Journal article

The relationship between peak warming and cumulative CO2 emissions, and its use to quantify vulnerabilities in the carbon-climate-human system

MR Raupach, JG Canadell, P Ciais, P Friedlingstein, PJ Rayner, CM Trudinger

Tellus Series B Chemical and Physical Meteorology | Published : 2011

Abstract

Interactions between the carbon cycle, climate and human societies are subject to several major vulnerabilities, broadly defined as factors contributing to the risk of harm from human-induced climate change. We assess five vulnerabilities: (1) effects of increasing CO2 on the partition of anthropogenic carbon between atmospheric, land and ocean reservoirs; (2) effects of climate change (quantified by temperature) on CO2 fluxes; (3) uncertainty in climate sensitivity; (4) non-CO2 radiative forcing and (5) anthropogenic CO2 emissions. Our analysis uses a physically based expression for Tp(Qp), the peak warming Tp associated with a cumulative anthropogenic CO2 emission Qp to the time of peak wa..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Funding Acknowledgements

This paper is a contribution to the Global Carbon Project. MRR and JGC acknowledge with appreciation the support of the Department of Climate Change, Australian Government, which has supported the office of the Global Carbon Project in Canberra. We thank Ian Harman, John Finnigan and Ian Enting for comments on an early draft of this paper, two anonymous referees for detailed and extremely helpful comments, and Peter Briggs for assistance with figures.