New Study Questions CO2's Role in Climate Change | Klean Industries Insights


A recent study offers new insights into the ongoing discussion about climate change drivers, examining the role of CO2 among other factors. This analysis explores the intricacies of climate science and its implications for sustainable practices.

A new climate science study suggests that clouds and sunlight, rather than carbon dioxide, are the primary drivers of global warming. 

A new climate science study suggests that clouds and sunlight, rather than carbon dioxide, are the primary drivers of global warming. In the study, scientists Ned Nikolov and Karl Zeller challenge the mainstream view that CO2 is the primary cause of global warming.

The reality is that the Earth’s ECS to CO2 is essentially zero due to a minuscule contribution of this gas to the total atmospheric pressure on our planet. It’s also worth mentioning that Earth’s ECS to TSI is about 6 times lower than the planet’s sensitivity to absorbed solar flux.

Earth has a relatively high climate sensitivity to variations of cloud albedo (-1.02 K/1% albedo change), which indicates the presence of relatively strong negative feedbacks within the system that tend to stabilize albedo fluctuations. This is good news for our global climate.

In the study, scientists Ned Nikolov and Karl Zeller challenge the mainstream view that CO2 is the primary cause of global warming. 

Using satellite data, they argue that changes in the planet’s albedo—its ability to reflect sunlight—are responsible for the rise in temperatures, and not increasing greenhouse gases.

“When clouds decrease, the planetary albedo drops and more radiation reaches the surface, causing warmer temperatures,” Nikolov said. 

Nikolov also criticises the current understanding of the greenhouse effect, stating that atmospheric pressure, not CO2, is what influences global temperatures. 

“This is why when you get up in elevation, it gets cooler—either in the mountains or when you’re flying on an aeroplane—because the pressure drops with height,” he said. 

Institutions like NASA and the IPCC maintain that human-induced greenhouse gas emissions are the primary contributors to climate change. 

However, in the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report, it says that changes in “cloudiness” may contribute to this, as clouds affect how much sunlight is reflected or absorbed. 

Nikolov says while climate science acknowledges cloud cover is decreasing, they’re wrong to think it’s just natural changes in the climate. Yet he admits: “We have hypotheses about what’s driving the cloud cover changes, but we don’t have an exact mechanism or a conclusive theory.” 

Download the Nikolov Study on Climate Change » GO.


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