跳到主要导航 跳到搜索 跳到主要内容

Fixed climate feedback assumptions systematically underestimate policy-relevant economic risks: Implications for climate resilience

  • Guangdong Ocean University
  • Beijing Institute of Technology

科研成果: 期刊稿件文章同行评审

摘要

Integrated Assessment Models (IAMs), central to informing climate policy, typically treat the climate feedback parameter as a fixed constant, contradicting robust evidence that it weakens as the planet warms. Here, we show that this structural simplification systematically underestimates policy-relevant economic risks. By integrating a state-dependent feedback mechanism calibrated to CMIP6 Earth System Models into a coupled DICE-FaIR framework, we reveal three key findings. First, dynamic feedback produces a consistent warming amplification of ∼0.2 °C across policy scenarios, demonstrating that conventional IAMs physically underestimate future warming trajectories. Second, this physical bias cascades into economic metrics, elevating the Social Cost of Carbon by up to 50% across diverse structural specifications, indicating a systematic limitation rather than a parameter-specific outcome. Third, we identify a ‘policy space compression’ effect: dynamic feedback simultaneously amplifies the tail risks of exceeding critical temperature thresholds while narrowing the feasible window for net-zero emissions. This physically driven compression is systematically obscured by fixed-feedback assumptions, which overstate the available policy space and understate the urgency of accelerating mitigation timelines. These findings demonstrate that neglecting the temperature-dependent weakening of climate feedback creates a biased foundation for risk assessment, with current resilience strategies potentially calibrated to overly optimistic baselines that inadequately account for the evolving dynamics of the Earth system.

源语言英语
期刊Advances in Climate Change Research
DOI
出版状态已接受/待刊 - 2026
已对外发布

指纹

探究 'Fixed climate feedback assumptions systematically underestimate policy-relevant economic risks: Implications for climate resilience' 的科研主题。它们共同构成独一无二的指纹。

引用此