Direct Observations by NASA Confirm that Humans are Throwing Earth’s Energy Budget off Balance

Simulating Carbon

A NASA supercomputer model shows how greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide (CO2) – a key driver of global warming – fluctuate in Earth’s atmosphere throughout the year. Higher concentrations are shown in red. Credit: NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio / NASA’s Global Modeling and Assimilation Office

Earth is on a budget – an energy budget. Our planet is constantly trying to balance the flow of energy in and out of Earth’s system. But human activities are throwing that off balance, causing our planet to warm in response.

Radiative energy enters Earth’s system from the sunlight that shines on our planet. Some of this energy reflects off of Earth’s surface or atmosphere back into space. The rest gets absorbed, heats the planet, and is then emitted as thermal radiative energy the same way that black asphalt gets hot and radiates heat on a sunny day. Eventually, this energy also heads toward space, but some of it gets re-absorbed by clouds and greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. The absorbed energy may also be emitted back toward Earth, where it will warm the surface even more.

Adding more components that absorb radiation – like greenhouse gases – or removing those that reflect it – like aerosols – throws off Earth’s energy balance, and causes more energy to be absorbed by Earth instead of escaping into space. This is called radiative forcing, and it’s the dominant way human activities are affecting the climate.

Earth's Planetary Energy Balance

A simplified animation of Earth’s planetary energy balance: A planet’s energy budget is balanced between incoming (yellow) and outgoing radiation (red). On Earth, natural and human-caused processes affect the amount of energy received as well as emitted back to space. This study filters out variations in Earth’s energy budget due to feedback processes, revealing the energy changes caused by aerosols and greenhouse gas emissions. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab

Climate modeling predicts that human activities are causing the release of greenhouse gases and aerosols that are affecting Earth’s energy budget. Now, a NASA study has confirmed these predictions with direct observations for the first time: radiative forcings are increasing due to human actions, affecting the planet’s energy balance and ultimately causing climate change. The paper was published online on March 25, 2021, in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

“This is the first calculation of the total radiative forcing of Earth using global observations, accounting for the effects of aerosols and greenhouse gases,” said Ryan Kramer, first author on the paper and a researcher at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. “It’s direct evidence that human activities are causing changes to Earth’s energy budget.”

NASA’s Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) project studies the flow of radiation at the top of Earth’s atmosphere. A series of CERES instruments have continuously flown on satellites since 1997. Each measures how much energy enters Earth’s system and how much leaves, giving the overall net change in radiation. That data, in combination with other data sources such as ocean heat measurements, shows that there’s an energy imbalance on our planet.

“But it doesn’t tell us what factors are causing changes in the energy balance,” said Kramer.

NASA CERES Energy Balance of Earth

NASA’s CERES instruments monitor the energy balance of Earth. This image shows how the difference between incoming and reflected shortwave energy – absorbed solar energy – can be compared to emitted longwave radiation to determine Earth’s net change in energy. Credit: NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio

This study used a new technique to parse out how much of the total energy change is caused by humans. The researchers calculated how much of the imbalance was caused by fluctuations in factors that are often naturally occurring, such as water vapor, clouds, temperature and surface albedo (essentially the brightness or reflectivity of Earth’s surface). For example, the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument on NASA’s Aqua satellite measures water vapor in Earth’s atmosphere. Water vapor absorbs energy in the form of heat, so changes in water vapor will affect how much energy ultimately leaves Earth’s system. The researchers calculated the energy change caused by each of these natural factors, then subtracted the values from the total. The portion left over is the radiative forcing.

The team found that human activities have caused the radiative forcing on Earth to increase by about 0.5 Watts per square meter from 2003 to 2018. The increase is mostly from greenhouse gas emissions from things like power generation, transport, and industrial manufacturing. Reduced reflective aerosols are also contributing to the imbalance.

The new technique is computationally faster than previous model-based methods, allowing researchers to monitor radiative forcing in almost real time. The method could be used to track how human emissions are affecting the climate, monitor how well various mitigation efforts are working, and evaluate models to predict future changes to the climate.

“Creating a direct record of radiative forcing calculated from observations will allow us to evaluate how well climate models can simulate these forcings,” said Gavin Schmidt, director of NASA’s Goddard Institute of Space Studies (GISS) in New York City. “This will allow us to make more confident projections about how the climate will change in the future.”

Reference: “Observational evidence of increasing global radiative forcing” by Ryan J. Kramer, Haozhe He, Brian J. Soden, Lazaros Oreopoulos, Gunnar Myhre, Piers M. Forster and Christopher J. Smith, 25 March 2021, Geophysical Research Letters.
DOI: 10.1029/2020GL091585

8 Comments on "Direct Observations by NASA Confirm that Humans are Throwing Earth’s Energy Budget off Balance"

  1. Because the Earth’s energy budget has alway been stable & perfect, _in seculum saeculorum,_ till nasty humans went industrial & messed everything up–or so the alarmists would have us believe.

    • mintas lanxor | March 27, 2021 at 7:20 pm | Reply

      A wise man had man-made climate change deniers in mind when he said that it’s better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak up and remove all doubt.

      • Clyde Spencer | March 29, 2021 at 4:14 pm | Reply

        Only a fool would NOT speak up if they thought that the claims were false, and had evidence to demonstrate it. Only someone who had no evidence to present would use a pejorative term like “denier,” which is really an ad hominem attack.

  2. Brian Scott-Dawkins | March 27, 2021 at 3:17 pm | Reply

    “HUMANS” ARE NOT THE CAUSE. IT’S BIG OIL! THEY REFUSE TO ALLOW FREE ENERGY DEVICES TO BE MANUFACTURED. SOME INVENTORS HAVE BEEN MURDERED!! SELFISH PROFIT DRIVEN GREED IS THE CAUSE.

  3. Arye Michael Bender | March 27, 2021 at 6:47 pm | Reply

    We are definitely overdrawn.

  4. Clavel jean-marc | March 28, 2021 at 12:49 am | Reply

    De quels aérosols réfléchissants vous parlez ?

  5. Logic is hard for libterds | March 28, 2021 at 1:57 pm | Reply

    Since humans are part of the Earth’s energy balance, we can’t be “throwing it off.”

  6. Clyde Spencer | March 29, 2021 at 4:11 pm | Reply

    The claim is not very convincing. The claimed human contribution, 0.5 W/m^2, is the same as the uncertainty in the total energy arriving at Earth at the top of the atmosphere.

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