Abstract

Global climate change is attracting widespread scientific, political, and public attention owing to the involvement of international initiatives such as the Paris Agreement and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. We present a large-scale bibliometric analysis based on approximately 120,000 climate change publications between 2001 and 2018 to examine how climate change is studied in scientific research. Our analysis provides an overview of scientific knowledge, shifts of research hotspots, global geographical distribution of research, and focus of individual countries. In our analysis, we identify five key fields in climate change research: physical sciences, paleoclimatology, climate-change ecology, climate technology, and climate policy. We draw the following key conclusions: (1) Over the investigated time period, the focus of climate change research has shifted from understanding the climate system toward climate technologies and policies, such as efficient energy use and legislation. (2) There is an imbalance in scientific production between developed and developing countries. (3) Geography, national demands, and national strategies have been important drivers that influence the research interests and concerns of researchers in different countries. Our study can be used by researchers and policymakers to reflect on the directions in which climate change research is developing and discuss priorities for future research.

Highlights

  • Climate change, known as global warming, refers to an increase in the average global temperature, which can have severe effects on the planet (United Nations, 2020; TakePart, 2020)

  • The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) played an important role in combining the understanding of the physical sciences behind climate change with the understanding of climate policy and climate technology via its Fourth Assessment Report in 2007 and its Fifth Assessment Report in 2014

  • The IPCC is a group of more than one thousand scientists independent from governments or companies worldwide, and its reports are a key input for international climate change negotiations. 3.1.1 Physical sciences The dark blue cluster, located on the bottom-left side of the term map (Fig. 1), covers the physical sciences that are the foundation of climate change research

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Summary

Introduction

Known as global warming, refers to an increase in the average global temperature, which can have severe effects on the planet (United Nations, 2020; TakePart, 2020). Term mapping analysis has been widely used as a method to present an overview of the organization of scientific literature on a specific research topic, such as polymer chemistry (Callon et al, 1991), software engineering (Coulter et al, 1998), economics (Cahlik, 2000), robot technology (Lee and Jeong, 2008), life cycle assessment (Hou et al, 2015), environmental crisis management (Dai et al, 2020), sustainable design (Geng et al, 2020), and sustainable banking (Najera-Sanchez, 2020) Another important tool for bibliometric studies are burst detection algorithms, which are used to explore the development of a research field over time. VOSviewer offers text mining functionality to construct and visualize a term map (van Eck and Waltman, 2011), and Sci supports the use of burst detection algorithms (Sci Team, 2009)

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