Narrowing the Range of Future Climate Projections Using Historical Observations of Atmospheric CO2

Author:

Booth Ben B. B.1,Harris Glen R.1,Murphy James M.1,House Jo I.2,Jones Chris D.1,Sexton David1,Sitch Stephen3

Affiliation:

1. Met Office Hadley Centre, Exeter, United Kingdom

2. Cabot Institute, Department of Geography, University of Bristol, Bristol, and College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom

3. College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom

Abstract

Uncertainty in the behavior of the carbon cycle is important in driving the range in future projected climate change. Previous comparisons of model responses with historical CO2 observations have suggested a strong constraint on simulated projections that could narrow the range considered plausible. This study uses a new 57-member perturbed parameter ensemble of variants of an Earth system model for three future scenarios, which 1) explores a wider range of potential climate responses than before and 2) includes the impact of past uncertainty in carbon emissions on simulated trends. These two factors represent a more complete exploration of uncertainty, although they lead to a weaker constraint on the range of future CO2 concentrations as compared to earlier studies. Nevertheless, CO2 observations are shown to be effective at narrowing the distribution, excluding 30 of 57 simulations as inconsistent with historical CO2 changes. The perturbed model variants excluded are mainly at the high end of the future projected CO2 changes, with only 8 of the 26 variants projecting RCP8.5 2100 concentrations in excess of 1100 ppm retained. Interestingly, a minority of the high-end variants were able to capture historical CO2 trends, with the large-magnitude response emerging later in the century (owing to high climate sensitivities, strong carbon feedbacks, or both). Comparison with observed CO2 is effective at narrowing both the range and distribution of projections out to the mid-twenty-first century for all scenarios and to 2100 for a scenario with low emissions.

Funder

Joint UK DECC/DEFRA Met Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme

Horizon 2020

Leverhulme Trust

FP7

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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