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Systematic Climate Model Biases in the Large‐Scale Patterns of Recent Sea‐Surface Temperature and Sea‐Level Pressure Change

Robert C. J. Wills, Yue Dong, Cristian Proistosecu, Kyle C. Armour, David S. Battisti

2022Geophysical Research Letters296 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Observed surface temperature trends over recent decades are characterized by (a) intensified warming in the Indo‐Pacific Warm Pool and slight cooling in the eastern equatorial Pacific, consistent with Walker circulation strengthening, and (b) Southern Ocean cooling. In contrast, state‐of‐the‐art coupled climate models generally project enhanced warming in the eastern equatorial Pacific, Walker circulation weakening, and Southern Ocean warming. Here we investigate the ability of 16 climate model large ensembles to reproduce observed sea‐surface temperature and sea‐level pressure trends over 1979–2020 through a combination of externally forced climate change and internal variability. We find large‐scale differences between observed and modeled trends that are very unlikely (<5% probability) to occur due to internal variability as represented in models. Disparate trends in the ratio of Indo‐Pacific Warm Pool to tropical‐mean warming, which shows little multi‐decadal variability in models, hint that model biases in the response to historical forcing constitute part of the discrepancy.

Topics & Concepts

ClimatologySea surface temperatureForcing (mathematics)Environmental scienceClimate changeClimate modelEffects of global warming on oceansAbrupt climate changeGlobal warmingOcean heat contentPacific decadal oscillationOcean currentWalker circulationGeneral Circulation ModelOceanographyEffects of global warmingGeologyClimate variability and modelsOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations