Is there evidence of a trend in the CO2 airborne fraction?
Mikkel Bennedsen, Eric Hillebrand, Siem Jan Koopman

TL;DR
This paper critically re-evaluates the evidence for a trend in the atmospheric CO2 airborne fraction, using improved statistical methods and multiple tests, finding the evidence remains inconclusive and suggests possible upward trends with trend breaks.
Contribution
It challenges previous findings by applying more robust statistical analyses to assess trends in the CO2 airborne fraction.
Findings
Statistical evidence for a trend in AF remains mixed.
Some evidence of upward trends when allowing for trend breaks.
Re-analysis questions earlier conclusions of a declining AF trend.
Abstract
In a paper recently published in this journal, van Marle et al. (van Marle et al., 2022) introduce an interesting new data set for land use and land cover change CO2 emissions (LULCC) that they use to study whether a trend is present in the airborne fraction (AF), defined as the fraction of CO2 emissions remaining in the atmosphere. Testing the hypothesis of a trend in the AF has attracted much attention, with the overall consensus that no statistical evidence is found for a trend in the data (Knorr, 2009; Gloor et al., 2010; Raupach et al., 2014; Bennedsen et al., 2019). In their paper, van Marle et al. analyze the AF as implied by three different LULCC emissions time series (GCP, H&N, and their new data series). In a Monte Carlo simulation study based on their new LULCC emissions data, van Marle et al. find evidence of a declining trend in the AF. In this note, we argue that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics · Air Quality and Health Impacts · Air Quality Monitoring and Forecasting
