DocumentCode :
162413
Title :
Global climate change: Anthropogenic warming versus multidecadal natural oscillations: The consequences of the hiatus
Author :
Stips, A.K. ; Macias, D. ; Garcia-Gorriz, E. ; Coughlan, C.
Author_Institution :
Joint Reseach Centre, Eur. Comm. Water Resources Unit, Ispra, Italy
fYear :
2014
fDate :
7-10 April 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
4
Abstract :
We use singular spectrum analysis techniques to discriminate the underlying signals within the HadCRUT4 global surface temperature record. Our analysis identifies a multidecadal oscillation (related to natural oscillations) and a secular trend (assumed to be representative of anthropogenic-induced warming) as the two main signals within the temperature record. Most current generation global circulation models (CMIP5) do not reproduce the multidecadal oscillation and fail to capture the present observed temperature hiatus in their simulations. Therefore, it is unlikely that these models can correctly forecast the temperature evolution during the coming decades. Forecasts based on the analysed secular trend and the multidecadal oscillations are indeed capable of reproducing the observed hiatus and generally result, in comparison to CMIP5 forecasts, in much lower temperature increases for 2100 of only about +0.39°C [-0.47-2.46] assuming a “business as usual” scenario. It is likely that the increased radiative forcing does rather lead to accelerated warming of other parts of the climate system as the ocean or the cryosphere.
Keywords :
atmospheric radiation; atmospheric temperature; global warming; weather forecasting; CMIP5 forecasts; HadCRUT4 global surface temperature record; accelerated warming; anthropogenic warming; generation global circulation models; global climate change; multidecadal natural oscillations; radiative forcing; secular trend; singular spectrum analysis techniques; temperature evolution; temperature hiatus; temperature record; Forecasting; Market research; Meteorology; Ocean temperature; Oscillators; Temperature distribution; Time series analysis; Global surface temperatures; forecasting; hiatus;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2014 - TAIPEI
Conference_Location :
Taipei
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-3645-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS-TAIPEI.2014.6964592
Filename :
6964592
Link To Document :
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