Abrupt cooling over the North Atlantic in modern climate models
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
Nature Communications. 2017-04, vol. 8, p. 14375
Nature Publishing Group
English Abstract
Observations over the 20th century evidence no long-term warming in the subpolar North Atlantic (SPG). This region even experienced a rapid cooling around 1970, raising a debate over its potential reoccurrence. Here we ...Read more >
Observations over the 20th century evidence no long-term warming in the subpolar North Atlantic (SPG). This region even experienced a rapid cooling around 1970, raising a debate over its potential reoccurrence. Here we assess the risk of future abrupt SPG cooling in 40 climate models from the fifth Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5). Contrary to the long-term SPG warming trend evidenced by most of the models, 17.5% of the models (7/40) project a rapid SPG cooling, consistent with a collapse of the local deep-ocean convection. Uncertainty in projections is associated with the models' varying capability in simulating the present-day SPG stratification, whose realistic reproduction appears a necessary condition for the onset of a convection collapse. This event occurs in 45.5% of the 11 models best able to simulate the observed SPG stratification. Thus, due to systematic model biases, the CMIP5 ensemble as a whole underestimates the chance of future abrupt SPG cooling, entailing crucial implications for observation and adaptation policy.Read less <
European Project
Earth system Model Bias Reduction and assessing Abrupt Climate change
Infrastructure for the European Network for Earth System modelling - Phase 2
Blue-Action: Arctic impact on weather and climat
Infrastructure for the European Network for Earth System modelling - Phase 2
Blue-Action: Arctic impact on weather and climat
ANR Project
LabEx Institut Pierre Simon Laplace (IPSL): Understand climate and anticipate future changes - ANR-10-LABX-0018
Origin
Hal imported