Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers -

Forensic Engineering

ISSN 2043-9903 | E-ISSN 2043-9911
Volume 170 Issue 2, May 2017, pp. 50-53
Themed issue on climate hazards for resilience
Open access content Subscribed content Free content Trial content

In the past 3 years, global surface temperatures have spiked considerably. In early 2016 it is possible that they briefly exceeded 1·5 K above ‘pre-industrial’ levels. This spike was the result of a combination of the underlying trend and internal climate system variability. Up until about 2015, there was much discussion of a potential ‘hiatus’ feature in the recent records and the implications thereof for the understanding of climate and the verity of projections. The general message across a broad range of literature is that some combination of internal climate system variability and external forcing effects principally from volcanoes and the sun was responsible for some part of this. However, there has also been renewed interest in analyses of historical records, from which several new and revised data products have arisen. These have served to highlight the roles of both modern marine data biases and spatial coverage. Accounting for these reduces the magnitude of the apparent muted warming in the early twenty-first century. Global mean temperatures have increased on multidecadal timescales, and only invoking human influences can explain these rises adequately. Natural variability can mask or exacerbate the underlying trend for periods of up to a decade or so.

Full Text

References

Cited By

Related content

Sign up to content alerts
ICE Membership

Content tools


Related search

By Keyword
By Author

No search history

Recently Viewed