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Short-lived climate forcers have long-term climate impacts via the carbon–climate feedback

Authors :
Fu, B.
Gasser, T.
Li, B.
Tao, S.
Ciais, P.
Piao, S.
Balkanski, Y.
Li, W.
Yin, T.
Han, L.
Li, X.
Han, Y.
An, J.
Peng, S.
Xu, J.
Fu, B.
Gasser, T.
Li, B.
Tao, S.
Ciais, P.
Piao, S.
Balkanski, Y.
Li, W.
Yin, T.
Han, L.
Li, X.
Han, Y.
An, J.
Peng, S.
Xu, J.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Short-lived climate forcers (SLCFs) like methane, ozone and aerosols have a shorter atmospheric lifetime than CO2 and are often assumed to have a short-term effect on the climate system: should their emissions cease, so would their radiative forcing (RF). However, via their climate impact, SLCFs can affect carbon sinks and atmospheric CO2, causing additional climate change. Here, we use a compact Earth system model to attribute CO2 RF to direct CO2 emissions and to climate–carbon feedbacks since the pre-industrial era. We estimate the climate–carbon feedback contributed 93 ± 50 mW m−2 (~5%) to total RF of CO2 in 2010. Of this, SLCF impacts were −13 ± 50 mW m−2, made up of cooling (−115 ± 43 mW m−2) and warming (102 ± 26 mW m−2) terms that largely cancel. This study illustrates the long-term impact that short-lived species have on climate and indicates that past (and future) change in atmospheric CO2 cannot be attributed only to CO2 emissions.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1194002998
Document Type :
Electronic Resource