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Efficacy of Climate Forcings in PDRMIP Models

Authors :
T B Richardson
P M Forster
C J Smith
A C Maycock
T Wood
T Andrews
O Boucher
G Faluvegi
D Fläschner
Ø Hodnebrog
M Kasoar
A Kirkevåg
J‐F Lamarque
J Mülmenstädt
G Myhre
D Olivi
R W Portmann
B H Samset
D Shawki
D Shindell
P Stier
T Takemura
A Voulgarakis
D Watson‐Parris
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. 124(23)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2019.

Abstract

Quantifying the efficacy of different climate forcings is important for understanding the real‐world climate sensitivity. This study presents a systematic multimodel analysis of different climate driver efficacies using simulations from the Precipitation Driver and Response Model Intercomparison Project (PDRMIP). Efficacies calculated from instantaneous radiative forcing deviate considerably from unity across forcing agents and models. Effective radiative forcing (ERF) is a better predictor of global mean near‐surface air temperature (GSAT) change. Efficacies are closest to one when ERF is computed using fixed sea surface temperature experiments and adjusted for land surface temperature changes using radiative kernels. Multimodel mean efficacies based on ERF are close to one for global perturbations of methane, sulfate, black carbon, and insolation, but there is notable intermodel spread. We do not find robust evidence that the geographic location of sulfate aerosol affects its efficacy. GSAT is found to respond more slowly to aerosol forcing than CO2 in the early stages of simulations. Despite these differences, we find that there is no evidence for an efficacy effect on historical GSAT trend estimates based on simulations with an impulse response model, nor on the resulting estimates of climate sensitivity derived from the historical period. However, the considerable intermodel spread in the computed efficacies means that we cannot rule out an efficacy‐induced bias of ±0.4 K in equilibrium climate sensitivity to CO2 doubling when estimated using the historical GSAT trend.

Subjects

Subjects :
Meteorology And Climatology

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21698996 and 2169897X
Volume :
124
Issue :
23
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Notes :
EU 820829, , NRC ns2345k, , NERC NE/N006038/1, , NERC NE/P013406/1, , UK GA01101, , RCN 229778, , JSPS KAKENHI JP15K12190, , NRC nn2345k, , NERC NE/M018199/1, , JSPS KAKENHI JP15H01728, , NERC NE/J022624/1, , 80NSSC17M0057, , NERC NE/L01355X/1, , NRC 229771, , ERC 724602, , NERC NE/K500872/1, , NRC 207711/E10
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20190034122
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JD030581