CIRCULATES - Circulation, Clouds and Climate Sensitivity

Lead Research Organisation: University of St Andrews
Department Name: Earth and Environmental Sciences

Abstract

Climate models are numerical models used to make projections of future climate change. Because of limitations in computing power, approximations to some parts of the model are required, particularly on small scales where important processes occur that are smaller than the model grid on which calculations are carried out. It is not clear how best to approximate small-scale processes and as a result, different GCMs use different approximations and produce different predictions of future climate change. One of the most important of these uncertainties is how low clouds are represented, and that is the focus of the CIRCULATES proposal.

We now have access to new, high resolution satellite observations that we can use to build datasets that give us a much better idea of how clouds form and disperse, and how they interact with the environment in which they find themselves. We also have high resolution modelling tools that are able to represent the physical processes necessary to simulate clouds with much higher accuracy. High resolution models are far too computationally expensive to run for many model years over the whole globe in a way that could be used to project changes in climate directly. However, in conjunction with the satellite data, they can be used to determine the best way to represent the effects of clouds on the GCM model grid. This information can be transferred to the climate model, which can then be run to discover the impact of our findings on global climate change. In CIRCULATES, we propose to develop both new satellite data and high resolution simulations that are specifically designed to assist with improving and understanding the response of climate models with a focus on tropical and sub-tropical clouds.

The project aims to assist the climate science and policy communities in two ways. First, the discoveries that we make will be used to assess the simulations made by climate models run by modelling centres around the world for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports. How well are IPCC GCMs representing cloud processes in the present day? How does their representation change for simulations of the future and is this appropriate? By determining the fidelity of simulation in comparison with high resolution satellite and model data, we will determine the extent to which model simulations can be trusted, with the aim of constraining the likely range of future climate change. Second, we will develop metrics that are useful not only for constraining projections but also for model developers who are building the next generation of models. Our project has strong collaboration with the Met Office, who, together with the academic community, are the primary developers of models used for understanding climate change in the UK. We will engage with key Met Office and UKESM staff on a regular basis in order to determine how our results may be made most useful to model development.

Planned Impact

Constraints on cloud feedback are directly relevant to climate policy worldwide. The project is in an excellent position to achieve this through the following linked activities.

The CIRCULATES team are engaged with United Nations agencies through several initiatives. Co-Is Collins and Byrne are authors of the forthcoming IPCC Sixth Assessment Report (AR6 - including special reports). Project partner Webb is a steering committee member for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) Grand Challenge on Clouds, Circulation and Climate Sensitivity and is co-lead author of the WCRP Assessment on Climate Sensitivity. CIRCULATES will therefore be able to feed directly into policy processes at international level.

Nationally, CIRCULATES will engage with the UK Climate Projections (UKCP) process by analysing data from the simulations used to make projections and applying our constraint metrics to them. This will help ensure that the Met Office and UK policy makers have the best information available for making decisions regarding climate change impacts.

More specifically, the project partner, the Met Office, will benefit directly from the research. Simulations and numerical model coding will be carried out using Met Office systems, meaning that results and code development will be directly relevant to Met Office work. We plan frequent informal meetings with relevant Met Office staff in the areas of model development, cloud and climate feedback and model projection, facilitated by the close proximity of the Met Office and the University of Exeter. Met Office staff will be present at our annual meetings and at the special model development workshop we plan for year 3. Transfer and relevance of this impact will be ensured through the direct involvement of Met Office staff in the project: Webb as partner, and Ringer and Stirling as strategic panel members.

Publications

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Hill P (2023) Climate Models Underestimate Dynamic Cloud Feedbacks in the Tropics in Geophysical Research Letters

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Mackie A (2023) Effects of Circulation on Tropical Cloud Feedbacks in High-Resolution Simulations in Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems

 
Description Clouds influence Earth's energy balance by absorbing and reflecting solar and terrestrial radiation. The response of clouds to warming remains a key source of uncertainty in our understanding on how the climate system will evolve in the future. In particular, how the influence of clouds on radiation is coupled to the atmospheric circulation is an open question. Through this award, we have analysed idealised simulations of the tropics at high resolution (3 km) to probe how changes in circulation impact clouds in a warming climate. We have found that, across a range of atmospheric models, the degree to which circulation changes influence clouds depends on how the area of the region with ascending air responds to warming. This key finding represents a major advance in our understanding of low-latitude cloud feedbacks and lays the foundation for new simulations and analyses of the processes controlling the area of tropical ascent in a warming climate, with implications for both global climate sensitivity and the regional water cycle in the tropics.
Exploitation Route The study funded by this award has highlighted the central role of small-scale circulations in determining the tropical cloud feedback, which in turn strongly affects global climate sensitivity. This project outcome might be taken forward by developers of global climate models, in particular by incorporating into these global models through new parameterisations the effects of unresolved circulations on cloud dynamics.
Sectors Environment

URL https://www.essoar.org/doi/10.1002/essoar.10509780.1
 
Title Dynamic/thermodynamic cloud feedback decomposition in high-resolution simulations 
Description In this project, a data analysis technique to decompose the dynamic and thermodynamic contributions to the cloud feedback has been applied for the first time to high-resolution simulations performed using cloud-resolving models. This technique is quantifying the role of convective-scale circulations in controlling the shortwave and longwave cloud feedbacks, with the objective of guiding the development and refinement of cloud and convection parameterisation schemes for the general circulation models (GCMs) used to predict future climate change. 
Type Of Material Data analysis technique 
Year Produced 2020 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This data analysis technique has shown for the first time that cloud feedbacks depend on convective-scale circulations that the current generation of GCMs cannot explicitly simulate. This has implications for future climate prediction, which depends critically on cloud feedbacks. 
 
Description Constraints on dynamic component of cloud feedback in climate models 
Organisation Meteorological Office UK
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution As part of the CIRCULATES project I have contributed to a fruitful collaboration, led by Peter Hill and Chris Holloway, focused on constraining the dynamical component of the cloud feedback in state-of-the-art climate models using observational data. This collaboration builds partly on previous work I have undertaken on this topic, and on ongoing work by my research team (led by Anna Mackie).
Collaborator Contribution Peter Hill and Chris Holloway have led the analyses and direction of this project, with expert input from project partners at the Met Office and University of Exeter (as well as from myself and my research team).
Impact A publication based on this collaboration is currently being written up.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Constraints on dynamic component of cloud feedback in climate models 
Organisation University of Exeter
Department College of Engineering, Mathematics & Physical Sciences
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution As part of the CIRCULATES project I have contributed to a fruitful collaboration, led by Peter Hill and Chris Holloway, focused on constraining the dynamical component of the cloud feedback in state-of-the-art climate models using observational data. This collaboration builds partly on previous work I have undertaken on this topic, and on ongoing work by my research team (led by Anna Mackie).
Collaborator Contribution Peter Hill and Chris Holloway have led the analyses and direction of this project, with expert input from project partners at the Met Office and University of Exeter (as well as from myself and my research team).
Impact A publication based on this collaboration is currently being written up.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Constraints on dynamic component of cloud feedback in climate models 
Organisation University of Reading
Department Department of Meteorology
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution As part of the CIRCULATES project I have contributed to a fruitful collaboration, led by Peter Hill and Chris Holloway, focused on constraining the dynamical component of the cloud feedback in state-of-the-art climate models using observational data. This collaboration builds partly on previous work I have undertaken on this topic, and on ongoing work by my research team (led by Anna Mackie).
Collaborator Contribution Peter Hill and Chris Holloway have led the analyses and direction of this project, with expert input from project partners at the Met Office and University of Exeter (as well as from myself and my research team).
Impact A publication based on this collaboration is currently being written up.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Article on cloud research in the 'Sustainability Series', produced by the St Andrews Network for Climate, Energy, Environment and Sustainability (STACEES) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A magazine, newsletter or online publication
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Dr Anna Mackie participated in the STACEES 'Sustainability Series', a collection of short articles about environmental research at St Andrews. In this series, Dr Mackie showcased her research as part of the NERC CIRCULATES project. The Sustainability Series has been published (DOI: https://doi.org/10.15664/10023.24212) and widely distributes across the University of St Andrews and the wider region. The Sustainability Series formed the basis of an outreach event with children from local schools in Fife.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021