Atmospheric regional climate projections for the Baltic Sea region until 2100
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Published:2022-01-24
Issue:1
Volume:13
Page:133-157
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ISSN:2190-4987
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Container-title:Earth System Dynamics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Earth Syst. Dynam.
Author:
Christensen Ole BøssingORCID, Kjellström ErikORCID, Dieterich Christian, Gröger MatthiasORCID, Meier Hans Eberhard Markus
Abstract
Abstract. The Baltic Sea region is very sensitive to climate change; it is a
region with spatially varying climate and diverse ecosystems, but it is also
under pressure due to a high population in large parts of the area. Climate
change impacts could easily exacerbate other anthropogenic stressors such as
biodiversity stress from society and eutrophication of the Baltic Sea
considerably. Therefore, there has been a focus on estimations of future
climate change and its impacts in recent research. In this overview paper,
we will concentrate on a presentation of recent climate projections from
12.5 km horizontal resolution atmosphere-only regional climate models from
Coordinated Regional Climate Downscaling Experiment – European domain (EURO-CORDEX).
Comparison will also be done with corresponding prior results
as well as with coupled atmosphere–ocean regional climate models. The recent
regional climate model projections strengthen the conclusions from previous
assessments. This includes a strong warming, in particular in the north in
winter. Precipitation is projected to increase in the whole region apart
from the southern half during summer. Consequently, the new results lend
more credibility to estimates of uncertainties and robust features of future
climate change. Furthermore, the larger number of scenarios gives
opportunities to better address impacts of mitigation measures. In
simulations with a coupled atmosphere–ocean model, the climate change signal
is locally modified relative to the corresponding stand-alone atmosphere
regional climate model. Differences are largest in areas where the coupled
system arrives at different sea-surface temperatures and sea-ice conditions.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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