AbstractThe North Pacific monsoon trough (NPMT) is an imperative large‐scale circulation pattern influencing tropical cyclone (TC) activity in the western North Pacific (WNP), thus its future change has great implications for the WNP TC activity. Here future change in the NPMT and its uncertainty are examined by using 35 climate models from Phase six of Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6). Due to the El Niño‐like sea surface temperature (SST) pattern, the multi‐model ensemble (MME) mean projects an eastward extension of the NPMT in the latter half of the 21st century. However, considerable inter‐model uncertainty exists in the projection, which is associated with the diversity in the zonal SST gradient across the tropical Pacific. This diversity in the projected SST is largely rooted in the simulated precipitation biases in the tropical Pacific in the historical experiments of CMIP6 models, which can modulate future Pacific SST distribution through the shortwave‐SST feedback. This linkage between biases in historical climate and future climate allows us to constrain the projection by using observational data sets. Emergent constraint using observational precipitation data set reduces the projection uncertainty by 48% and projects an eastward extension of the north Pacific NPMT by 6.2°. This eastward extension of the NPMT indicates an eastward migration of TC genesis location, and elongated TC track and thus strengthened TC intensity, suggesting an increased TC‐related disaster for residents near the WNP.
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