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The utility of the historical record for assessing the transient climate response to cumulative emissions
by
Friedlingstein, Pierre
, Millar, Richard J.
in
Carbon Budgets
/ Carbon Cycle
/ Carbon dioxide
/ Climate Change
/ Computer simulation
/ Paris Agreement
/ Radiative forcing
/ Uncertainty
/ Upper bounds
2018
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The utility of the historical record for assessing the transient climate response to cumulative emissions
by
Friedlingstein, Pierre
, Millar, Richard J.
in
Carbon Budgets
/ Carbon Cycle
/ Carbon dioxide
/ Climate Change
/ Computer simulation
/ Paris Agreement
/ Radiative forcing
/ Uncertainty
/ Upper bounds
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
The utility of the historical record for assessing the transient climate response to cumulative emissions
by
Friedlingstein, Pierre
, Millar, Richard J.
in
Carbon Budgets
/ Carbon Cycle
/ Carbon dioxide
/ Climate Change
/ Computer simulation
/ Paris Agreement
/ Radiative forcing
/ Uncertainty
/ Upper bounds
2018
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The utility of the historical record for assessing the transient climate response to cumulative emissions
Journal Article
The utility of the historical record for assessing the transient climate response to cumulative emissions
2018
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Overview
The historical observational record offers a way to constrain the relationship between cumulative carbon dioxide emissions and global mean warming. We use a standard detection and attribution technique, along with observational uncertainties to estimate the all-forcing or 'effective' transient climate response to cumulative emissions (TCRE) from the observational record. Accounting for observational uncertainty and uncertainty in historical non-CO2 radiative forcing gives a best-estimate from the historical record of 1.84°C/TtC (1.43-2.37°C/TtC 5-95% uncertainty) for the effective TCRE and 1.31°C/TtC (0.88-2.60°C/TtC 5-95% uncertainty) for the CO2-only TCRE. While the best-estimate TCRE lies in the lower half of the IPCC likely range, the high upper bound is associated with the not-ruled-out possibility of a strongly negative aerosol forcing. Earth System Models have a higher effective TCRE range when compared like-for-like with the observations over the historical period, associated in part with a slight underestimate of diagnosed cumulative emissions relative to the observational best-estimate, a larger ensemble mean-simulated CO2-induced warming, and rapid post-2000 non-CO2 warming in some ensemble members.
This article is part of the theme issue 'The Paris Agreement: understanding the physical and social challenges for a warming world of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels'.
Publisher
The Royal Society Publishing
Subject
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