Geophysical Research Letters (Jun 2024)

Missing Increase in Summer Greenland Blocking in Climate Models

  • J. W. Maddison,
  • J. L. Catto,
  • E. Hanna,
  • L. N. Luu,
  • J. A. Screen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL108505
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 11
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Summertime Greenland blocking (GB) can drive melting of the Greenland ice sheet, which has global implications. A strongly increasing trend in GB in the early twenty‐first century was observed but is missing in climate model simulations. Here, we analyze the temporal evolution of GB in nearly 500 members from the CMIP6 archive. The recent period of increased GB is not present in the members considered. The maximum 10‐year trend in GB in the reanalysis, associated with the recent increase, lies almost outside the distributions of trends for any 10‐year period in the climate models. GB is shown to be partly driven by the sea surface temperatures and/or sea ice concentrations, as well as by anthropogenic aerosols. Further work is required to understand why climate models cannot represent a period of increased GB, and appear to underestimate its decadal variability, and what implications this may have.

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