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考研阅读精选:气候变化--终于传来了好消息

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发表于 2017-8-5 22:03:43 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
『研究发现,空气中的二氧化碳含量并不会对气候造成太大的影响,这一发现出乎我们的意料。』
Climate change: Good news at last?
气候变化:终于传来了好消息

Nov 26, 2011 | from The Economist

  CLIMATE science is famously complicated, but one useful number to keep  in mind is “climate sensitivity”. This measures the amount of warming  that can eventually be expected to follow a doubling in the atmospheric  concentration of carbon dioxide. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate  Change, in its most recent summary of the science behind its  predictions, published in 2007, estimated that, in present conditions, a  doubling of CO2 would cause warming of about 3°C, with uncertainty of  about a degree and a half in either direction. But it also says there is  a small probability that the true number is much higher. Some recent  studies have suggested that it could be as high as 10°C.
If that  were true, disaster beckons. But a paper published in this week’s  Science, by Andreas Schmittner of Oregon State University, suggests it  is not. In Dr Schmittner’s analysis, the climate is less sensitive to  carbon dioxide than was feared.
Existing studies of climate  sensitivity mostly rely on data gathered from weather stations, which go  back to roughly 1850. Dr Schmittner takes a different approach. His  data come from the peak of the most recent ice age, between 19,000 and  23,000 years ago. His group is not the first to use such data (ice  cores, fossils, marine sediments and the like) to probe the climate’s  sensitivity to carbon dioxide. But their paper is the most thorough.  Previous attempts had considered only small regions of the globe. He has  compiled enough information to make a credible stab at recreating the  climate of the entire planet.
The result offers that rarest of  things in climate science—a bit of good news. The group’s most likely  figure for climate sensitivity is 2.3°C, which is more than half a  degree lower than the consensus figure, with a 66% probability that it  lies between 1.7° and 2.6°C. More importantly, these results suggest an  upper limit for climate sensitivity of around 3.2°C.
Before you  take the SUV out for a celebratory spin, though, it is worth bearing in  mind that this is only one study, and, like all such, it has its flaws.  The computer model used is of only middling sophistication, Dr  Schmittner admits. That may be one reason for the narrow range of his  team’s results. And although the study’s geographical coverage is the  most comprehensive so far for work of this type, there are still blank  areas—notably in Australia, Central Asia, South America and the northern  Pacific Ocean. Moreover, some sceptics complain about the way ancient  data of this type were used to construct a different but related piece  of climate science: the so-called hockey-stick model, which suggests  that temperatures have risen suddenly since the beginning of the  industrial revolution. It will be interesting to see if such sceptics  are willing to be equally sceptical about ancient data when they support  their point of view. (476 words)
文章地址: http://www.economist.com/node/21540224
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