Climate Projections Very Likely Underestimate Future Volcanic Forcing and Its Climatic Effects

Author:

Chim Man Mei1ORCID,Aubry Thomas J.2ORCID,Abraham Nathan Luke13ORCID,Marshall Lauren4,Mulcahy Jane5ORCID,Walton Jeremy5ORCID,Schmidt Anja167

Affiliation:

1. Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry Centre for Atmospheric Science University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Exeter Penryn UK

3. National Centre for Atmospheric Science Cambridge UK

4. Department of Earth Sciences Durham University Durham UK

5. Met Office Exeter UK

6. German Aerospace Center (DLR) Institute of Atmospheric Physics (IPA) Oberpfaffenhofen Germany

7. Meteorological Institute Ludwig‐Maximilians University Munich Munich Germany

Abstract

AbstractStandard climate projections represent future volcanic eruptions by a constant forcing inferred from 1850 to 2014 volcanic forcing. Using the latest ice‐core and satellite records to design stochastic eruption scenarios, we show that there is a 95% probability that explosive eruptions could emit more sulfur dioxide (SO2) into the stratosphere over 2015–2100 than current standard climate projections (i.e., ScenarioMIP). Our simulations using the UK Earth System Model with interactive stratospheric aerosols show that for a median future eruption scenario, the 2015–2100 average global‐mean stratospheric aerosol optical depth (SAOD) is double that used in ScenarioMIP, with small‐magnitude eruptions (<3 Tg of SO2) contributing 50% to SAOD perturbations. We show that volcanic effects on large‐scale climate indicators, including global surface temperature, sea level and sea ice extent, are underestimated in ScenarioMIP because current climate projections do not fully account for the recurrent frequency of volcanic eruptions of different magnitudes.

Funder

Croucher Foundation

Natural Environment Research Council

HORIZON EUROPE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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