—
Human activity has affected Earth's surface temperature
during the last 130 years, according to a study published
this month by the Journal of Geophysical Research. Dr.
Robert K. Kaufmann of Boston University's Center for Energy
and Environmental Studies and Dr. David I. Stern of the
Australian National University's Centre for Resource and
Environmental Study analyzed historical data for greenhouse
gas concentrations, human sulfur emissions, and variations
in solar activity between 1865 and 1990. The greenhouse
gases studied included carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous
oxide, and chloroflurocarbons 11 and 12.
Using the
statistical technique of cointegration, the scientists
compared these factors over time with global surface
temperature in both the northern and southern hemispheres.
Cointegration techniques are not confused by variables that
tend to increase or decrease over time or contain some
poorly measured observations. As such this is the first
study to make a statistically meaningful link between human
activity and temperature, independent of climate models,
Kaufmann notes.
They found
that eliminating any one variable - greenhouse gases, human
sulfur emissions, or solar activity - made the errors
larger; that is, all of those factors taken together are
needed to explain changes in Earth's surface temperature.
They found
also that the impact of human activity has been different in
the two hemispheres. In the north, the warming effect of
greenhouse gases was almost exactly offset by the cooling
effect of sulfur emissions, making the temperature effects
difficult to observe. In the southern hemisphere, where
human sulfur emissions are lower, the effects are easier to
see, they write.
Kaufmann
says, "the countervailing effects of greenhouse gases
and sulfur emissions undercut comments by climate change
skeptics, who argue that the rapid increase in atmospheric
concentrations of greenhouse gases between the end of World
War II and the early 1970s had little effect on
temperature." During this period, he says, "the
warming effect of greenhouse gases was hidden by a
simultaneous increase in sulfur emissions. But, since then,
sulfur emissions have slowed, due to laws aimed at reducing
acid rain, and this has allowed the warming effects of
greenhouse gases to become more apparent."
Analysis of
the data indicates that doubling the atmospheric
concentration of carbon dioxide from its preindustrial level
will increase will increase northern hemispheric temperature
by 2.3 to 3.5 degrees Celsius [4.1 to 6.3 degrees
Fahrenheit]. In the southern hemisphere, the increase will
be between 1.7 and 2.2 degrees Celsius [3.1 and 4 degrees
Fahrenheit], the scientists say, noting that this doubling
is expected to be achieved over the next century.
Kaufmann
observes that while to some, these projected changes may
seem small, during the last ice age, more than 15,000 years
ago, Earth's global temperature was only 3 to 5 degrees
Celsius [5 to 9 degrees Fahrenheit] cooler than it is now.