Decadal Climate Prediction: An Update from the Trenches

Author:

Meehl Gerald A.1,Goddard Lisa2,Boer George3,Burgman Robert4,Branstator Grant1,Cassou Christophe5,Corti Susanna6,Danabasoglu Gokhan1,Doblas-Reyes Francisco7,Hawkins Ed8,Karspeck Alicia1,Kimoto Masahide9,Kumar Arun10,Matei Daniela11,Mignot Juliette12,Msadek Rym13,Navarra Antonio14,Pohlmann Holger11,Rienecker Michele15,Rosati Tony13,Schneider Edwin16,Smith Doug17,Sutton Rowan8,Teng Haiyan1,van Oldenborgh Geert Jan18,Vecchi Gabriel13,Yeager Stephen1

Affiliation:

1. National Center for Atmospheric Research,* Boulder, Colorado

2. International Research Institute for Climate and Society, Palisades, New York

3. Canadian Centre for Climate Modeling and Analysis, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

4. Florida International University, Miami, Florida

5. Centre Européen de Recherche et de Formation Avancée en Calcul Scientifique, Toulouse, France

6. European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, Reading, United Kingdom, and Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate, Italian National Research Council, Bologna, Italy

7. Catalan Institute of Climate Sciences, Barcelona, Spain

8. National Centre for Atmospheric Science, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom

9. University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, Japan

10. Climate Prediction Center, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration/National Centers for Environmental Prediction, College Park, Maryland

11. Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany

12. Institut Pierre Simon Laplace des Sciences de l'Environment, Paris, France, and University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland

13. Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey

14. Centro Euromediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici, and Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Bologna, Italy

15. National Aeronautics and Space Administration Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland

16. George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, and COLA, Calverton, Maryland

17. Met Office Hadley Centre, Exeter, United Kingdom

18. Koninklijk Nederlands Meteorologisch Instituut, De Bilt, Netherlands

Abstract

This paper provides an update on research in the relatively new and fast-moving field of decadal climate prediction, and addresses the use of decadal climate predictions not only for potential users of such information but also for improving our understanding of processes in the climate system. External forcing influences the predictions throughout, but their contributions to predictive skill become dominant after most of the improved skill from initialization with observations vanishes after about 6–9 years. Recent multimodel results suggest that there is relatively more decadal predictive skill in the North Atlantic, western Pacific, and Indian Oceans than in other regions of the world oceans. Aspects of decadal variability of SSTs, like the mid-1970s shift in the Pacific, the mid-1990s shift in the northern North Atlantic and western Pacific, and the early-2000s hiatus, are better represented in initialized hindcasts compared to uninitialized simulations. There is evidence of higher skill in initialized multimodel ensemble decadal hindcasts than in single model results, with multimodel initialized predictions for near-term climate showing somewhat less global warming than uninitialized simulations. Some decadal hindcasts have shown statistically reliable predictions of surface temperature over various land and ocean regions for lead times of up to 6–9 years, but this needs to be investigated in a wider set of models. As in the early days of El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) prediction, improvements to models will reduce the need for bias adjustment, and increase the reliability, and thus usefulness, of decadal climate predictions in the future.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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