College of Engineering, Mathematics and Physical Sciences, University of Exeter, North Park Road, Exeter EX4 4QF, UK.
Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci. 2011 Mar 13;369(1938):868-86. doi: 10.1098/rsta.2010.0305.
Global CO(2) emissions are understood to be the largest contributor to anthropogenic climate change, and have, to date, been highly correlated with economic output. However, there is likely to be a negative feedback between climate change and human wealth: economic growth is typically associated with an increase in CO(2) emissions and global warming, but the resulting climate change may lead to damages that suppress economic growth. This climate-economy feedback is assumed to be weak in standard climate change assessments. When the feedback is incorporated in a transparently simple model it reveals possible emergent behaviour in the coupled climate-economy system. Formulae are derived for the critical rates of growth of global CO(2) emissions that cause damped or long-term boom-bust oscillations in human wealth, thereby preventing a soft landing of the climate-economy system. On the basis of this model, historical rates of economic growth and decarbonization appear to put the climate-economy system in a potentially damaging oscillatory regime.
全球二氧化碳排放被认为是人为气候变化的最大贡献者,迄今为止,与经济产出高度相关。然而,气候变化和人类财富之间可能存在负反馈:经济增长通常伴随着二氧化碳排放和全球变暖的增加,但由此产生的气候变化可能导致抑制经济增长的损害。在标准气候变化评估中,这种气候-经济反馈被认为是微弱的。当这种反馈被纳入一个透明简单的模型时,它揭示了耦合气候-经济系统中可能出现的新行为。推导出了全球二氧化碳排放增长率的临界值,这些增长率导致人类财富的阻尼或长期繁荣-萧条振荡,从而防止气候-经济系统软着陆。基于这个模型,历史上的经济增长和脱碳速度似乎使气候-经济系统处于一个潜在的破坏性振荡状态。