A probabilistic analysis of human influence on recent record global mean temperature changes
December 2013 was the 346th consecutive month where global land and ocean average surface temperature exceeded the 20th century monthly average, with February 1985 the last time mean temperature fell below this value. Even given these and other extraordinary statistics, public acceptance of human in...
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doaj-8ae97150c1484c5495ff9238deafea682020-11-24T23:20:08ZengElsevierClimate Risk Management2212-09632014-01-013C11210.1016/j.crm.2014.03.002A probabilistic analysis of human influence on recent record global mean temperature changesPhilip Kokic0Steven Crimp1Mark Howden2CSIRO, CCI, GPO Box 664, ACT 2601, AustraliaCSIRO, CES, GPO Box 1700, ACT 2601, AustraliaCSIRO, CAF, GPO Box 1700, ACT 2601, AustraliaDecember 2013 was the 346th consecutive month where global land and ocean average surface temperature exceeded the 20th century monthly average, with February 1985 the last time mean temperature fell below this value. Even given these and other extraordinary statistics, public acceptance of human induced climate change and confidence in the supporting science has declined since 2007. The degree of uncertainty as to whether observed climate changes are due to human activity or are part of natural systems fluctuations remains a major stumbling block to effective adaptation action and risk management. Previous approaches to attribute change include qualitative expert-assessment approaches such as used in IPCC reports and use of ‘fingerprinting’ methods based on global climate models. Here we develop an alternative approach which provides a rigorous probabilistic statistical assessment of the link between observed climate changes and human activities in a way that can inform formal climate risk assessment. We construct and validate a time series model of anomalous global temperatures to June 2010, using rates of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, as well as other causal factors including solar radiation, volcanic forcing and the El Niño Southern Oscillation. When the effect of GHGs is removed, bootstrap simulation of the model reveals that there is less than a one in one hundred thousand chance of observing an unbroken sequence of 304 months (our analysis extends to June 2010) with mean surface temperature exceeding the 20th century average. We also show that one would expect a far greater number of short periods of falling global temperatures (as observed since 1998) if climate change was not occurring. This approach to assessing probabilities of human influence on global temperature could be transferred to other climate variables and extremes allowing enhanced formal risk assessment of climate change.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212096314000163Time series modellingBootstrap simulationAnthropogenic climate change |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Philip Kokic Steven Crimp Mark Howden |
spellingShingle |
Philip Kokic Steven Crimp Mark Howden A probabilistic analysis of human influence on recent record global mean temperature changes Climate Risk Management Time series modelling Bootstrap simulation Anthropogenic climate change |
author_facet |
Philip Kokic Steven Crimp Mark Howden |
author_sort |
Philip Kokic |
title |
A probabilistic analysis of human influence on recent record global mean temperature changes |
title_short |
A probabilistic analysis of human influence on recent record global mean temperature changes |
title_full |
A probabilistic analysis of human influence on recent record global mean temperature changes |
title_fullStr |
A probabilistic analysis of human influence on recent record global mean temperature changes |
title_full_unstemmed |
A probabilistic analysis of human influence on recent record global mean temperature changes |
title_sort |
probabilistic analysis of human influence on recent record global mean temperature changes |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Climate Risk Management |
issn |
2212-0963 |
publishDate |
2014-01-01 |
description |
December 2013 was the 346th consecutive month where global land and ocean average surface temperature exceeded the 20th century monthly average, with February 1985 the last time mean temperature fell below this value. Even given these and other extraordinary statistics, public acceptance of human induced climate change and confidence in the supporting science has declined since 2007. The degree of uncertainty as to whether observed climate changes are due to human activity or are part of natural systems fluctuations remains a major stumbling block to effective adaptation action and risk management. Previous approaches to attribute change include qualitative expert-assessment approaches such as used in IPCC reports and use of ‘fingerprinting’ methods based on global climate models. Here we develop an alternative approach which provides a rigorous probabilistic statistical assessment of the link between observed climate changes and human activities in a way that can inform formal climate risk assessment. We construct and validate a time series model of anomalous global temperatures to June 2010, using rates of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, as well as other causal factors including solar radiation, volcanic forcing and the El Niño Southern Oscillation. When the effect of GHGs is removed, bootstrap simulation of the model reveals that there is less than a one in one hundred thousand chance of observing an unbroken sequence of 304 months (our analysis extends to June 2010) with mean surface temperature exceeding the 20th century average. We also show that one would expect a far greater number of short periods of falling global temperatures (as observed since 1998) if climate change was not occurring. This approach to assessing probabilities of human influence on global temperature could be transferred to other climate variables and extremes allowing enhanced formal risk assessment of climate change. |
topic |
Time series modelling Bootstrap simulation Anthropogenic climate change |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212096314000163 |
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