Litcius/Paper detail

Anthropogenic climate change: the impact of the global carbon budget

Margarete Redlin, Thomas Gries

2021Theoretical and Applied Climatology37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Using time series data for the period 1959–2015, our empirical analysis examines the simultaneous effects of the individual components of the global carbon budget on temperature. Specifically, we explore the possible effects of carbon emissions caused by fossil fuel combustion, cement production, land-use change emissions, and carbon sinks (here in terms of land sink and ocean sink) on climate change. The simultaneous inclusion of carbon emissions and carbon sinks allows us to look at the coexistent and opposing effects of the individual components of the carbon budget and thus provides a holistic perspective from which to explore the relationship between the global carbon budget and global warming. The results reveal a significant positive effect of carbon emissions on temperature for both fossil fuels emissions and emissions from land-use change, confirming previous results concerning carbon dioxide and temperature. Further, while ocean sink does not seem to have a significant effect, we identify a temperature-decreasing effect for land sink.

Topics & Concepts

Carbon sinkEnvironmental scienceClimate changeSink (geography)Global warmingGreenhouse gasFossil fuelCarbon dioxideGlobal changeCarbon cycleAtmospheric carbon cycleCarbon fibersLand use, land-use change and forestryCombustionAtmospheric sciencesCarbon sequestrationLand useEcologyOceanographyGeologyEcosystemChemistryBiologyOrganic chemistryCartographyGeographyComposite materialComposite numberMaterials scienceAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsClimate Change Policy and EconomicsClimate variability and models