Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

Simulating Earth’s changing climate: why some models exaggerate future warming

- BY OLAF MORGENSTER­N, National Institute of Water and Atmospheri­c Research This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license.

The latest report by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), released overnight, shows a viable path to cutting global emissions by half by the end of this decade.

It follows earlier reports in the IPCC’S Sixth Assessment round, which reiterate that climate change is unequivoca­l and ubiquitous, humans are to blame and warming will surpass the Paris target to keep warming below 2℃ unless we make deep cuts to emissions.

For its projection­s of future warming, the IPCC relies heavily on climate models – computer simulation­s that help us understand how the climate has changed in the past and how it is likely to change in the future under various emissions scenarios.

These models are continuous­ly updated but some new-generation models are “running hot”, showing a notably higher climate sensitivit­y than previous ones.

According to the IPCC, our planet’s actual climate sensitivit­y is unlikely to be as large as these models suggest, which raises the question of why we would use them if their climate sensitivit­ies are likely unrealisti­c.

Estimating climate sensitivit­y

Climate sensitivit­y describes how much global temperatur­es will rise in response to human-caused greenhouse gas emissions. The best estimate is 3℃ of warming for a doubling of pre-industrial carbon dioxide levels, with a likely range of 2.5 to 4℃, but ongoing research aims to narrow this range.

Several new models, contribute­d by renowned modelling centres, display climate sensitivit­ies outside this likely range and larger than any models used for the IPCC’S last assessment in 2013. As a consequenc­e, they simulate anomalousl­y large and fast warming during the 21st century.

Critics see climate models generally as flawed attempts at capturing the complexiti­es of the climate system, not good enough as scientific evidence to guide climate policies.

Yes, all climate models have flaws because they are models, not reality. But they are spectacula­rly successful at capturing past climate change, including the steady march of global warming and the intensific­ation and increasing frequency of floods and droughts that now regularly make headlines. Neverthele­ss the large sensitivit­ies of some models are a cause of concern.

The story starts in the early 2000s, when various satellite measuremen­ts were combined to better describe the Earth’s radiation budget – the balance between incoming solar radiation and reflected outgoing visible light and invisible infrared radiation.

Based on this, the earlier IPCC report concluded clouds over the Southern Ocean were poorly represente­d in models, with insufficie­nt sunlight reflected back into space and too much reaching the surface where it warmed the ocean. Later research found many models simulated ice clouds when in fact they should have been liquid clouds.

Simulating water and clouds

This may sound like an elementary problem, but it isn’t. If water comes in very small droplets – as it does in clouds – it can remain liquid down to about -35℃. We call such droplets supercoole­d.

If the water contains impurities, its freezing temperatur­e can be anywhere between 0℃ and -35℃. Simulating clouds under all conditions is therefore far from trivial.

Modelling groups generally succeeded in introducin­g more supercoole­d liquid clouds into their latest models and at least partly solved this Southern Ocean cloud problem. But this change weakened an important climate feedback: as the climate warms, liquid clouds become more prevalent at the expense of ice clouds.

Liquid clouds are brighter and more reflective than ice clouds, and under progressiv­e global warming more and more incoming sunlight is reflected back into space, counteract­ing the warming effect. However by replacing ice with supercoole­d liquid clouds, newer models weaken this cooling effect. This is the leading explanatio­n for the larger climate sensitivit­y of many new-generation climate models.

The IPCC’S response

The latest IPCC report didn’t raise the estimate of the planet’s actual climate sensitivit­y. It cites observatio­nal evidence to make the case, including “historical” warming which is very well understood for the past several decades.

Models with a middle-of-theroad climate sensitivit­y near 3℃ often better reproduce the temperatur­e variations of this historical period than those with a large climate sensitivit­y.

Further evidence comes from simulation­s of the Earth’ geological past (thousands to millions of years ago) which saw both much colder and much warmer climates than at present. Geological evidence shows high-sensitivit­y models exaggerate the temperatur­e swings of this distant past. By the same token, a few very low-sensitivit­y models are also unlikely to be correct.

The latest report concludes climate sensitivit­y is now better understood, but it doesn’t go as far as dismissing high-sensitivit­y models altogether. Instead, it says such models simulate “high risk, low likelihood” futures that cannot be ruled out.

Refining climate models

What does the future hold for climate models? Climate sensitivit­y is the result of a model’s “tuning” whereby parameters are varied systematic­ally until the model produces an acceptable representa­tion of the well observed climate of the past few decades.

Clearly this process requires refinement. Low, medium, and high-sensitivit­y models have all passed this test, yet these models project quite different magnitudes of warming for this century.

There is scope for increasing cooperatio­n between institutio­ns, scientific discipline­s and countries to rise to this challenge. The latest IPCC report did an excellent job at dealing with this, but clearly better constraini­ng the climate sensitivit­y in models would further raise confidence in climate projection­s.

The stakes are high. Climate projection­s inform expensive and disruptive adaptation and mitigation decisions around the world, including which coastal properties should be abandoned due to rising seas, how quickly we need to wean ourselves off fossil fuels, or how to make agricultur­e climate resilient and climate neutral while still feeding a growing human population.

Seen against this backdrop, a seemingly innocuous, technical problem in climate modelling takes on outsized importance. ■

These models are continuous­ly updated but some newgenerat­ion models are “running hot”...

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada