Abstract

The slowdown in tropospheric temperature increase between 1997-2016 led some commentators in Australia (and elsewhere) to repeat earlier assertions that there is an absence of any relationship between anthropogenic carbon dioxide increase and global air temperature. Here we test the null hypothesis that anthropogenic greenhouse forcing makes no contribution to global mean tropospheric temperature by analysing a satellite-derived lower tropospheric temperature record since 1978. A well-known heuristic model that separates variance in air temperature into components from different sources of climate variability is employed to determine what contribution anthropogenic greenhouse gases made to satellite-measured lower tropospheric temperature. Over the satellite record from December 1978 to the January 2016 the anthropogenic contribution to lower tropospheric temperature is estimated to be between +0.29 and +0.34K. Over the shorter segment of the record from December 1997 to January 2016 an anthropogenic contribution of +0.15K to the satellite-derived lower tropospheric air temperature was found. The slowdown in rate of temperature increase in that period is found simply to be a consequence of internal climate system variability that at other times has the opposite effect. The null hypothesis of no relationship between lower troposphere temperature and greenhouse gas increase is rejected.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call