Litcius/Paper detail

Opposing trends of cloud coverage over land and ocean under global warming

Huan Liu, Ilan Koren, Orit Altaratz, Mickaël D. Chekroun

2023Atmospheric chemistry and physics39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract. Clouds play a key role in Earth's energy budget and water cycle. Their response to global warming contributes the largest uncertainty to climate prediction. Here, by performing an empirical orthogonal function analysis on 42 years of reanalysis data of global cloud coverage, we extract an unambiguous trend and El-Niño–Southern-Oscillation-associated modes. The trend mode translates spatially to decreasing trends in cloud coverage over most continents and increasing trends over the tropical and subtropical oceans. A reduction in near-surface relative humidity can explain the decreasing trends in cloud coverage over land. Our results suggest potential stress on the terrestrial water cycle and changes in the energy partition between land and ocean, all associated with global warming.

Topics & Concepts

Empirical orthogonal functionsClimatologyEnvironmental scienceGlobal warmingWater cycleSubtropicsCloud computingAtmospheric sciencesClimate changeOceanographyGeologyEcologyFisheryComputer scienceBiologyOperating systemAtmospheric aerosols and cloudsClimate variability and modelsAtmospheric chemistry and aerosols