Developments of the Perception of Climate Change and Abnormal Weather in Postwar Japan

Keegan Cothern, J. Hasegawa
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Abstract

Climate research has been presented as a largely Anglophone and European affair, while other regional contributions and concerns have been left largely unexamined. An investigation of the Japan Meteorological Agency’s ‘Abnormal Weather Reports’ and related literature instead reveals the concerns of an island nation anxious about immediate weather abnormalities, causes of climate variability, and predicting the consequences of global warming within a geographically vulnerable Japan. Researchers initially focused on the topic of global cooling in the 1970s, sparking fears about Japan’s self-sustainability in the event of a long-term decline in temperatures. By the 1980s, though cooling fears persisted, focus also turned to how El Niño cycles provoked climatic variability, even as initial concern with global warming resulting from human activities, carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, and ozone depletion grew. Following the Kyoto Protocol’s recognition of anthropogenic climate change and creation of a global cooperative framework, research has begun to focus on the consequences of global warming in exacerbating Japan’s meteorological risks and on mitigating further anthropogenic temperature increases.
战后日本气候变化感知与异常天气的发展
气候研究在很大程度上被认为是英语国家和欧洲人的事情,而其他地区的贡献和关注在很大程度上没有得到检验。对日本气象厅的“异常天气报告”和相关文献的调查反而揭示了一个岛国对即时天气异常的担忧,气候变化的原因,以及预测全球变暖在地理上脆弱的日本的后果。研究人员最初在20世纪70年代关注全球变冷的话题,引发了人们对日本在气温长期下降的情况下能否自我维持的担忧。到20世纪80年代,尽管降温担忧持续存在,但焦点也转向了厄尔尼诺Niño周期如何引发气候变化,即使最初对人类活动、二氧化碳(CO2)排放和臭氧消耗导致的全球变暖的担忧日益增加。在《京都议定书》承认人为气候变化和建立全球合作框架之后,研究开始关注全球变暖加剧日本气象风险的后果,以及如何进一步减轻人为温度升高。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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