Is adding freshwater the conceptually correct thing to do? #13
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From Andrew Meijers - don't make your professional github name based on your teenage gamer tag...The question as I understood it in the session was whether or not the cryosphere freshwater forcing should be included in the historical runs (and presumably piControl?), or kept in separate MIPs? As a simple observational oceanographer, I feel it would be very valuable if this could be done. The historical Southern Ocean (SO) is so poorly captured in the CMIP models, notably sea ice, temperature anomalies and vertical exchange, and at least some of these do appear to improve in the presence of added fw fluxes (eg Gavin's recent paper). If we are leaving these fluxes out, then we are either getting the 'right' SO for the wrong reasons, or settling for a bad SO...which given its role in global heat/carbon uptake could have significant impacts. Conceptually therefore it would seem to be the right thing to do; if we can. I realise that adding fw makes things like getting a decent deep cell even harder, so perhaps the realistic answer is 'we want to but there are so many things to fix if we do, eg deep convection, dense water cascading etc, that it cannot realistically be done in time for CMIP7? I'd be interested to know modeller's thoughts. |
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[Reformulated for clarity/brevity] Are we ready to apply specified anomalous freshwater forcing in core policy relevant CMIP experiments, like historical, as opposed to testing these ideas and their many uncertainties more comprehensively in dedicated MIPs/experiments (e.g. NAhosMIP / SOFIAMIP / etc)? All CMIP6 (and likely many CMIP7) models lack processes representing dynamic ice-ocean interaction, and we all agree the missing anomalous freshwater input is an important feedback on climate change. Adding anomalous freshwater as an additional "forcing" is arguably a good way to simply represent this missing interaction, given the large expense and difficulty in coupling an Ice Sheet Model. Indeed, this is the approach we have taken in the SOFIA initiative and propose to extend into a CMIP7 community MIP. However, I feel there are some possible complications with applying such forcing more generally in CMIP simulations outside of a dedicated MIP, which is focused on science not policy, and has clear goal and caveats. Some of these are:
Whether in CMIP7 DECK or in a dedicated MIP, building greater community consensus on the best forcing timeseries/uncertainty and implementation into models is highly valuable, and this workshop is much appreciated. Thanks! |
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Historical balance for Greenland is addressed by Box and Colgan (2013), and that is then somewhat improved and incorporated into Mankoff et al. 2021 (http://doi.org/10.5194/essd-13-5001-2021). For the record, I don't love the pre-1980 data and there are large uncertainties. |
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So, if I understand it, currently most models assume steady state ice, implying that the historical and future surface mass balance trends over the ice sheets lead to an anomalous freshwater flux into the ocean. Can anyone point me towards a study that looks at the numbers for these, in the CMIP models? Maybe they are of the correct magnitude? |
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@WilliamColgan (not part of this workshop so far?) may have thoughts on historic Greenlandic mass balance (and mass balance partitioning). |
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Neil?
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