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The accuracy of computer models that predict climate change over the coming decades has been the subject of debate among politicians, environmentalists and even scientists. A new study by meteorologists at the University of Utah shows that current climate models are quite accurate and can be valuable tools for those seeking solutions on reversing global warming trends. Most of these models project a global warming trend that amounts to about 7 degrees Fahrenheit over the next 100 years.
The
study titled "How Well do Coupled Models Simulate Today’s Climate?" is
due to be published this Friday in the Bulletin of the American
Meteorological Society. In the study, co-authors Thomas Reichler and
Junsu Kim from the Department of Meteorology at the University of Utah
investigate how well climate models actually do their job in simulating
climate. To this end, they compare the output of the models against
observations for present climate. The authors apply this method to
about 50 different national and international models that were
developed over the past two decades at major climate research centers
in China, Russia, Australia, Canada, France, Korea, Great Britain,
Germany, and the United States. Of course, also included is the very
latest model generation that was used for the very recent (2007) report
of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
“Coupled
models are becoming increasingly reliable tools for understanding
climate and climate change, and the best models are now capable of
simulating present-day climate with accuracy approaching conventional
atmospheric observations,” said Reichler. “We can now place a much
higher level of confidence in model-based projections of climate change
than in the past.”
The many hours of studying models and
comparing them with actual climate changes fulfills the increasing wish
to know how much one can trust climate models and their predictions.
Given the significance of climate change research in public policy, the
study’s results also provide important response to critics of global
warming. Earlier this year, working group one of the IPCC released its
fourth global warming report. The University of Utah study results
directly relate to this highly publicized report by showing that the
models used for the IPCC paper have reached an unprecedented level of
realism.
Another important aspect of the research is that
climate models built in the U.S. are now some of the best models
worldwide. Increased efforts in the U.S. over the past few years to
build better climate models have paid off, and according to the
authors' measure of reliability, one of the U.S. models is now one of
the leading climate models worldwide.
Although model-based
projections of future climate are now more credible than ever before,
the authors note they have no way to say exactly how reliable those
projections are. There are simply too many unknowns involved in the
future evolution of climate, such as how much humans will curb their
future greenhouse gas emissions.
Thomas Reichler | Quelle: EurekAlert!
Weitere Informationen: www.utah.edu
Lieber Besucher, | ||
Contact: info@insites.eu | ||
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