EMS Annual Meeting Abstracts
Vol. 21, EMS2024-1074, 2024, updated on 05 Jul 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/ems2024-1074
EMS Annual Meeting 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Friday, 06 Sep, 09:15–09:30 (CEST)
 
Lecture room B5

For a Pluralism of Climate Modelling Strategies

Erica Thompson1, Marina Baldissera Pacchetti1,2, and Julie Jebeile3,4,5
Erica Thompson et al.
  • 1STEaPP, UCL, United Kingdom (erica.thompson@ucl.ac.uk)
  • 2Barcelona Supercomputing Center, Spain
  • 3Institute of Philosophy, University of Bern, Switzerland
  • 4Oeschger Center for Climate Change Research, Bern, Switzerland
  • 5CNRM UMR 3589, Météo-France/CNRS, Centre National de Recherches Météorologiques, Toulouse, France

The continued development of General Circulation Models (GCMs) towards increasing resolution and complexity is a predominantly chosen strategy to advance climate science, resulting in channelling of research and funding to meet this aspiration. Yet many other modelling strategies have also been developed and can be used to understand past and present climates, to project future climates and ultimately to support decision-making. We argue that a plurality of climate modelling strategies and an equitable distribution of funding among them would be an improvement on the current predominant strategy for informing policy making. To support our claim, we use a philosophy of science approach to compare increasing resolution and complexity of General Circulation Models with three alternate examples: the use of machine learning techniques, the physical climate storyline approach, and Earth System Models of Intermediate Complexity. We show that each of these strategies prioritises a particular set of methodological aims, among which are empirical agreement, realism, comprehensiveness, diversity of process representations, inclusion of the human dimension, reduction of computational expense, and intelligibility. Thus, each strategy may provide adequate information to support different specific kinds of research and decision questions. We conclude that, because climate decision-making consists of different kinds of questions, many modelling strategies are all potentially useful, and can be used in a complementary way.  The outcomes of active diversification of climate modelling strategies would be to broaden the kinds of decision questions we are capable to answer, as well as to have more justified confidence in the robust core of projections, more potential input from those who will be affected by decisions, and thereby more effective consensus building for climate action.

How to cite: Thompson, E., Baldissera Pacchetti, M., and Jebeile, J.: For a Pluralism of Climate Modelling Strategies, EMS Annual Meeting 2024, Barcelona, Spain, 1–6 Sep 2024, EMS2024-1074, https://doi.org/10.5194/ems2024-1074, 2024.