The geographic disparity of historical greenhouse emissions and projected climate change.

Sci Adv

Monterey Bay Aquarium, 886 Cannery Row, Monterey, CA 93940, USA.

Published: July 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • One key issue in climate change communication is that the effects of global warming can vary greatly by location, making it hard to connect local actions to global impacts.
  • Researchers created a detailed index showing the difference between areas with high emissions and areas experiencing significant temperature increases; almost all of the Earth's surface shows a rise in temperature, despite uneven emissions.
  • The index highlights regions with the greatest temperature increases (like the Arctic and parts of Africa) versus areas with lower temperature increases despite high emissions (like Western Europe and Southeast Asia), potentially aiding in public understanding and encouraging global action on climate equity.

Article Abstract

One challenge in climate change communication is that the causes and impacts of global warming are unrelated at local spatial scales. Using high-resolution datasets of historical anthropogenic greenhouse emissions and an ensemble of 21st century surface temperature projections, we developed a spatially explicit index of local climate disparity. This index identifies positive (low emissions, large temperature shifts) and negative disparity regions (high emissions, small temperature shifts), with global coverage. Across all climate change projections we analyzed, 99% of the earth's surface area has a positive index value. This result underscores that while emissions are geographically concentrated, warming is globally widespread. From our index, the regions of the greatest positive disparity appear concentrated in the polar arctic, Central Asia, and Africa with negative disparity regions in western Europe, Southeast Asia, and eastern North America. Straightforward illustrations of this complex relationship may inform on equity, enhance public understanding, and increase collective global action.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8279500PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abe4342DOI Listing

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