Probabilities of causation of climate changes

11/30/2017
by   Alexis Hannart, et al.
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Multiple changes in Earth's climate system have been observed over the past decades. Determining how likely each of these changes are to have been caused by human influence, is important for decision making on mitigation and adaptation policy. Here we describe an approach for deriving the probability that anthropogenic forcings have caused a given observed change. The proposed approach is anchored into causal counterfactual theory (Pearl 2009) which has been introduced recently, and was in fact partly used already, in the context of extreme weather event attribution (EA). We argue that these concepts are also relevant, and can be straightforwardly extended to, the context of detection and attribution of long term trends associated to climate change (D&A). For this purpose, and in agreement with the principle of "fingerprinting" applied in the conventional D&A framework, a trajectory of change is converted into an event occurrence defined by maximizing the causal evidence associated to the forcing under scrutiny. Other key assumptions used in the conventional D&A framework, in particular those related to numerical models error, can also be adapted conveniently to this approach. Our proposal thus allows to bridge the conventional framework with the standard causal theory, in an attempt to improve the quantification of causal probabilities. An illustration suggests that our approach is prone to yield a significantly higher estimate of the probability that anthropogenic forcings have caused the observed temperature change, thus supporting more assertive causal claims.

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