|
There are several global climate models (GCMs) produced by many
different groups. There are a half dozen from the USA, some from the UK
Met Office, a well known one from Australia, and so on. GCMs
are a truly global effort. These GCMs are of course referenced by the
IPCC, and each version is known to the creators of the other versions.
Much is made of the fact that these various GCMs show rough
agreement with each other. People have the sense that, since so many
“different” GCMs agree, we should have more confidence that what they
say is true. Today I will discuss why this view is false. This is not
an easy subject, so we will take it slowly.
Suppose first that you and I want to predict tomorrow’s high
temperature in Central Park in New York City (this example naturally
works for any thing we want to predict, from stock prices to
number of people who will vote for a certain USA presidential
candidate). I have a weather model called MMatt.
I run this model on my computer and it predicts 66 degrees F. I then
give you this model so that you can run it on your computer, but you
are vain and rename the model to MMe. You make the change, run the model, and announce that MMe predicts 66 degrees F.
Are we now more confident that tomorrow’s high temperature will be 66 because two different models predicted that number?
Obviously not.
The reason is that changing the name does not change the model.
Simply running the model twice, or a dozen, or a hundred times, does
not give us any additional evidence than if we only ran it just once.
We reach the same conclusion if instead of predicting tomorrow’s high
temperature, we use GCMs to predict next year’s global mean
temperature: no matter how many times we run the model, or how many
different places in the world we run it, we are no more confident of
the final prediction than if we only ran the model once.
So Point One of why multiple GCMs agreeing is not that exciting is
that if all the different GCMs are really the same model but each just
has a different name, then we have not gained new information by
running the models many times. And we might suspect that if somebody
keeps telling us that “all the models agree” to imply there is greater
certainty, he either might not understand this simple point or he has
ulterior motives.
Are all the many GMCs touted by the IPCC the same except for name?
No. Since they are not, then we might hope to gain much new information
from examining all of them. Unfortunately, they are not, and can not
be, that different either. We cannot here go into detail of each
component of each model (books are written on these subjects), but we
can make some broad conclusions.
The atmosphere, like the ocean, is a fluid and it flows like one.
The fundamental equations of motion that govern this flow are known.
They cannot differ from model to model; or to state this
positively, they will be the same in each model. On paper, anyway,
because those equations have to be approximated in a computer, and
there is not universal agreement, nor is there a proof, of the best way
to do this. So the manner each GCM implements this approximation might
be different, and these differences might cause the outputs to differ
(though this is not guaranteed).
The equations describing the physics of a photon of sunlight
interacting with our atmosphere are also known, but these interactions
happen on a scale too small to model, so the effects of sunlight must
be parameterized, which is a semi-statistical semi-physical guess of
how the small scale effects accumulate to the large scale used in GCMs.
Parameterization schemes can differ from model to model and these
differences almost certainly will cause the outputs to differ.
And so on for the other components of the models. Already, then, it
begins to look like there might be a lot of different information
available from the many GCMs, so we would be right to make something of
the cases where these models agree. Not quite.
The groups that build the GCMs do not work independently of one
another (nor should they). They read and write for the same journals,
attend the same conferences, and are familiar with each other’s work.
In fact, many of the components used in the different GCMs are the
same, even exactly the same, in more than one model. The same person or
persons may be responsible, through some line of research, for a
particular parameterization used in all the models. Computer code is
shared. Thus, while there are some reasons for differing output (and we
haven’t covered all of them yet), there are many more reasons that the
output should agree.
Results from different GCMs are thus not independent, so our
enthusiasm generated because they all roughly agree should at least be
tempered, until we understand how dependent the models are.
This next part is tricky, so stay with me. The models differ in more
ways than just the physical representations previously noted. They also
differ in strictly computational ways and through different hypotheses
of how, for example, CO2 should be treated. Some models use
a coarse grid point representation of the earth and others use a finer
grid: the first method generally attempts to do better with the physics
but sacrifices resolution, the second method attempts to provide a
finer look at the world, while typically sacrificing accuracy in other
parts of the model. While the positive feedback in temperature caused
by increasing CO2 is the same in spirit for all models, the exact way it is implemented in each can differ.
Now, each climate model, as a result of the many approximations that
must be made, has, if you like, hundreds (even thousands) of knobs that
can be dialed to and fro. Each twist of the dial produces a difference
in the output. Tweaking these dials, then, is a necessary part of the
model building process. The models are tuned so that they, as closely
as possible, first are able to produce climate that looks like the
past, already observed, climate. Much time is spent tuning and tweaking
the models so that they can, at least roughly, reproduce past climate.
Thus, the fact that all the GCMs can roughly represent the past climate
is again not as interesting as it first seemed. They better had, or
nobody would seriously consider the model as a contender.
Reproducing past data is a necessary but not sufficient condition
that the models can predict future data. Thus, it is also not at all
clear how these tweakings affect the accuracy in predicting new data,
which is data that was not used in any way to build the models, that
is, future data. Predicting future data has several components.
It might be that one of the models, say GCM1 is the best of the bunch in the sense that it matches most closely future data. If this is always the case, if GCM1
is always closest (using some proper measure of skill), then it means
that the other models are not as good, they are wrong in some way, and
thus they should be ignored when making predictions. The fact that they come close to GCM1 should not give us more reason to believe the predictions made by GCM1.
The other models are not providing new information in this case. This
argument, which is admittedly subtle, also holds if a certain group of
GCMs are always better than the remainder of models. Only the close
group can be considered independent evidence. Read rest...
|