Abstract

Abstract. Significant discrepancies remain in estimates of climate impacts of anthropogenic aerosols between different general circulation models (GCMs). Here, we demonstrate that eliminating differences in model aerosol or radiative forcing fields results in close agreement in simulated globally averaged temperature and precipitation responses in the studied GCMs. However, it does not erase the differences in regional responses. We carry out experiments of equilibrium climate response to modern-day anthropogenic aerosols using an identical representation of anthropogenic aerosol optical properties and the first indirect effect of aerosols, MACv2-SP (a simple plume implementation of the second version of the Max Planck Institute Aerosol CLimatology), in two independent climate models (NorESM, Norwegian Earth System Model, and ECHAM6). We find consistent global average temperature responses of −0.48 (±0.02) and −0.50 (±0.03) K and precipitation responses of −1.69 (±0.04) % and −1.79 (±0.05) % in NorESM1 and ECHAM6, respectively, compared to modern-day equilibrium climate without anthropogenic aerosols. However, significant differences remain between the two GCMs' regional temperature responses around the Arctic circle and the Equator and precipitation responses in the tropics. The scatter in the simulated globally averaged responses is small in magnitude when compared against literature data from modern GCMs using model intrinsic aerosols but same aerosol emissions −(0.5–1.1) K and −(1.5–3.1) % for temperature and precipitation, respectively). The Pearson correlation of regional temperature (precipitation) response in these literature model experiments with intrinsic aerosols is 0.79 (0.34). The corresponding correlation coefficient for NorESM1 and ECHAM6 runs with identical aerosols is 0.78 (0.41). The lack of improvement in correlation coefficients between models with identical aerosols and models with intrinsic aerosols implies that the spatial distribution of regional climate responses is not improved via homogenizing the aerosol descriptions in the models. Rather, differences in the atmospheric dynamic and snow/sea ice cover responses dominate the differences in regional climate responses. Hence, even if we would have perfect aerosol descriptions inside the global climate models, uncertainty arising from the differences in circulation responses between the models would likely still result in a significant uncertainty in regional climate responses.

Highlights

  • Making reliable predictions on future changes in regional climates is crucial for estimating how climate change will impact people and societies (Hawkins et al, 2016), but there are still large uncertainties related to climate change predictions on regional scales (Giorgi and Francisco, 2000; Feser et al, 2011)

  • The MACv2-SP aerosols produced a very similar total instantaneous anthropogenic aerosol radiative forcing in the two models (−0.64 Wm−2 in the ECHAM6-MACSP and −0.69 Wm−2 in the NorESM1-MACSP experiments)

  • We found that there are differences up to 3.2 Wm−2 in the instantaneous regional aerosol forcing between the models when using the same aerosol representation

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Summary

Introduction

Making reliable predictions on future changes in regional climates is crucial for estimating how climate change will impact people and societies (Hawkins et al, 2016), but there are still large uncertainties related to climate change predictions on regional scales (Giorgi and Francisco, 2000; Feser et al, 2011). Anthropogenic aerosol particles can be an important driver for regional climate change due to the nearinstantaneous response of local aerosol concentrations to changes in emissions, their direct radiative properties and their ability to modify cloud microphysical processes. Reliable implementation of aerosol effects into global climate models has been challenging. Several aerosol processes are still not well understood (Boucher et al, 2013), and there exists an enormous scale difference between the Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. K. Nordling et al.: Climate responses to anthropogenic aerosols microphysical processes and the resolution of global-scale models (Carslaw et al, 2013)

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