Demonstrating GWP*: a means of reporting warming-equivalent emissions that captures the contrasting impacts of short- and long-lived climate pollutants
Environmental Research Letters IOP Publishing 15:4 (2020) 044023
Abstract:
The atmospheric lifetime and radiative impacts of different climate pollutants can both differ markedly, so metrics that equate emissions using a single scaling factor, such as the 100-year Global Warming Potential (GWP100), can be misleading. An alternative approach is to report emissions as 'warming-equivalents' that result in similar warming impacts without requiring a like-for-like weighting per emission. GWP*, an alternative application of GWPs where the CO2-equivalence of short-lived climate pollutant (SLCP) emissions is predominantly determined by changes in their emission rate, provides a straightforward means of generating warming-equivalent emissions. In this letter we illustrate the contrasting climate impacts resulting from emissions of methane, a short-lived greenhouse gas, and CO2, and compare GWP100 and GWP* CO2-equivalents for a number of simple emissions scenarios. We demonstrate that GWP* provides a useful indication of warming, while conventional application of GWP100 falls short in many scenarios and particularly when methane emissions are stable or declining, with important implications for how we consider 'zero emission' or 'climate neutral' targets for sectors emitting different compositions of gases. We then illustrate how GWP* can provide an improved means of assessing alternative mitigation strategies. GWP* allows warming-equivalent emissions to be calculated directly from CO2-equivalent emissions reported using GWP100, consistent with the "Paris Rulebook" agreed by the UNFCCC. It provides a direct link between emissions and anticipated warming impacts, 91探花ing stocktakes of progress towards a long-term temperature goal and compatible with cumulative emissions budgets.Response of the quasi鈥恇iennial oscillation to a warming climate in global climate models
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley (2020) qj.3749
The equatorial stratospheric semiannual oscillation and time鈥恗ean winds in QBOi models
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley 148:744A (2020) 1593-1609
Abstract:
The Quasi鈥怋iennial Oscillation initiative (QBOi) is a model intercomparison programme that specifically targets simulation of the QBO in current global climate models. Eleven of the models or model versions that participated in a QBOi intercomparison study have upper boundaries in or above the mesosphere and therefore simulate the region where the stratopause semiannual oscillation (SAO) is the dominant mode of variability of zonal winds in the tropical upper stratosphere. Comparisons of the SAO simulations in these models are presented here. These show that the model simulations of the amplitudes and phases of the SAO in zonal鈥恗ean zonal wind near the stratopause agree well with the information derived from available observations. However, most of the models simulate time鈥恆verage zonal winds that are more westward than determined from observations, in some cases by several tens of m路s鈥1. Validation of wave activity in the models is hampered by the limited observations of tropical waves in the upper stratosphere but suggests a deficit of eastward forcing either by large鈥恠cale waves, such as Kelvin waves, or by gravity waves.An interdecadal shift of the extratropical teleconnection from the tropical Pacific during boreal summer
Geophysical Research Letters American Geophysical Union 46:22 (2019) 13379-13388
Abstract:
The extratropical teleconnection from the tropical Pacific in boreal summer exhibits a significant shift over the past 70 years. Cyclonic circulation anomalies over the North Atlantic and Eurasia associated with El Ni帽o in the later period (1978鈥2014) are absent in the earlier period (1948鈥1977). An initialised atmospheric model ensemble, performed with prescribed sea surface temperature (SST) boundary conditions, replicates some key features of the shift in the teleconnection, providing clear evidence that this shift is not simply due to internal atmospheric variability or random sampling. Additional ensemble simulations, one with detrended tropical SSTs and another with constant external forcing are analysed. In the model, the teleconnection shift is associated with climatological atmospheric circulation changes, which are substantially reduced in the simulation with detrended tropical SSTs. These results demonstrate that the climatological atmospheric circulation and associated teleconnection changes are largely forced by tropical SST trends.Tropical atmospheric drivers of wintertime European precipitation events
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley 146:727 (2019) 780-794