From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Attribution of recent climate change is the
effort to scientifically ascertain mechanisms
responsible for relatively recent changes observed in the Earth's climate. The effort has focused on changes
observed during the period of instrumental temperature
record, when records are most reliable; particularly on the
last 50 years, when human activity has grown fastest and
observations of the upper atmosphere
have become available. The dominant mechanisms to which recent
climate change has been attributed all result from human activity. They are:[1]
Attribution of recent change to anthropogenic forcing is based
on the following facts:
- The observed change is not consistent with natural
variability.
- Known natural forcings would, if anything, be negative over
this period.
- Known anthropogenic forcings are consistent with the observed
response.
- The pattern of the observed change is consistent with the
anthropogenic forcing.
Recent reports from the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have concluded that:
- "Most of the observed increase in globally averaged
temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due
to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations."[2];
It is extremely unlikely (<5%) that the global pattern of
warming during the past half century can be explained without
external forcing (i.e., it is inconsistent with being the
result of internal variability), and very unlikely that it is due
to known natural external causes alone. The warming occurred in
both the ocean and the atmosphere and took place at a time when
natural external forcing factors would likely have produced
cooling. [1]
- "From new estimates of the combined anthropogenic forcing due
to greenhouse gases, aerosols, and land surface changes, it is extremely
likely that human activities have exerted a substantial net
warming influence on climate since 1750."[1]
- "It is virtually certain that anthropogenic aerosols
produce a net negative radiative forcing (cooling influence)
with a greater magnitude in the Northern Hemisphere than in the Southern
Hemisphere.[1]
The panel defines "very likely," "extremely likely," and
"virtually certain" as indicating probabilities greater than 90%,
95%, and 99%, respectively.[1]
Key
attributions
Greenhouse
gases
Emission Database for Global Atmospheric Research version 3.2, fast
track 2000 project
Scientific consensus has identified carbon dioxide as the dominant greenhouse gas
forcing. (The dominant greenhouse gas overall is water vapor. Water
vapor, however, has a very short atmospheric lifetime (about 10
days) and is very nearly in a dynamic equilibrium in the
atmosphere, so it is not a forcing gas in the context of global
warming.[3])
Methane and nitrous oxide are
also major forcing contributors to the greenhouse effect. The Kyoto Protocol
lists these together with Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), Perfluorocarbons (PFCs), and Sulphur hexafluoride (SF6),[4]
which are entirely artificial (i.e. anthropogenic) gases which also
contribute to radiative forcing in the atmosphere. The chart at
right attributes anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions to eight main economic sectors,
of which the largest contributors are power stations (many
of which burn coal or other fossil fuels), industrial processes (among
which cement production is a
dominant contributor[5]),
transportation fuels (generally fossil fuels), and agricultural by-products (mainly methane
from enteric fermentation and nitrous
oxide from fertilizer
use).
Land use
Climate change is attributed to land use for two main reasons. While 66% of
anthropogenic CO2 emissions over the last
250 years have resulted from burning fossil fuels, 33% have
resulted from changes in land use, primarily deforestation.[5]
Deforestation both reduces the amount of carbon dioxide absorbed by
deforested regions and releases greenhouse gases directly, together
with aerosols, through biomass burning that frequently
accompanies it. A second reason that climate change has been
attributed to land use is that the terrestrial albedo is often altered by use,
which leads to radiative forcing. This effect is
more significant locally than globally.[5]
Livestock
and land use
Worldwide, livestock production occupies 70% of all land used
for agriculture, or 30% of the ice-free land surface of the
Earth.[6]
Scientists attribute more than 18% of anthropogenic greenhouse gas
emissions to livestock and livestock-related activities such as
deforestation and increasingly fuel-intensive farming
practices.[6]
Specific attributions to the livestock sector include:
Aerosols
With virtual certainty, scientific consensus has attributed
various forms of climate change, chiefly cooling effects, to aerosols, which are small
particles or droplets suspended in the atmosphere.[7]
Key sources to which anthropogenic aerosols are attributed[8]
include:
Attribution of 20th
century climate change
One
global climate model's
reconstruction of temperature change during the 20th century as the
result of five studied forcing factors and the amount of
temperature change attributed to each.
Over the past 150 years human activities have released
increasing quantities of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. This has led to increases in
mean global temperature, or global warming. Other human effects are
relevant—for example, sulphate aerosols are believed to lead to
cooling—and natural factors also contribute. According to the historical temperature record of the last
century, the Earth's near-surface air temperature has risen around
0.74 ±
0.18 °Celsius (1.3 ±
0.32 °Fahrenheit).
A historically important question in climate change research has
regarded the relative importance of human activity and non-anthropogenic
causes during the period of instrumental record. In
the 1995 Second Assessment Report (SAR), the IPCC made the
widely-quoted statement that "The balance of evidence suggests a
discernible human influence on global climate". The phrase "balance
of evidence" suggested the (English) common-law standard of proof
required in civil as opposed to criminal courts: not as high as
"beyond reasonable doubt". In 2001 the Third Assessment Report
(TAR) refined this, saying "There is new and stronger evidence that
most of the warming observed over the last 50 years is attributable
to human activities".[9]
The 2007 fourth assessment report (WG1 AR4) strengthened this
finding:
- "Anthropogenic warming of the climate system is widespread and
can be detected in temperature observations taken at the surface,
in the free atmosphere and in the oceans. Evidence of the effect of
external influences, both anthropogenic and natural, on the climate
system has continued to accumulate since the TAR."[5]
Over the past five decades there has been a global warming of
approximately 0.65 °C (1.17 °F) at the Earth's surface
(see historical temperature record). Among the
possible factors that could produce changes in global mean
temperature are internal variability of the climate system,
external forcing, an increase in concentration of greenhouse gases,
or any combination of these. Current studies indicate that the
increase in greenhouse gases, most notably CO2, is
mostly responsible for the observed warming. Evidence for this
conclusion includes:
- Estimates of internal variability from climate models, and
reconstructions of past temperatures, indicate that the warming is
unlikely to be entirely natural.
- Climate models forced by natural factors and increased
greenhouse gases and aerosols reproduce the observed global
temperature changes; those forced by natural factors alone do
not[10].
- "Fingerprint" methods indicate that the pattern of change is
closer to that expected from greenhouse gas-forced change than from
natural change.[11]
- The plateau in warming from the 1940s to 1960s can be
attributed largely to sulphate aerosol cooling.[12]
In 2001, the U.S. National Academy
of Sciences released a report supporting the IPCC’s conclusions
regarding the causes of recent climate change. It stated,
"Greenhouse gases are accumulating in Earth’s atmosphere as a
result of human activities, causing surface air temperatures and
subsurface ocean temperatures to rise. Temperatures are, in fact,
rising. The changes observed over the last several decades are
likely mostly due to human activities, but we cannot rule out that
some significant part of these changes are also a reflection of
natural variability."[13][14][15]
Detection vs.
attribution
Per capita greenhouse gas emissions by country including land-use
change
Detection and attribution of climate signals, as well as its
common-sense meaning, has a more precise definition within the
climate change literature, as expressed by the IPCC[16].
Detection of a signal requires demonstrating that an
observed change is statistically
significantly different from that which can be explained by
natural internal variability.
Attribution requires demonstrating that a signal
is:
- unlikely to be due entirely to internal variability;
- consistent with the estimated responses to the given
combination of anthropogenic and natural forcing
- not consistent with alternative, physically plausible
explanations of recent climate change that exclude important
elements of the given combination of forcings.
Detection does not imply attribution, and is easier to show than
attribution. Unequivocal attribution would require controlled
experiments with multiple copies of the climate system, which is
not possible. Therefore, attribution, as described above, can only
be done within some margin of error. For example, the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report
says "it is extremely likely that human activities have
exerted a substantial net warming influence on climate since 1750,"
where "extremely likely" indicates a probability greater than
95%.[1]
Following the publication of the Third Assessment Report (TAR)
in 2001, "detection and attribution" of climate change has remained
an active area of research. Some important results include:
- A review of detection and attribution studies by the
International Ad Hoc Detection
and Attribution Group[17] found
that "natural drivers such as solar variability and volcanic
activity are at most partially responsible for the large-scale
temperature changes observed over the past century, and that a
large fraction of the warming over the last 50 yr can be attributed
to greenhouse gas increases. Thus, the recent research supports and
strengthens the IPCC Third Assessment Report conclusion that 'most
of the global warming over the past 50 years is likely due to the
increase in greenhouse gases.'"
- Multiple independent reconstructions of the temperature record of the past 1000 years
confirm that the late 20th century is probably the warmest period
in that time
- Two papers in the journal Science in August 2005[18][19]
resolve the problem, evident at the time of the TAR, of tropospheric
temperature trends. The UAH version of the record contained errors,
and there is evidence of spurious cooling trends in the radiosonde
record, particularly in the tropics. See satellite temperature
measurements for details; and the 2006 US CCSP report.[20]
- Barnett and colleagues say that the observed warming of the
oceans "cannot be explained by natural internal climate variability
or solar and volcanic forcing, but is well simulated by two anthropogenically
forced climate models," concluding that "it is of human origin, a
conclusion robust to observational sampling and model
differences"[21]
Scientific literature and
opinion
Some examples of published and informal support for the
consensus view:
- The attribution of climate change is discussed extensively,
with references to peer-reviewed research, in chapter 12 of the IPCC
TAR, which discusses The Meaning of Detection and
Attribution, Quantitative Comparison of
Observed and Modelled Climate Change, Pattern Correlation
Methods and Optimal Fingerprint
Methods.
- An essay[22] in Science surveyed 928 abstracts
related to climate change, and concluded that most journal reports
accepted the consensus. This is
discussed further in scientific opinion on
climate change.
- A 2002 paper in the Journal of Geophysical
Research says "Our analysis suggests that the early
twentieth century warming can best be explained by a combination of
warming due to increases in greenhouse gases and natural forcing,
some cooling due to other anthropogenic forcings, and a
substantial, but not implausible, contribution from internal
variability. In the second half of the century we find that the
warming is largely caused by changes in greenhouse gases, with
changes in sulphates and, perhaps, volcanic aerosol offsetting
approximately one third of the warming."[23][24]
- In 1996, in a paper in Nature titled "A search for
human influences on the thermal structure of the atmosphere", Benjamin D.
Santer et al. wrote: "The observed spatial patterns of
temperature change in the free atmosphere from 1963 to 1987 are
similar to those predicted by state-of-the-art climate models
incorporating various combinations of changes in carbon dioxide,
anthropogenic sulphate aerosol and stratospheric ozone
concentrations. The degree of pattern similarity between models and
observations increases through this period. It is likely that this
trend is partially due to human activities, although many
uncertainties remain, particularly relating to estimates of natural
variability."
- Some scientists noted for their somewhat skeptical view of
global warming accept that recent climate change is mostly
anthropogenic. John
Christy has said that he supports the American Geophysical Union
(AGU) declaration, and is convinced that human activities are
the major cause of the global warming that has been measured.[25]
Some scientists do disagree with the consensus: see list of scientists opposing global warming
consensus. For example Willie Soon and Richard Lindzen[26] say
that there is insufficient proof for anthropogenic attribution.
Generally this position requires new physical mechanisms to explain
the observed warming; for example "Climate hypersensitivity to
solar forcing?", Soon W et al., 2000, Annales
Geophysicae-Atmospheres Hydrospheres and Space Sciences 18(5): full text.
Findings that
complicate attribution to CO2
Warming sometimes leads
CO2 increases
Factors other than increased CO2 concentrations can
initiate warming or cooling episodes (see, e.g., orbital
forcing). The ice core record shows that on some occasions
temperature starts rising hundreds of years before CO2
increases.[27][28] Such
results confirm that the relationship between CO2 and
climate can go in both directions: changes in CO2
concentrations affect climate, while changes in climate can affect
CO2 concentrations. One proposed mechanism for this
effect is increased release of sequestered CO2 from
oceans as circulation patterns shift, perhaps abruptly, in response
to climate change.[29][30]
A more speculative and polemical inference sometimes drawn is
that the causal relationship between temperature rises and global
CO2 concentrations is only one-way, so that historical
increases in CO2 have been nothing more than the product
of independently rising temperatures.[31]
However, a strictly "one-way" view of the relationship between
CO2 and temperature contradicts basic results in
physics, specifically the fact that the absorption and emission of
infrared radiation by CO2 increases as its atmospheric
concentration increases.[32][33]
First principles as well as empirical observation suggest that
positive feedbacks from CO2 concentrations amplify
warming initially caused by other factors:
Close analysis of the relationship between the two curves [i.e.,
temperature and CO2] shows that, within the
uncertainties of matching their timescales, the temperature led by
a few centuries. This is expected, since it was changes in the
Earth’s orbital parameters (including the shape of its orbit around
the Sun, and the tilt of Earth’s axis) that caused the small
initial temperature rise. This then raised atmospheric
CO2 levels, in part by outgassing from the oceans,
causing the temperature to rise further. By amplifying each other’s
response, this "positive feedback" can turn a small initial
perturbation into a large climate change. There is therefore no
surprise that the temperature and CO2 rose in parallel,
with the temperature initially in advance. In the current case, the
situation is different, because human actions are raising the
CO2 level, and we are starting to observe the
temperature response.[34]
Present CO2 levels greatly exceed the range found in
the ice core data. Isotopic analysis of atmospheric CO2
confirms that fossil fuel burning is the source of most of the
CO2 increase, unlike during prior interglacial
periods.[35] As
noted above, models that include increased CO2 levels
when simulating recent climate match the observed data far better
than those that do not.[2]
Warming on other
planets?
Over the last two decades, proxy evidence of local or planetary
warming has been observed on Mars,[36]
Pluto,[37]
Jupiter, [38] and
Neptune's largest moon Triton.[39] It
has sometimes been asserted in the popular press that this points
to a solar explanation for the recent warming on Earth.[40]
Physicist Khabibullo Abdusamatov claims
that solar
variation has caused global warming on Earth,[41] and
that the coincident warmings "can only be a straightline
consequence of the effect of the one same factor: a long-time
change in solar irradiance."[42] This
view is not accepted by other scientists. Planetary physicist Colin
Wilson responded, "His views are completely at odds with the
mainstream scientific opinion," and climate scientist Amato Evan
stated, "the idea just isn't supported by the theory or by the
observations."[36]
Charles Long of Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory, who studies radiative transfer, says
"That's nuts ... It doesn't make physical sense that that's
the case."[43] Jay Pasachoff, an
astronomy professor at Williams College, said that Pluto's
global warming was "likely not connected with that of the Earth.
The major way they could be connected is if the warming was caused
by a large increase in sunlight. But the solar constant — the
amount of sunlight received each second — is carefully
monitored by spacecraft, and we know the Sun's output is much too
steady to be changing the temperature of Pluto."[37]
Instead, scientific opinion is that these changes are caused by
other factors, such as orbital irregularities or (in the case of
Mars) changes in albedo as a
result of dust storms[44].
See also
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Further
reading
- RealClimate - Le Quéré,
How much of the recent CO2 increase is due
to human activities?, 2005
External
links