Research articles

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  • A relatively wide range of emissions in 2020 could keep open the option of limiting long-term temperature increase to below 2 °C; however, a shortfall in critical technologies would narrow that range or eliminate it altogether. Reduced emissions in 2020 would hedge against this uncertainty.

    • Joeri Rogelj
    • David L. McCollum
    • Keywan Riahi
    Article
  • Environmental campaigns often promote energy conservation by appealing to economic rather than environmental concerns, assuming self-interest drives people’s behaviour. New research discredits such conventional wisdom and shows that, at least in some cases, it is more effective to call on people’s interest in protecting the biosphere to encourage behavioural changes.

    • J. W. Bolderdijk
    • L. Steg
    • T. Postmes
    Article
  • Public concern about anthropogenic global warming has been declining despite the scientific consensus on the issue. It is still unknown whether experts’ consensus determines people’s beliefs, and it is not clear if public perception of consensus overrides worldviews known to foster rejection of anthropogenic climate change. New research shows that information about scientific consensus increases acceptance of anthropogenic global warming and neutralizes the effect of worldviews.

    • Stephan Lewandowsky
    • Gilles E. Gignac
    • Samuel Vaughan
    Article
  • The South Pacific Convergence Zone is the largest rainband in the Southern Hemisphere, and its response to global warming is still undetermined. In this study a hierarchy of climate models show that the uncertainty in rainfall projections in the South Pacific Convergence Zone is the result of two competing mechanisms.

    • Matthew J. Widlansky
    • Axel Timmermann
    • Wenju Cai
    Article
  • As the global climate changes, drought is expected to reduce productivity and tree survival across many forests; however, the relative influence of climate variables on forest decline remains poorly understood. A drought-stress index based on tree-ring data—newly developed for the southwestern United States—is found to be equally influenced by evaporation (primarily temperature driven) and precipitation and may serve as a holistic forest-vigour indicator in water-limited forests.

    • A. Park Williams
    • Craig D. Allen
    • Nate G. McDowell
    Article
  • Comprehensive computer simulations show that coral reefs are likely to suffer extensive long-term degradation resulting from mass bleaching events even if the expected increase in global mean temperature can be kept well below 2 °C. Without major mitigation efforts to limit global warming significantly, the fate of coral reef ecosystems seems to be sealed.

    • K. Frieler
    • M. Meinshausen
    • O. Hoegh-Guldberg
    Article
  • Climate-driven sea-level rise will result in coastline retreat due to landward movement of the coastal profile. However, coastlines adjacent to tidal inlets will also be influenced by changes in the rate of basin infill and variations in rainfall. A model demonstrates that typical practice, which fails to incorporate these processes, is liable to represent only 25–50% of total coastline change.

    • Roshanka Ranasinghe
    • Trang Minh Duong
    • Marcel Stive
    Article
  • Accurately characterizing natural versus forced sea surface temperature variability in observations is needed to validate and verify climate models used for projections of future climate change. This study successfully resolves previous large discrepancies in estimated tropical Indo-Pacific twentieth-century trends between observationally based sea surface temperature reconstructions.

    • Amy Solomon
    • Matthew Newman
    Article
  • An international agreement on reducing greenhouse-gas emissions requires large financial flows from richer to poorer countries. However, the amount and justification for such transfers is still contested. Now research has developed an argument for transfer payments by estimating regional carbon prices versus a global price, and found that in the case of a global carbon price of US$35 per tonne of carbon dioxide, a flow of US$15–48 billion per year would be needed.

    • Florian Landis
    • Thomas Bernauer
    Article
  • The 2010 Cancún Agreement established a financial mechanism, through the Green Climate Fund, to support developing countries in greenhouse-gas emissions abatement. However, the different countries’ financial needs are often assessed on the basis of top-down cost estimates of energy technologies. Now a study provides a more fine-grained bottom-up approach that highlights the need for a ‘fair’ baseline calculation methodology and calls for a phase-out of fuel subsidies.

    • Tobias S. Schmidt
    • Robin Born
    • Malte Schneider
    Article
  • Sea-surface-temperature proxy data for a period of natural climate warming during the Pliocene are used in this study to show how palaeoclimatic data can help ‘ground truth’ numerical models, increasing the confidence in these same models for projecting future climate.

    • Harry J. Dowsett
    • Marci M. Robinson
    • Christina R. Riesselman
    Article
  • Focusing on New York City, this study investigates the impact of climate change on hurricane storm surges. The analysis shows that the frequency of surge-flooding events is likely to increase greatly owing to the combined effects of storm-climatology change and sea-level rise.

    • Ning Lin
    • Kerry Emanuel
    • Erik Vanmarcke
    Article
  • Assessments of tropical cyclone risk trends are typically based on reported losses, which are biased by improvements in information access. Now research based on thousands of physically observed events and contextual factors shows that, despite projected reductions in tropical cyclone frequency, projected increases in demographic pressure and tropical cyclone intensity can be expected to exacerbate disaster risk.

    • P. Peduzzi
    • B. Chatenoux
    • O. Nordbeck
    Article
  • Greenhouse-gas emissions are likely to have an impact on the damage caused by extreme weather events, such as tropical cyclones. A study predicts that climate change will increase the frequency of these high-intensity storms in selected ocean basins and double their economic damage. Almost all tropical cyclone damage tends to be concentrated in North America, East Asia and the Caribbean-Central American region.

    • Robert Mendelsohn
    • Kerry Emanuel
    • Laura Bakkensen
    Article
  • Global climate models cannot resolve hailstorms explicitly, so it is unclear whether a warmer climate will change hailstorm frequency and intensity. Now a study using high-resolution model simulations capable of resolving hail indicates the near-elimination of hail at the surface in future simulations for Colorado—a major centre of hailstorms in the United States.

    • Kelly Mahoney
    • Michael A. Alexander
    • James D. Scott
    Article