Abstract

Projections of changes in surface air temperature and global mean sea level over the next century are presented for all IS92 radiative forcing scenarios. A zonal mean energy-balance climate model is used to estimate temperature changes and thermal expansion, precipitation-dependent sensitivity values are used to estimate the sea-level contribution of glaciers and small ice caps and dynamic ice-sheet models coupled to surface mass balance models are employed with regard to the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets. A few of the sea-level projections have been included in the IPCC96-report for comparison with the revised IPCC96 projections. Here it is demonstrated that the observed inter-model differences are similar for all IS92 radiative forcing scenarios: the projections of global surface air temperature change resemble the revised IPCC96 projections, but the projections of global sea-level rise are 30%—50% smaller than the revised IPCC96 projections. In this paper, the reasons for the inter-model differences in sea-level results are considered. The largest inter-model differences in individual sea-level contributions are found for thermal expansion and for the Antarctic ice-sheet. Sensitivity experiments are presented that show the importance of different assumptions about the temperature forcing of the glacier and ice-sheet models and about weakening of the ocean circulation. Furthermore, uncertainties in thermal expansion caused by uncertainties in ocean heat mixing are considered. It is concluded that the inter-model differences in sea-level projections are caused by the use of essentially different models in this paper and in the revised IPCC96 projections.

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