Designing detection and attribution simulations for CMIP6 to optimize the estimation of greenhouse gas–induced warming

Date

2015

Authors

Ribes, Aurélien
Gillett, Nathan P.
Zwiers, Francis W.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Journal of Climate

Abstract

Climate change detection and attribution studies rely on historical simulations using specified combinations of forcings to quantify the contributions from greenhouse gases and other forcings to observed climate change. In the last CMIP5 exercise, in addition to the so-called all-forcings simulations, which are driven with a combination of anthropogenic and natural forcings, natural forcings–only and greenhouse gas–only simulations were prioritized among other possible experiments. This study addresses the question of optimally designing this set of experiments to estimate the recent greenhouse gas–induced warming, which is highly relevant to the problem of constraining estimates of the transient climate response. Based on Monte Carlo simulations and considering experimental designs with a fixed budget for the number of simulations that modeling centers can perform, the most accurate estimate of historical greenhouse gas–induced warming is obtained with a design using a combination of all-forcings, natural forcings–only, and aerosol forcing–only simulations. An investigation of optimal ensemble sizes, given the constraint on the total number of simulations, indicates that allocating larger ensemble sizes to weaker forcings, such as natural-only, is optimal.

Description

Keywords

UN SDG 13: Climate Action, #journal article, Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium (PCIC), Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis (CCCma)

Citation

Ribes, A., Gillett, N. P., & Zwiers, F. W. (2015). Designing detection and attribution simulations for CMIP6 to optimize the estimation of greenhouse gas–induced warming. Journal of Climate, 28(8), 3435–3438. https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-14-00691.1