http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00382-014-2302-6?wt_mc=alerts.TOCjournals

Climate Dynamics
August 2015, Volume 45, Issue 3-4, pp 745-754

26 Aug 2014

The reversibility of CO2 induced climate change

Peili Wu, Jeff Ridley, Anne Pardaens, Richard Levine, Jason Lowe

Abstract
This paper investigates the reversibility of CO2 induced climate change and
in particular the potential impacts of different rates of CO2 reduction
using a coupled climate model. Atmospheric CO2 concentration is ramped up
by 0.5 %/year from the preindustrial value to 4×CO2 and then ramped down
from 2×CO2 to 4×CO2 with different rates. How the response of the climate
system is affected by the peak atmospheric CO2 concentration and the rate
of long term decline is vital information for those considering
hypothetical geoengineering options to remove CO2. Major components of the
climate system including global mean surface air temperature and
precipitation, contribution of thermal expansion to global sea level rise,
loss of the Arctic sea ice, weakening of the Atlantic meridional
overturning circulation (AMOC) and the South Asia monsoon are analyzed. We
have found no ‘tipping points’ or thresholds beyond which CO2 induced
climate change in these components become irreversible within this model
under the specific scenarios. However, there are strong inertias and
path-dependent hysteresis in the climate system linked through oceanic
memory. Initially the strengthened global hydrological cycle accelerates
further in response to a CO2 ramp-down before weakening. Thermal expansion
of the oceans continues for many decades after CO2 concentration starts to
decrease. A 0.5 %/year reduction from 4×CO2 could see a further 25 % sea
level rise. The weakening of the AMOC is reversible, but the build-up of
highly saline subtropical waters during global warming drives an overshoot
of the AMOC after the CO2 ramp-down and extends the warming of the northern
high latitudes by many decades. The South Asia monsoon strengthens in
response to a CO2 ramp-up marked by an increase in summer monsoon rainfall.
This increase reverses rapidly following a CO2 ramp-down, displaying an
undershoot in monsoon rainfall for rapid CO2 reductions.

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