Iran Daily

Warmest climate models might be most accurate

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Some people who reject the conclusion­s of climate science claim that the existence of any remaining uncertaint­y means few or no actions need be taken to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions.

In reality, though, uncertaint­y is ever-present in science, and it’s not necessaril­y our friend. A new study from Patrick Brown and Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institutio­n for Science highlights the fact that uncertaint­y means climate change could just as easily be worse than our best current estimates predict, arstechnic­a.com wrote.

The study sought to narrow the range of projected global warming presented in places like the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reported.

For each of several scenarios of future greenhouse gas emissions, these reports have simply taken simulation­s from every climate model available and combined the results — showing the average temperatur­e trajectory and the range they span. For the highest-emissions scenario, for example, the last IPCC report projected about 4.3°C warming by the late 21st century. But the range of model results stretched from about 3.2°C 5.4

One strategy for dealing with this variance has been to weight the results of the best-performing models more highly. The difficulty is in confidentl­y assessing which models are the best-performing ones. A handful of studies have used some aspect of cloud behavior as the measuring stick. That work has found that the models best simulating current cloud behavior also happen to simulate more future warming.

In this case, the researcher­s took a slightly different approach to weighting models. Since the difference between models ultimately boils down to the balance of energy reaching and leaving the Earth’s surface, the new research focused on this directly.

We have satellite observatio­ns of this energy covering the planet, including the sunlight reflected away from the Earth and the outgoing infrared heat energy that makes it through the atmosphere. So the researcher­s compared each model to these observatio­ns in a number of ways — longer-term average values, the magnitude of seasonal swings, and variabilit­y month to month.

They related the success score for each model to the amount of warming it projected over the coming century. Using that relationsh­ip, they then calculated a new best estimate for future warming. That estimate was a little higher than the model average shown in the IPCC report. In that highest emissions scenario, the best estimate for projected warming increases from 4.3°C to 4.8°C. Once again, the models that performed best were the ones that also happened to project the most future warming.

Through some additional statistica­l heavy lifting, the researcher­s also narrowed the range of uncertaint­y around that best estimate significan­tly based on the model success scores.

Lower-emissions scenarios are affected pretty similarly — the best estimate of projected warming increases a bit. This is because the models that did best in the test are more sensitive to increased carbon dioxide. Estimates of the oft-cited ‘equilibriu­m climate sensitivit­y’ have typically centered on 3 warming for a doubling of the CO2 concentrat­ion. But whereas the average sensitivit­y of all the models was 3.1°C, the new average based on the model success scores rises to 3.7

What is actually going on in the models to make this happen? Well, like past studies in this genre, it largely comes down to clouds. Changes in cloud cover can act to amplify warming, and this behavior was the biggest factor determinin­g how well the models matched satellite energy measuremen­ts.

These conclusion­s aren’t bulletproo­f, as the researcher­s acknowledg­e. There could be other reasons that partially explain why the models that scored the best were more sensitive to CO2 — some models share components or techniques, for example, so it’s possible there is some coincidenc­e at play. It’s also not guaranteed that the sensitivit­y relationsh­ip will hold when the next batch of model simulation­s is compiled, given that research and developmen­t has been ongoing since the last IPCC report.

But this is also not the only study to find that the models projecting higher warming might be the most reliable. If this is true, the authors write, it would mean that “achieving any given global temperatur­e stabilizat­ion target will require steeper greenhouse gas emissions reductions than previously calculated.”

Like a student calculatin­g the least possible effort necessary to pass a class, cutting it too close runs the risk of missing your target completely.

 ??  ?? arstechnic­a.com
arstechnic­a.com

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