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Dangerous human-made interference with climate: A GISS modelE study

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posted on 2025-07-31, 16:16 authored by J Hansen, M Sato, R Ruedy, P Kharecha, A Lacis, R Miller, L Nazarenko, K Lo, GA Schmidt, G Russell, I Aleinov, S Bauer, E Baum, B Cairns, V Canuto, M Chandler, Y Cheng, A Cohen, AD Genio, G Faluvegi, E Fleming, A Friend, T Hall, C Jackman, J Jonas, M Kelley, NY Kiang, D Koch, G Labow, J Lerner, S Menon, T Novakov, V Oinas, J Perlwitz, D Rind, A Romanou, R Schmunk, D Shindell, P Stone, S Sun, D Streets, N Tausnev, D Thresher, N Unger, M Yao, S Zhang
We investigate the issue of "dangerous human-made interference with climate" using simulations with GISS modelE driven by measured or estimated forcings for 1880-2003 and extended to 2100 for IPCC greenhouse gas scenarios as well as the 'alternative' scenario of Hansen and Sato. Identification of 'dangerous' effects is partly subjective, but we find evidence that added global warming of more than 1 degree C above the level in 2000 has effects that may be highly disruptive. The alternative scenario, with peak added forcing ~1.5 W/m2 in 2100, keeps further global warming under 1 degree C if climate sensitivity is \~3 degrees C or less for doubled CO2. We discuss three specific sub-global topics: Arctic climate change, tropical storm intensification, and ice sheet stability. Growth of non-CO2 forcings has slowed in recent years, but CO2 emissions are now surging well above the alternative scenario. Prompt actions to slow CO2 emissions and decrease non-CO2 forcings are needed to achieve the low forcing of the alternative scenario.

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© Author(s) 2007. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics

Publisher

European Geosciences Union (EGU)

Language

en

Citation

Vol. 7, pp. 2287 - 2312

Department

  • Mathematics and Statistics

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