An apparent hiatus in global warming?

被引:505
|
作者
Trenberth, Kevin E. [1 ]
Fasullo, John T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Ctr Atmospher Res, Boulder, CO 80307 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
ENSO; Pacific Decadal Oscillation; global warming; energy imbalance; global temperatures; CLIMATE VARIABILITY; ENERGY; PACIFIC; TEMPERATURES; OSCILLATION; WINTER;
D O I
10.1002/2013EF000165
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Global warming first became evident beyond the bounds of natural variability in the 1970s, but increases in global mean surface temperatures have stalled in the 2000s. Increases in atmospheric greenhouse gases, notably carbon dioxide, create an energy imbalance at the top-of-atmosphere (TOA) even as the planet warms to adjust to this imbalance, which is estimated to be 0.5-1 Wm(-2) over the 2000s. Annual global fluctuations in TOA energy of up to 0.2 Wm(-2) occur from natural variations in clouds, aerosols, and changes in the Sun. At times of major volcanic eruptions the effects can be much larger. Yet global mean surface temperatures fluctuate much more than these can account for. An energy imbalance is manifested not just as surface atmospheric or ground warming but also as melting sea and land ice, and heating of the oceans. More than 90% of the heat goes into the oceans and, with melting land ice, causes sea level to rise. For the past decade, more than 30% of the heat has apparently penetrated below 700m depth that is traceable to changes in surface winds mainly over the Pacific in association with a switch to a negative phase of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) in 1999. Surface warming was much more in evidence during the 1976-1998 positive phase of the PDO, suggesting that natural decadal variability modulates the rate of change of global surface temperatures while sea-level rise is more relentless. Global warming has not stopped; it is merely manifested in different ways.
引用
收藏
页码:19 / 32
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Spatiotemporal Temperature Variability over the Tibetan Plateau: Altitudinal Dependence Associated with the Global Warming Hiatus
    Cai, Danlu
    You, Qinglong
    Fraedrich, Klaus
    Guan, Yanning
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2017, 30 (03) : 969 - 984
  • [22] Possible artifacts of data biases in the recent global surface warming hiatus
    Karl, Thomas R.
    Arguez, Anthony
    Huang, Boyin
    Lawrimore, Jay H.
    McMahon, James R.
    Menne, Matthew J.
    Peterson, Thomas C.
    Vose, Russell S.
    Zhang, Huai-Min
    SCIENCE, 2015, 348 (6242) : 1469 - 1472
  • [23] The interplay of internal and forced modes of Hadley Cell expansion: lessons from the global warming hiatus
    Amaya, Dillon J.
    Siler, Nicholas
    Xie, Shang-Ping
    Miller, Arthur J.
    CLIMATE DYNAMICS, 2018, 51 (1-2) : 305 - 319
  • [24] Role of Indian Ocean SST variability on the recent global warming hiatus
    Arora, Anika
    Rao, Suryachandra A.
    Chattopadhyay, R.
    Goswami, Tanmoy
    George, Gibies
    Sabeerali, C. T.
    GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE, 2016, 143 : 21 - 30
  • [25] What Caused the Global Surface Warming Hiatus of 1998-2013?
    Xie, Shang-Ping
    Kosaka, Yu
    CURRENT CLIMATE CHANGE REPORTS, 2017, 3 (02): : 128 - 140
  • [26] The Life and Death of the Recent Global Surface Warming Hiatus Parsimoniously Explained
    Rypdal, Kristoffer
    CLIMATE, 2018, 6 (03):
  • [27] From accelerated warming to warming hiatus in China
    Xie, Yongkun
    Huang, Jianping
    Liu, Yuzhi
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2017, 37 (04) : 1758 - 1773
  • [28] The global warming hiatus—a natural product of interactions of a secular warming trend and a multi-decadal oscillation
    Shuai-Lei Yao
    Gang Huang
    Ren-Guang Wu
    Xia Qu
    Theoretical and Applied Climatology, 2016, 123 : 349 - 360
  • [29] Attribution analysis for the failure of CMIP5 climate models to simulate the recent global warming hiatus
    Wei Meng
    Qiao FangLi
    SCIENCE CHINA-EARTH SCIENCES, 2017, 60 (02) : 397 - 408
  • [30] The extreme El Nino of 2015-2016 and the end of global warming hiatus
    Hu, Shineng
    Fedorov, Alexey V.
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2017, 44 (08) : 3816 - 3824