Clarifying the Roles of Greenhouse Gases and ENSO in Recent Global Warming through Their Prediction Performance

It is well known that natural external forcings and decadal-to-millennial variability drove changes in the climate system throughout the Holocene. Regarding recent times, attribution studies have shown that greenhouse gases (GHGs) determined the trend of temperature (T) in the last half century, whi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of climate 2014-10, Vol.27 (20), p.7903-7910
Hauptverfasser: Triacca, Umberto, Pasini, Antonello, Attanasio, Alessandro, Giovannelli, Alessandro, Lippi, Marco
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:It is well known that natural external forcings and decadal-to-millennial variability drove changes in the climate system throughout the Holocene. Regarding recent times, attribution studies have shown that greenhouse gases (GHGs) determined the trend of temperature (T) in the last half century, while circulation patterns contributed to modify its interannual, decadal, or multidecadal behavior over this period. Here temperature predictions based on vector autoregressive models (VARs) have been used to study the influence of GHGs and El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) on recent temperature behavior. It is found that in the last decades of steep temperature increase, ENSO shows just a very short-range influence onT, while GHGs are dominant for each forecast horizon. Conversely and quite surprisingly, in the previous quasi-stationary period the influences of GHGs and ENSO are comparable, even at longer range. Therefore, if the recent hiatus in global temperatures should persist into the near future, an enhancement of the role of ENSO can be expected. Finally, the predictive ability of GHGs is more evident in the Southern Hemisphere, where the temperature series is smoother.
ISSN:0894-8755
1520-0442
DOI:10.1175/JCLI-D-13-00784.1