Title: Kein Folientitel
1Long-term perspectives on the Earth
SystemLooking from the Past into the Future
Thomas Stocker
Climate and Environmental Physics University of
Bern, Switzerland www.climate.unibe.ch
Collaborators Bern Team, S. Johnsen
2UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(in force since 21.3.1994, ratified by 186
countries)
Article 2 The ultimate objective ... is to
achieve stabilization of greenhouse gas
concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that
would prevent dangerous anthropogenic
interference with the climate system.
3Understand the past ...
4Phase 2 (2003 )
PANASH CLIVAR/PAGES IMAGES Polar
Programs Ecosystem Proc. Human Interactions
5 FOCI
5Vostok (Antarctica) 4 glacial cycles
(Petit et al., 1999)
6Rates of CO2 change from Antarctic ice cores
Paleorecords
Today gt150 ppm/cty
(Stocker Monnin, 2003)
7Millennial changes during the ice age
(Blunier Brook, 2001)
8Millennial changes during the ice age
Paleorecords
(Blunier Brook, 2001)
9The role of models in paleoclimate research
Paleorecords
10The role of models in paleoclimate research
Prediction
Processes
Paleorecords
11Hierarchy of Climate Models
12Millennial changes due to the ocean circulation ?
13A minimum model for the bipolar seesaw
South Memory(North)
14Thermal Bipolar Seesaw
GRIP (Greenland)
Byrd (Antarctica)
t 1120 yr
t 500 yr
t 2000 yr
t 4000 yr
(Stocker Johnsen 2003)
15the world aint so simple ... we need a model
hierarchy
16Coupled climate models show consistent NH cooling
HadCM3
NASA-GISS
(Schmidt, 2002)
(Vellinga, 2002)
17Not consistent changes in the southern hemisphere
HadCM3
NASA-GISS
(Schmidt, 2002)
(Vellinga, 2002)
18Dome Concordia (Antarctica) 800,000 yrs of
climate record
(EPICA, 2003, unpublished)
19- Summary 1
- high-resolution, well-dated paleorecords provide
time and space information about Earth system
dynamics - models are required to identify and quantify
processes and make predictions - a model hierarchy is required to fully appreciate
the paleoclimate records and extract information
of combined records - a model hierarchy is required to fully appreciate
the possible limitations of reduced complexity
models
20Understand the past ...
... to project the future
21Uncertainties in radiative forcing 1750 - 2000
(IPCC 2001)
22Ensemble simulation of future changes
Knutti et al. (2002)
23Ensemble-simulations of the Atlantic THC
(Knutti et al., 2003)
24Reduction of the Atlantic thermohaline circulation
Ensemble simulations with comprehensive models
show uncertainty, but not long-term evolution
25Long-term Changes of the Atlantic thermohaline
circulation
Long-term simulations with reduced complexity
models suggest possibility of mode switches
26- Conclusions
- understanding of the past and prediction of the
future requires excellent paleorecords, combined
with climate and process models - one single model, or model simulation, ignores
inherent gaps in our knowledge and inherent
limits of predictability in the Earth system - ensemble simulations are needed model
complexity, initial conditions, model parameters - use reduced complexity models to access long time
scales and explore systematically parameter space