New research, November 13-19, 2017
Posted on 24 November 2017 by Ari Jokimäki
A selection of new climate related research articles is shown below.
The Canadian hockey stick shown above in blue is from paper #17.
Climate change mitigation
1. Warning signs for stabilizing global CO 2 emissions
"Carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emissions from fossil fuels and industry comprise ~90% of all CO 2 emissions from human activities. For the last three years, such emissions were stable, despite continuing growth in the global economy. Many positive trends contributed to this unique hiatus, including reduced coal use in China and elsewhere, continuing gains in energy efficiency, and a boom in low-carbon renewables such as wind and solar. However, the temporary hiatus appears to have ended in 2017. For 2017, we project emissions growth of 2.0% (range: 0.8%−3.0%) from 2016 levels (leap-year adjusted), reaching a record 36.8 ± 2 Gt CO 2 . Economic projections suggest further emissions growth in 2018 is likely. Time is running out on our ability to keep global average temperature increases below 2 °C and, even more immediately, anything close to 1.5 °C."
"At both Horsepool and Castlepeak, the diurnal cycle of modeled CH4 concentrations was captured using NOAA emission estimates, but was underestimated using the EPA inventory. These findings corroborate emission estimates from the NOAA inventory, based on daytime mass balance estimates, and provide additional support for a suggested leak rate from the Uintah Basin that is higher than most other regions with natural gas and oil development."
"Under the highest greenhouse gas emissions scenario (RCP8.5), adverse effects on mean air temperature of global warming overwhelm those from the urbanization of new areas. In particular, the mean temperature increase for a summer period due to global warming and urban expansion in the Phoenix metropolitan area is 3.6 °C and in the Tucson metropolitan area, it is 3.1 °C. These result in an increase in the spatial density of the cooling energy demand (MW km−2) by 36.2 and 42.6% in the respective regions compared to present consumption. The citywide cooling energy demand (MW) on the other hand, is expected to increase up to a factor two (Phoenix) and three (Tucson), with ∼75% of this increase due to urban expansion, and ∼25% due to global warming."
9. Greenhouse gas and energy balance of Jatropha biofuel production systems of Burkina Faso
10. Cost reduction potential of parabolic trough based concentrating solar power plants in India
11. Cartograms facilitate communication of climate change risks and responsibilities
Climate change
13. Recent changes in extreme floods across multiple continents
"The occurrence of rare floods in spatial aggregate shows strong temporal variability and peaked around 1995. During the 30 year period, there are overall increases in both the frequency and magnitude of extreme floods. These increases are strongest in Europe and the United States, and weakest in Brazil and Australia."
14. Climate extremes in Europe at 1.5 and 2 degrees of global warming
"For example, we find that events similar to the European record hot summer of 2003, which caused tens of thousands of excess deaths, would be very likely at least 24% less frequent in a world at 1.5 °C global warming compared to 2 °C global warming. Under 2 °C of global warming, we could expect such extreme summer temperatures in the historical record to become commonplace, occurring in at least one-in-every-two years."
"Taken together, these results suggest that climate and regional hydrology in the central US are sensitive to the recent reductions in aerosol concentrations. Our work has implications for severely polluted regions outside the US, where improvements in air quality due to reductions in the aerosol burden could inadvertently pose an enhanced climate risk."
16. Groundwater Depletion: A Significant Unreported Source of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide
"We suggest that groundwater depletion adds significant and measurable CO2 to the atmosphere and should be considered as a source in future CO2 budgets as groundwater depletion at the same or greater rate is likely to continue"
"Model experiments show that at least ∼ 0.44?°C of cooling over the past 2?kyr is required for the ice cap to reach its 1900?CE margin, and that the period from ∼ 1000 to 1900?CE must have been at least 0.25°?C cooler than the previous millennium, results that agree with regional temperature reconstructions and climate model simulations. However, significant warming since 1900?CE is required to explain retreat to its present position, and, at the same rate of warming, the ice cap will disappear before 2100?CE."
19. Recent Progress in Greenland Ice Sheet Modelling
20. Predicting the geothermal heat flux in Greenland: a Machine Learning approach
21. Antarctic climate variability on regional and continental scales over the last 2000 years
24. Agreement of CMIP5 Simulated and Observed Ocean Anthropogenic CO2 Uptake
26. Contributions of the troposphere and stratosphere to CH4 model biases
27. Uncertainties in observations and climate projections for the North East India
28. Assessment of simulated and projected climate change in Pakistan using IPCC AR4-based AOGCMs
29. Synoptic climatology of winter daily temperature extremes in Sapporo, northern Japan
36. Global assessment of groundwater sustainability based on storage anomalies
37. Spatial representativeness of surface-measured variations of downward solar radiation
38. Cloud climatologies from the infrared sounders AIRS and IASI: strengths and applications
44. Characteristics of Explosive Cyclones over the Northern Pacific
45. Rapid Weakening of Tropical Cyclones in Monsoon Gyres over the Tropical Western North Pacific
Climate change impacts
"The result showed that dry tropical (DT) days during early summer caused excess mortality due to non-acclimatization by inhabitants, and moist tropical (MT) plus and double plus resulted in greater spikes of excess mortality due to extremely hot and humid conditions. Among the 14 Korean cities, highly excess mortality for the elderly was observed in Incheon (23.2%, 95%CI 5.6), Seoul (15.8%, 95%CI 2.6), and Jeonju (15.8%, 95%CI 4.6). No time lag effect was observed, and excess mortality gradually increased with time and hot weather simultaneously."
47. The catastrophic landside in Maoxian County, Sichuan, SW China, on June 24, 2017
"In virtue of the in situ reconnaissance conducted by geological experts, the main reason for the collapse is the high-level and long-distance debris flow in earthquake fracture zone induced by continuous rainfall."
48. Impact of sea level rise and coastal slope on shoreline change along the Indian coast
"The present study demonstrates that coastal slope is an additional parameter responsible for the movement of shoreline along with sea level change. The results of satellite-derived SCR reveal the highest percentage of erosion along West Bengal coast with 70% followed by Kerala (65%), Gujarat (60%) and Odisha (50%). The coastlines of remaining states recorded less than 50% of coasts under erosion."
"In both cases, recurrent sublethal warming decreased embryonic survival and hatchling sizes. Incorporating survivorship results into a mechanistic species distribution model reduced annual survival by up to 24% compared to models that did not incorporate sublethal warming. Contrary to models without sublethal effects, our model suggests that modest increases in developmental temperatures influence species ranges due to effects on survivorship."
50. Biodiversity and climate determine the functioning of Neotropical forests
"Water availability has a strong positive effect on biomass stocks and growth, and a future predicted increase in (atmospheric) drought might, therefore, potentially reduce carbon storage. Forest attributes, including species diversity and community-weighted mean traits, have independent and important relationships with AGB stocks, dynamics and ecosystem functioning, not only in relatively simple temperate systems, but also in structurally complex hyper-diverse tropical forests."
53. Unique challenges and opportunities for northeastern US crop production in a changing climate
55. Analysis of agro-climatic parameters and their influence on maize production in South Africa
57. Responses of rubber leaf phenology to climatic variations in Southwest China
58. Groundwater-dependent irrigation costs and benefits for adaptation to global change
59. Heat stress in cows at pasture and benefit of shade in a temperate climate region
63. Remotely sensed predictors of conifer tree mortality during severe drought
68. Temperature response surfaces for mortality risk of tree species with future drought
71. Can Antarctic lichens acclimatise to changes in temperature?
Other papers
74. Air quality improvements and health benefits from China’s clean air action since 2013
75. The potential of existing cellular networks for detecting the precursors of fog
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