Abstract

<p>Currently major efforts are underway toward refining the horizontal grid spacing of climate models to about 1 km, using both global and regional climate models. There is the well-founded hope that this increase in resolution will improve climate models, as it enables replacing the parameterizations of moist convection and gravity-wave drag by explicit treatments. Results suggest that this approach has a high potential in improving the representation of the water cycle and extreme events, and in reducing uncertainties in climate change projections. The presentation will provide examples of these developments in the areas of heavy precipitation and severe weather events over Europe. In addition, it will be argued that km-resolution is a promising approach toward constraining uncertainties in global climate change projections, due to improvements in the representation of tropical and subtropical clouds. Work in the latter area has only recently started and results are highly encouraging.</p> <p>For a few years there have also been attempts to make km-resolution available in global climate models for decade-long simulations. Developing this approach requires a concerted effort. Key challenges include the exploitation of the next generation hardware architectures using accelerators (e.g. graphics processing units, GPUs), the development of suitable approaches to overcome the output avalanche, and the maintenance of the rapidly-developing model source codes on a number of different compute architectures. Despite these challenges, it will be argued that km-resolution GCMs with a capacity to run at 1 SYPD (simulated year per day), might be much closer than commonly believed.</p> <p>The presentation is largely based on a recent collaborative paper (Schär et al., 2020, BAMS, https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0167.1) and ongoing studies. It will also present aspects of a recent Swiss project in this area (EXCLAIM, https://exclaim.ethz.ch/).</p>

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