http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/joc.4222/abstract

Pasini et al

Keywords:
sulfates;global temperature;radiative forcing;Granger causality

ABSTRACT

Attribution studies clearly show that the recent global warming is mainly
linked with changes in atmospheric composition induced by human activities,
especially by emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs). Even if the increasing
trend in temperatures is well caught by global climate models (GCMs), some
periods of quasi-constant temperature behaviour are not completely
understood. In this article we focus on the role of sulfates and apply an
inferential method (Granger causality analysis) in order to analyse in
detail their role in changes of global temperature. Starting from the
identification of two sub-periods (1943–1975 and 1976–2011) characterized
by a quasi-constant plateau and a steep increase in temperature,
respectively, we find that in the first period the cooling induced by
sulfates is able to balance the warming effect of GHGs. This does not
happen in the second period, when GHG forcing probably overwhelms the other
causal factor here considered. In any case there exists a strong evidence
of a joint driving of temperature by these two forcings. This allows us to
identify sulfates as a major driver of the quasi-stationary period
1943–1975.

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