Cristin-resultat-ID: 1254662
Sist endret: 8. februar 2016, 13:49
NVI-rapporteringsår: 2015
Resultat
Vitenskapelig artikkel
2015

Uncertainty in temperature response of current consumption-based emissions estimates

Bidragsytere:
  • Jonas Karstensen
  • Glen Philip Peters og
  • Robbie Andrew

Tidsskrift

Earth System Dynamics (ESD)
ISSN 2190-4979
e-ISSN 2190-4987
NVI-nivå 1

Om resultatet

Vitenskapelig artikkel
Publiseringsår: 2015
Volum: 6
Hefte: 1
Sider: 287 - 309
Open Access

Importkilder

Scopus-ID: 2-s2.0-84930207190

Beskrivelse Beskrivelse

Tittel

Uncertainty in temperature response of current consumption-based emissions estimates

Sammendrag

Several studies have connected emissions of greenhouse gases to economic and trade data to quantify the causal chain from consumption to emissions and climate change. These studies usually combine data and models originating from different sources, making it difficult to estimate uncertainties along the entire causal chain. We estimate uncertainties in economic data, multi-pollutant emission statistics, and metric parameters, and use Monte Carlo analysis to quantify contributions to uncertainty and to determine how uncertainty propagates to estimates of global temperature change from regional and sectoral territorial- and consumption-based emissions for the year 2007. We find that the uncertainties are sensitive to the emission allocations, mix of pollutants included, the metric and its time horizon, and the level of aggregation of the results. Uncertainties in the final results are largely dominated by the climate sensitivity and the parameters associated with the warming effects of CO2. Based on our assumptions, which exclude correlations in the economic data, the uncertainty in the economic data appears to have a relatively small impact on uncertainty at the national level in comparison to emissions and metric uncertainty. Much higher uncertainties are found at the sectoral level. Our results suggest that consumption-based national emissions are not significantly more uncertain than the corresponding production-based emissions since the largest uncertainties are due to metric and emissions which affect both perspectives equally. The two perspectives exhibit different sectoral uncertainties, due to changes of pollutant compositions. We find global sectoral consumption uncertainties in the range of ±10 to ±27 % using the Global Temperature Potential with a 50-year time horizon, with metric uncertainties dominating. National-level uncertainties are similar in both perspectives due to the dominance of CO2 over other pollutants. The consumption emissions of the top 10 emitting regions have a broad uncertainty range of ±9 to ±25 %, with metric and emission uncertainties contributing similarly. The absolute global temperature potential (AGTP) with a 50-year time horizon has much higher uncertainties, with considerable uncertainty overlap for regions and sectors, indicating that the ranking of countries is uncertain.

Bidragsytere

Jonas Karstensen

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved CICERO Senter for klimaforskning

Glen Philip Peters

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved CICERO Senter for klimaforskning

Robbie Andrew

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved CICERO Senter for klimaforskning
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