Sea ice trends in climate models only accurate in runs with biased global warming
Erica Rosenblum, Ian Eisenman

TL;DR
Climate models only match observed polar sea ice trends when they simulate higher global warming than observed, indicating they may be getting the right trends for the wrong reasons.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that current climate models' accurate sea ice trend simulations are linked to biased global warming levels, challenging their reliability.
Findings
Models with Arctic sea ice retreat matching observations have excessive global warming.
Simulated Antarctic sea ice expansion aligns with too little global warming.
Models do not accurately capture the asymmetry between Arctic and Antarctic trends.
Abstract
Observations indicate that the Arctic sea ice cover is rapidly retreating while the Antarctic sea ice cover is steadily expanding. State-of-the-art climate models, by contrast, typically simulate a moderate decrease in both the Arctic and Antarctic sea ice covers. However, in each hemisphere there is a small subset of model simulations that have sea ice trends similar to the observations. Based on this, a number of recent studies have suggested that the models are consistent with the observations in each hemisphere when simulated internal climate variability is taken into account. Here we examine sea ice changes during 1979-2013 in simulations from the most recent Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) as well as the Community Earth System Model Large Ensemble (CESM-LE), drawing on previous work that found a close relationship in climate models between global-mean surface…
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