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Details of Award

NERC Reference : NE/R010536/1

OUTCROP: New prOcess-based UndersTanding of ocean heat Uptake with an application to improved Climate pRojections for pOlicy and Planning

Grant Award

Principal Investigator:
Dr RGJ Tailleux, University of Reading, Meteorology
Co-Investigator:
Professor JM Gregory, University of Reading, National Centre for Atmospheric Science
Co-Investigator:
Dr T Kuhlbrodt, University of Reading, Meteorology
Co-Investigator:
Dr D Ferreira, University of Reading, Meteorology
Science Area:
Atmospheric
Marine
Overall Classification:
Panel B
ENRIs:
Global Change
Science Topics:
Ocean modelling
Climate & Climate Change
Thermohaline circulation
Water mass analysis
Ocean Circulation
Oceanic eddies
Abstract:
Future climate change projections provide essential guidance for the efforts to curb the global warming trend caused by human emissions of greenhouse gases. One of the most important factors controlling the rate of climate change is ocean heat uptake (OHU), which is responsible for limiting global warming by absorbing part of the excess radiative forcing due to greenhouse gases by the ocean. Unfortunately, the physical processes controlling OHU remain poorly constrained and understood, as they are all associated with small scale processes related to turbulent mixing of heat and salt, meso-scale ocean eddies, deep water formation, which we do not know how to represent accurately, as well as to the surface fluxes of heat and freshwater, which are difficult to observe and measure precisely. As a result, large uncertainties in climate projections remain that are directly attributable to our lack of precise knowledge about ocean heat uptake. To understand how to make progress, a firm theoretical understanding of the physics of vertical heat transfer associated with OHU appears to be essential. Unfortunately, the validity and usefulness of the standard vertical/advection diffusion model for the horizontally-averaged temperature, which has been the primary theoretical tool to think about the vertical heat transfer, has been repeatedly questioned over the years owing to its failure to account for such effects as a varying topography, isopycnal mixing and the existence of density-compensated temperature anomalies. To resolve the above difficulties, our group recently developed a new process-based vertical advection/diffusion model for the heat balance that exploits advances from the theory of ocean water masses accumulated over the past 50 years or so. The new model represents a considerable improvement over the previous one, in that it naturally explains the precise role of a varying topography, density-compensated temperature anomalies, isoneutral mixing, and differential surface heating on the vertical heat transfer, which had remained obscure in the standard model. In this proposal, our first objective will be to demonstrate the usefulness of this new process-based model to interpret and rationalise the simulated ocean heat uptake for a wide range of climate change scenarios including increasing CO2, stabilisation, radiative forcing overshoot, and a collapse of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation. Our second objective will be to demonstrate that the major advances due to our new process-based understanding of ocean heat uptake can be translated into a major improvement in the accuracy of climate change projections using Simple Climate Models, with a particular application to the MAGICC model, and one developed by the Met Office Hadley Centre. Indeed, although the main physical basis for our current understanding of climate change relies on coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models (AOGCMs), these models are computationally very expensive to run. Therefore, simple climate models (SCMs) have been developed, which are able to mimic the climate response seen in the AOGCMs, but at a much reduced computational cost. SCMs represent a key tool in the study of climate change, and are being used for several purposes, e.g. simulating how the projections depend on key climate parameters, or for the interpretation of the AOGCM projections. SCMs are often used for policy advice and play a central role in the science forming the basis for Working groups 2 and 3 of the latest International Panel on Climate Change report, the main document at the origin of the recent Paris agreement aimed at limiting the overall global warming below 2C. The improved physical understanding of ocean heat uptake will significantly contribute to improved climate projections and reductions of associated uncertainties.
Period of Award:
1 Apr 2018 - 30 Sep 2021
Value:
£341,264
Authorised funds only
NERC Reference:
NE/R010536/1
Grant Stage:
Completed
Scheme:
Standard Grant FEC
Grant Status:
Closed
Programme:
Standard Grant

This grant award has a total value of £341,264  

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FDAB - Financial Details (Award breakdown by headings)

DI - Other CostsIndirect - Indirect CostsDA - InvestigatorsDA - Estate CostsDI - StaffDA - Other Directly AllocatedDI - T&S
£12,282£122,164£39,931£45,181£104,460£3,181£14,065

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