CMIP6 models overestimate sea ice melt, growth & conduction relative to ice mass balance buoy estimates

With the ongoing decline in Arctic sea ice extent, the accurate simulation of Arctic sea ice in coupled models remains an important problem in climate modelling. In this study, the substantial CMIP6 model spread in Arctic sea ice extent and volume is investigated using a novel, process-based approac...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: West, Alex Edward, Blockley, Edward William
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-2024-121
https://gmd.copernicus.org/preprints/gmd-2024-121/
Description
Summary:With the ongoing decline in Arctic sea ice extent, the accurate simulation of Arctic sea ice in coupled models remains an important problem in climate modelling. In this study, the substantial CMIP6 model spread in Arctic sea ice extent and volume is investigated using a novel, process-based approach. An observational dataset derived from the Arctic Ice Mass Balance buoy (IMB) network is used to evaluate the thermodynamic and mass balance diagnostics produced by a subset of CMIP6 models, to better understand the model processes that underlie the large-scale sea ice states. Due to the sparse nature of the IMB observations, the evaluation is performed by comparing distributions of modelled and observed fluxes in the densely sampled regions of the North Pole and Beaufort Sea. We find that all fluxes are routinely biased high in magnitude with respect to the IMB measurements by nearly all models, with too much melt in summer, and too much conduction and growth in winter, even as a function of ice thickness. We also show that choices of thermodynamic parameterisation substantially influence particular fluxes in physically realistic ways, and that these effects likely modulate the large-scale relationship between ice thickness and ice growth and melt in the CMIP6 models.