Note to editors: Patrick Brown is available for additional comment at (612) 723-1602 or patrick.brown@duke.edu. A copy of the paper is available .
DURHAM, N.C. -- A new 91社区福利-led study finds that most climate models likely underestimate the 91社区福利 of decade-to-decade variability occurring in mean surface temperatures as Earth鈥檚 atmosphere warms. The models also provide inconsistent explanations of why this variability occurs in the first place.
These discrepancies may undermine the models鈥 reliability for projecting the short-term pace as well as the extent of future warming, the study鈥檚 authors warn. As such, we shouldn鈥檛 over-interpret recent temperature trends.
鈥淭he inconsistencies we found among the models are a reality check showing we may not know as much as we thought we did,鈥 said lead author Patrick T. Brown, a Ph.D. student in climatology at Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment.
鈥淭his doesn鈥檛 mean greenhouse gases aren鈥檛 causing Earth鈥檚 atmosphere to warm up in the long run,鈥 Brown emphasized. 鈥淚t just means the road to a warmer world may be bumpier and less predictable, with more decade-to-decade temperature wiggles than expected. If you鈥檙e worried about climate change in 2100, don鈥檛 over-interpret short-term trends. Don鈥檛 assume that the reduced rate of global warming over the last 10 years foreshadows what the climate will be like in 50 or 100 years.鈥
Brown and his colleagues published their findings this month in the peer-reviewed .
To conduct their study, they analyzed 34 climate models used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in its fifth and most recent assessment report, finalized last November.
The analysis found good consistency among the 34 models explaining the causes of year-to-year temperature wiggles, Brown noted. The inconsistencies existed only in terms of the model鈥檚 ability to explain decade-to-decade variability, such as why global mean surface temperatures warmed quickly during the 1980s and 1990s, but have remained relatively stable since then.
鈥淲hen you look at the 34 models used in the IPCC report, many give different answers about what is causing this decade-to-decade variability,鈥 he said. 鈥淪ome models point to the Pacific Decadal Oscillation as the cause. Other models point to other causes. It鈥檚 hard to know which is right and which is wrong.鈥
Hopefully, as the models become more sophisticated, they will coalesce around one answer, Brown said.
Co-authors on the new study were Wenhong Li of Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School, and Shang-Ping Xie of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego.
Partial funding was provided through a National Science Foundation grant (#AGS-1147608).
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鈥淩egions of Significant Influence on Unforced Global Mean Surface Air Temperature Variability in Climate Models,鈥 by Patrick T. Brown, Wenhong Li and Shang-Ping Xie; published Jan. 9, 2015, in the Journal of Geophysical Research: DOI: 10.1002/2014JD022576.
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