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Jim__

(14,502 posts)
2. I believe a better summary: we have improved the ability to model climate sensitivity.
Thu Apr 18, 2024, 01:45 AM
Apr 2024

As the lead author is reported in the phys.org article to have said: "The main contribution from our study is narrowing the estimate of climate sensitivity, improving our ability to make future warming projections".

Which is also the emphasis given in the paper's abstract:

Abstract

Here, we show that the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) provides a stronger constraint on equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS), the global warming from increasing greenhouse gases, after accounting for temperature patterns. Feedbacks governing ECS depend on spatial patterns of surface temperature (“pattern effects”); hence, using the LGM to constrain future warming requires quantifying how temperature patterns produce different feedbacks during LGM cooling versus modern-day warming. Combining data assimilation reconstructions with atmospheric models, we show that the climate is more sensitive to LGM forcing because ice sheets amplify extratropical cooling where feedbacks are destabilizing. Accounting for LGM pattern effects yields a median modern-day ECS of 2.4°C, 66% range 1.7° to 3.5°C (1.4° to 5.0°C, 5 to 95%), from LGM evidence alone. Combining the LGM with other lines of evidence, the best estimate becomes 2.9°C, 66% range 2.4° to 3.5°C (2.1° to 4.1°C, 5 to 95%), substantially narrowing uncertainty compared to recent assessments.


Improving climate modeling is a good thing.

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