week.

The study in the journal Science was led by researchers at Yale University and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

When climate scientists look ahead to how much the planet's surface temperature may warm up in response to a doubling of carbon dioxide -- a by-product of fossil fuel burning -- they typically predict a rise of between 2.1 and 4.7 degrees Celsius (3.75 to 8.5 degrees Fahrenheit).

But these models overestimate the ability of clouds to reflect back sunlight, and counteract warming in Earth's atmosphere, researchers said.

"We found that the climate sensitivity increased from four degrees Celsius in the default model to five to 5.3 degrees Celsius in versions that were modified to bring liquid and ice amounts into closer agreement with observations," said lead author Ivy Tan, a researcher at Yale University.

The problem is most models assume there is more ice in clouds than there actually is.

Icier clouds would gain more liquid in a warming environment, and more liquid in clouds would mean less global warming.

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The sun shines through dark clouds hanging over al-Jamhour town in eastern Beirut, Lebanon, January 1, 2016.

"Most climate models are a little too eager to glaciate below freezing, so they are likely exaggerating the increase in cloud reflectivity as the atmosphere warms," said co-author Mark Zelinka.

"This means they may be systematically underestimating how much warming will occur in response to carbon dioxide."

Researchers said their findings add to previous studies that have suggested clouds may make warming worse, rather than lessen it.

"The evidence is piling up against an overall stabilising cloud feedback," said Zelinka.

"Clouds do not seem to want to do us any favour when it comes to limiting global warming."

The study was funded by NASA and the Department of Energy's Office of Science.

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