Abstract
AbstractThe Arctic region has warmed faster than the global mean in past decades. Future climate change projections also suggest this Arctic warming amplification will continue. Here, using 50-member historical and future scenario simulations by a single climate model, we find that Arctic warming amplification is stronger in a low-emission scenario, compared to a high-emission scenario, after the mid-2040s. This is because in the low-emission scenario, sea ice continues to exist beyond 2040 and the ice-albedo feedback therefore maintains Arctic warming, unlike other latitudes. By contrast, in the high-emission scenario summer sea ice melts away by about 2050. Multi-model analyses show that the strength of Arctic amplification in the low-emission scenario is highly correlated with the amount of sea-ice reduction, whereas this relationship weakens in the high-emission scenario. Our results indicate that climate change mitigation may have a side effect because Arctic warming persists even if the global warming is stabilized.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science
Cited by
21 articles.
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