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Uncertainties in the attribution of greenhouse gas warming and implications for climate prediction

Authors :
Jones, Gareth S.
Stott, Peter A.
Mitchell, John F. B.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Using optimal detection techniques with climate model simulations, most of the observed increase of near surface temperatures over the second half of the twentieth century is attributed to anthropogenic influences. However, the partitioning of the anthropogenic influence to individual factors, such as greenhouse gases and aerosols, is much less robust. Differences in how forcing factors are applied, in their radiative influence and in models' climate sensitivities, substantially influence the response patterns. We find standard optimal detection methodologies cannot fully reconcile this response diversity. By selecting a set of experiments to enable the diagnosing of greenhouse gases and the combined influence of other anthropogenic and natural factors, we find robust detections of well mixed greenhouse gases across a large ensemble of models. Of the observed warming over the 20th century of 0.65K/century we find, using a multi model mean not incorporating pattern uncertainty, a well mixed greenhouse gas warming of 0.87 to 1.22K/century. This is partially offset by cooling from other anthropogenic and natural influences of -0.54 to -0.22K/century. Although better constrained than recent studies, the attributable trends across climate models are still wide, with implications for observational constrained estimates of transient climate response. Some of the uncertainties could be reduced in future by having more model data to better quantify the simulated estimates of the signals and natural variability, by designing model experiments more effectively and better quantification of the climate model radiative influences. Most importantly, how model pattern uncertainties are incorporated into the optimal detection methodology should be improved.<br />Comment: 33 pages, 15 figures, and supporting information. Accepted for publication in Journal of Geophysical Research - Atmospheres, 2016

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1606.05108
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/2015JD024337