The Truth about Uncertinity in Climate Midels
Climate models get smarter, but uncertainty just won't go away
It's been five years since the last report from the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change, and the organization is currently preparing its
fifth assessment report (AR5). These reports provide both an update on
what we've learned about the climate in the intervening years and
projections for likely future climates based on that new understanding.
Those projections are powered by climate models. Starting with AR4,
those projections were based on the work of the World Climate Research
Programme. This group identifies the current climate models from a
variety of institutions, and runs them under a variety of emissions
scenarios. Then, the WCRP collects the results of multiple runs from the
ensemble of climate models, and uses that to predict the likely climate
change and remaining uncertainties.
You might expect the
progress made during the intervening five years would greatly narrow the
uncertainties since the last report. If so, get ready for
disappointment. A pair of researchers from ETH Zurich has compared the
results from AR4 with the ones that will be coming out in AR5, and they
find that the uncertainties haven't gone down much. And, somewhat
ironically, they blame the improvements—as researchers are able to add
more factors to their models, each new factor comes with its own
uncertainties, which keeps the models from narrowing in on a value.
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