Breaks, Trends and the Attribution of Climate Change: A Time-Series Analysis
Climate change detection and attribution have been the subject of intense research and debate over at least four decades. However, direct attribution of climate change to anthropogenic activities using observed climate and forcing variables through statistical methods has remained elusive, partly c...
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doaj-de5b46d2a4854a6c9645cab7beb8ab102020-11-25T01:46:38ZengPontificia Universidad Católica del PerúEconomía0254-44152304-43062019-09-01428310.18800/economia.201901.00121102Breaks, Trends and the Attribution of Climate Change: A Time-Series AnalysisFrancisco Estrada0Pierre Perron1Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Vrije UniversiteitBoston University Climate change detection and attribution have been the subject of intense research and debate over at least four decades. However, direct attribution of climate change to anthropogenic activities using observed climate and forcing variables through statistical methods has remained elusive, partly caused by difficulties to correctly identify the time-series properties of these variables and by the limited availability of methods to relate nonstationary variables. This paper provides strong evidence concerning the direct attribution of observed climate change to anthropogenic greenhouse gases emissions by first investigating the univariate time-series properties of observed global and hemispheric temperatures and forcing variables and then by proposing statistically adequate multivariate models. The results show that there is a clear anthropogenic fingerprint on both global and hemispheric temperatures. The signal of the well-mixed Greenhouse Gases (GHG) forcing in all temperature series is very clear and accounts for most of their secular movements since the beginning of observations. Both temperature and forcing variables are characterized by piecewise linear trends with abrupt changes in their slopes estimated to occur at different dates. Nevertheless, their long-term movements are so closely related that the observed temperature and forcing trends cancel out. The warming experimented during the last century was mainly due to the increase in GHG which was partially offset by the effect of tropospheric aerosols. Other forcing sources, such as solar, are shown to only contribute to (shorter-term) variations around the GHG forcing trend. http://revistas.pucp.edu.pe/index.php/economia/article/view/21102Segmented trendsTemperaturesGreenhouse gasesRadiative forcingsAnthropogenic influence |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Francisco Estrada Pierre Perron |
spellingShingle |
Francisco Estrada Pierre Perron Breaks, Trends and the Attribution of Climate Change: A Time-Series Analysis Economía Segmented trends Temperatures Greenhouse gases Radiative forcings Anthropogenic influence |
author_facet |
Francisco Estrada Pierre Perron |
author_sort |
Francisco Estrada |
title |
Breaks, Trends and the Attribution of Climate Change: A Time-Series Analysis |
title_short |
Breaks, Trends and the Attribution of Climate Change: A Time-Series Analysis |
title_full |
Breaks, Trends and the Attribution of Climate Change: A Time-Series Analysis |
title_fullStr |
Breaks, Trends and the Attribution of Climate Change: A Time-Series Analysis |
title_full_unstemmed |
Breaks, Trends and the Attribution of Climate Change: A Time-Series Analysis |
title_sort |
breaks, trends and the attribution of climate change: a time-series analysis |
publisher |
Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú |
series |
Economía |
issn |
0254-4415 2304-4306 |
publishDate |
2019-09-01 |
description |
Climate change detection and attribution have been the subject of intense research and debate over at least four decades. However, direct attribution of climate change to anthropogenic activities using observed climate and forcing variables through statistical methods has remained elusive, partly caused by difficulties to correctly identify the time-series properties of these variables and by the limited availability of methods to relate nonstationary variables. This paper provides strong evidence concerning the direct attribution of observed climate change to anthropogenic greenhouse gases emissions by first investigating the univariate time-series properties of observed global and hemispheric temperatures and forcing variables and then by proposing statistically adequate multivariate models. The results show that there is a clear anthropogenic fingerprint on both global and hemispheric temperatures. The signal of the well-mixed Greenhouse Gases (GHG) forcing in all temperature series is very clear and accounts for most of their secular movements since the beginning of observations. Both temperature and forcing variables are characterized by piecewise linear trends with abrupt changes in their slopes estimated to occur at different dates. Nevertheless, their long-term movements are so closely related that the observed temperature and forcing trends cancel out. The warming experimented during the last century was mainly due to the increase in GHG which was partially offset by the effect of tropospheric aerosols. Other forcing sources, such as solar, are shown to only contribute to (shorter-term) variations around the GHG forcing trend.
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topic |
Segmented trends Temperatures Greenhouse gases Radiative forcings Anthropogenic influence |
url |
http://revistas.pucp.edu.pe/index.php/economia/article/view/21102 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT franciscoestrada breakstrendsandtheattributionofclimatechangeatimeseriesanalysis AT pierreperron breakstrendsandtheattributionofclimatechangeatimeseriesanalysis |
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1725018247376404480 |