The Origin and Limits of the Near Proportionality between Climate Warming and Cumulative CO2 Emissions

  • MacDougall A
  • Friedlingstein P
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Abstract

The transient climate response to cumulative CO 2 emissions (TCRE) is a useful metric of climate warming that directly relates the cause of climate change (cumulative carbon emissions) to the most used index of climate change (global mean near-surface temperature change). In this paper, analytical reasoning is used to investigate why TCRE is near constant over a range of cumulative emissions up to 2000 Pg of carbon. In addition, a climate model of intermediate complexity, forced with a constant flux of CO 2 emissions, is used to explore the effect of terrestrial carbon cycle feedback strength on TCRE. The analysis reveals that TCRE emerges from the diminishing radiative forcing from CO 2 per unit mass being compensated for by the diminishing ability of the ocean to take up heat and carbon. The relationship is maintained as long as the ocean uptake of carbon, which is simulated to be a function of the CO 2 emissions rate, dominates changes in the airborne fraction of carbon. Strong terrestrial carbon cycle feedbacks have a dependence on the rate of carbon emission and, when present, lead to TRCE becoming rate dependent. Despite these feedbacks, TCRE remains roughly constant over the range of the representative concentration pathways and therefore maintains its primary utility as a metric of climate change.

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MacDougall, A. H., & Friedlingstein, P. (2015). The Origin and Limits of the Near Proportionality between Climate Warming and Cumulative CO2 Emissions. Journal of Climate, 28(10), 4217–4230. https://doi.org/10.1175/jcli-d-14-00036.1

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