Abstract
Under the Paris Agreement, signatory nations aim to keep global warming well below 2 °C above pre-industrial levels and preferably below 1.5 °C. This implicitly requires achieving net-zero or net-negative greenhouse gas emissions to ensure long-term global temperature stabilisation or reduction. Despite this requirement, there have been few analyses of stabilised climates, and there is a lack of model experiments to address our need for understanding the implications of the Paris Agreement. Here, we describe a new set of experiments using the Australian Community Climate and Earth System Simulator Earth system model (ACCESS-ESM-1.5) that enables the analysis of climate evolution under net-zero emissions, and we present initial results. Seven 1000-year-long simulations were run with global temperatures stabilising at levels in line with the Paris Agreement and at a range of higher global warming levels (GWLs). We provide an overview of the experimental design and use these simulations to demonstrate the consequences of delayed attainment of global net-zero carbon dioxide emissions. We show that there are substantial differences between transient and stabilising climate states and differences in stabilisation between GWLs. As the climate stabilises under net-zero emissions, we identify significant and robust changes in temperature and precipitation patterns including continued Southern Ocean warming and changes in regional precipitation trends. Changes under net-zero emissions differ greatly between regions, including contrasting trajectories of sea ice extent between the Arctic and Antarctic. We also examine the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and find evidence of reduced amplitude and frequency of ENSO events under climate stabilisation relative to projections under transient warming. An analysis at specific GWLs shows that significant regional changes continue for centuries after emission cessation and that these changes are stronger at higher GWLs. Our findings suggest substantial long-term climate changes are possible even under net-zero emission pathways. These simulations are available for use in the community and will hopefully motivate further experiments and analyses based on other Earth system models.
An interesting read (admittedly I skimmed through a lot as the details are over my head). The takeaway I get is that even in an ideal situation like these simulations where we immediately go to a net zero world or even one of negative net, there will still be centuries of climate oscillations as it finds a new stability.
Given that the goals are met at various year points and the continued progressions are overall straight, this seems to suggest to me that there's a lot of the extra "noise" left out to keep the simulations simple enough to run. Things like triggered feedbacks for one. Perhaps laid onto these conclusions we can imagine arching curves from the net zero year points that find their high points much later and finally plateau or perhaps find a slow decrease over thousands of years timescale. Again, just a layperson's take given other projections I've seen and the typical curves that seem to result from them.
The short conclusion is that we need to cut emissions yesterday, and fast, and then prepare for a very rough ride for our posterity. Cessation, mitigation, and adaptation need to be primary concerns.