Regional Climate Sensitivity of Climate Extremes in CMIP6 Versus CMIP5 Multimodel Ensembles
We analyze projected changes in climate extremes (extreme temperatures and heavy precipitation) in the multimodel ensembles of the fifth and sixth Coupled Model Intercomparison Projects (CMIP5 and CMIP6). The results reveal close similarity between both ensembles in the regional climate sensitivity...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Earth's future 2020-09, Vol.8 (9), p.e2019EF001474-n/a |
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Zusammenfassung: | We analyze projected changes in climate extremes (extreme temperatures and heavy precipitation) in the multimodel ensembles of the fifth and sixth Coupled Model Intercomparison Projects (CMIP5 and CMIP6). The results reveal close similarity between both ensembles in the regional climate sensitivity of the projected multimodel mean changes in climate extremes, that is, their projected changes as a function of global warming. This stands in contrast to widely reported divergences in global (transient and equilibrium) climate sensitivity in the two multimodel ensembles. Some exceptions include higher warming in the South America monsoon region, lower warming in Southern Asia and Central Africa, and higher increases in heavy precipitation in Western Africa and the Sahel region in the CMIP6 ensemble. The multimodel spread in regional climate sensitivity is found to be large in both ensembles. In particular, it contributes more to intermodel spread in projected regional climate extremes compared with the intermodel spread in global climate sensitivity in CMIP6. Our results highlight the need to consider regional climate sensitivity as a distinct feature of Earth system models and a key determinant of projected regional impacts, which is largely independent of the models' response in global climate sensitivity.
Plain Language Summary
Many articles analyze and compare global climate sensitivity in climate models, that is, how their global warming differs at a given level of CO2 concentrations. However, global warming is only one quantity affecting impacts. To assess human‐ and ecosystem‐relevant impacts, it is essential to evaluate the regional climate sensitivity of climate models, that is, how their regional climate features differ at a given level of global warming. We analyze here regional climate sensitivity in the new multimodel ensemble that will underlie the conclusions of the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). This ensemble of model projections is called the “Sixth Coupled Model Intercomparison Project” or CMIP6. We find that differences in regional climate sensitivity between models in CMIP6 often contribute more to the uncertainty of regional extremes projections than the uncertainty in global mean warming between models. Overall, the regional climate sensitivity features in the CMIP6 models' projections ensemble are very similar to those of the prior ensemble (CMIP5), although the model ensembles have been |
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ISSN: | 2328-4277 2328-4277 |
DOI: | 10.1029/2019EF001474 |