Introduction
Most of the data files provided here are direct copies of the original PMIP3 or CMIP5 datasets. If you use any of these datasets for publication please reference the data as indicated on the PMIP3 or CMIP5 web sites. Files for the RCP extensions, which are specified to year 2500, but only used here to 2300, have been shortened to avoid potential confusion.Maps of land-use change and emissions of aerosols are specified as RCP forcing for GCMs. Some EMICs can not use spatial maps of vegetation to simulate forcing from land-use change. Most EMICS do not have the appropriate atmospheric chemistry to calculate the direct and indirect effects of aerosols from emissions. Equivalent modelled SO4 concentrations are also specified for the RCPs which can be used with models (including GCMs) that lack the appropriate aerosol chemistry. Emissions and concentration data are available from the RCP download page. This page may require signing in to gain access. If the spatial emissions or concentrations of aerosols or maps of land-use change can not be used, then it is recommended that the globally averaged estimates of radiative forcing from Task Group: RCP Concentrations Calculation and Data be used. For sulphate aerosols use "Global SOX (Fossil & Ind) Radiative Forcing" and for land-use use, "Global LANDUSE Radiative Forcing". Radiative forcing data can be found in the file ALLDATA_30May2010.zip.
Links to modified versions of some of these datasets are available at the bottom of this page and are provided for convenience. See UVic Forcing Data below. These processed files are all in compressed netcdf format and often are considerably smaller than the original datasets. If used, they should be checked against the original datasets. Use with caution. Even if you do not use the processed versions of these datasets, this section may provide hints on how to process your own data.
4. Historical Simulations
Initial Condition
Spin up at 850 boundary conditions or alternatively, spin-up as pre-industrial (PI), where PI is defined as
in CMIP5 (~1750 to ~1850). A
CO2 concentration of 280 ppmv is preferred but not required. It is recommended that you spin
up with the average of the solar irradiance over a solar cycle. The average irradiance from the recommended Delaygue and
Bard dataset between 850 and 861 (next solar cycle) is 1365.763 W m-2.
Control Simulation (850 to 2005)
Control simulation with constant 850 forcing (from the forcing specified below) or alternatively, a control
simulation with constant PI forcing for models spun up at PI. This is usually just a continuation of the constant forcing
simulation used to provide the initial condition.
The simulations over the last millennium will follow the PMIP3/CMIP5 protocol. Further details are available from Schmidt et al. (2010) and: https://pmip3.lsce.ipsl.fr/wiki/doku.php/pmip3:design:lm:final. All forcing that is compatible with the model should be used. If a model is not capable of using the prescribed forcing then the globally averaged radiative forcing from Task Group: RCP Concentrations Calculation and Data may be used for forcing beyond 1765. If radiative forcing estimates are required before 1765, it is left to the modelling groups to decide how best to specify the forcing. If any forcing is applied differently than specified here or not applied, please indicate this when submitting any model results.
Forcing (850 to 2005):- Orbital parameters: Annually varying following Berger (1978) or from the PMIP3 orbital data file.
- Date of vernal equinox: March 21 at noon.
- Trace Gases: Annually varying 850-1850 from the PMIP3 trace gas data file blended into the RCP trace gas data before 1850.
- Volcanic aerosols: Crowley dataset from the PMIP3 volcanic
data file. Volcanic forcing should be converted into an anomaly by subtracting out
the long term mean. Zero anomaly can be applied during the spin-up and after 1998. Alternatively the long term mean of the
volcanic forcing should be applied during the spin-up and after 1998.
- Solar irradiance: Delaygue and Bard (from 850 to 1609) from the PMIP3 solar data file and the historical RCP solar irradiance data (from 1610 to 2005).
- Ozone: Not applied.
- Aerosols: Follow the protocol for CMIP5 RCPs (from 1855 to 2005). Only the direct effects of anthropogenic SOX emissions, SO4 concentrations or SOX equivalent radiative forcing should be applied. Emissions and concentration data are available from the RCP download page. This page may require registering to gain access.
- Vegetation: Land cover changes (natural to crop and pasture). PMIP3 data file (800 to 1699, Pongratz et al. 2007, 1.1 GB!) linearly blended over the period 1500 to 1699 with the CMIP5 historical RCP land use data (1500 to 2005, 1.1GB!).
- Ice sheets: no changes from CMIP5 PI.
- Topography and coastlines: no changes from CMIP5 PI.
Compatibility with RCP forcing:
All forcing from 1850 to 2005 should be the same as for the historical portion (1850-2005) of the RCP scenarios (see below).
Any blending of datasets should happen before 1850.
Additional optional forcing:
PMIP3 does not recommend singular volcanic, solar irradiance or land-use datasets. Although it is recommended here to use
the datasets indicated above, please consider doing additional simulations using
other PMIP3 recommended
volcanic (Gao-Robock-Ammann), solar irradiance
(from Muscheler, Joos, Beer, Müller, Vonmoos and Snowball: 850-1609, Vieira, Krivova and Solanki: 850-1849
and Steinhilber, Beer, and Frohlich: 850-1849 - see "Solar Irradiance" file above) and land-use
(Kaplan et al.) forcing data .
5. Representative Concentration Pathways
Initial Condition
Use the end state (2005) of the "total" forcing simulation from the "historical" last millennium experiment above or
alternatively, spin up as for CMIP5 PI
and perform the simulation from PI to 2005 using the historical portion of the RCP forcing. It is recommended that you spin
up with the average of the solar irradiance over a solar cycle and a CO2 concentration of 280
ppmv is preferred but not required.
Control Simulation (2005 to time of longest experiment)
A continuation of the last millennium "historical" control simulation with constant 850 forcing (see above) or alternatively, a
continuation of the spin up at PI with constant PI forcing. This is usually just a continuation of the constant forcing
simulation used to provide the initial condition.
Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) have been designed to provide radiative forcing data for modelling groups wishing to contribute to the IPCC AR5. Information on the RCPs is available at: http://www.iiasa.ac.at/web-apps/tnt/RcpDb The Coupled Modelling Intercomparison Project (CMIP) have taken the RCP data and designed a suite of experiments for the CMIP5 project. See Taylor et al. (2009) and http://www-pcmdi.llnl.gov/ for details.
All forcing that is compatible with the model should be used. If a model is not capable of using the prescribed forcing then the globally averaged radiative forcing from Task Group: RCP Concentrations Calculation and Data should be used.
f Historical RCP Forcing (PI to 2005):Only required if not starting from the end of the last millennium experiment.
- Orbital parameters: Annually varying following Berger (1978) or from the PMIP3 orbital data. file Hold fixed at 2005 values, after 2005.
- Date of vernal equinox: March 21 at noon.
- Trace Gases: Historical RCP trace gas data.
- Volcanic aerosols: Crowley dataset from the PMIP3 volcanic data file. Volcanic
forcing should be converted into an anomaly by subtracting out the long term mean. Zero anomaly can be applied during the spin-up
and after 1998.
Alternatively the long term mean of the volcanic forcing should be applied during the spin-up and after 1998.
- Solar irradiance: Historical RCP solar irradiance data .
- Ozone: Not applied.
- Aerosols: Follow the protocol for CMIP5 RCPs (from 1855 to 2005). Only the direct effects of anthropogenic SOX emissions, SO4 concentrations or SOX equivalent radiative forcing should be applied. Emissions and concentration data are available from the RCP download page. This page may require registering to gain access.
- Vegetation: Historical RCP land use data file (1500-2005, 1.1 GB!).
- Ice sheets: No changes from CMIP5 PI.
- Topography and coastlines: no changes from CMIP5 PI.
As for historical RCP with:
- Trace Gases: Trace gas data file. Note this file has been truncated at 2300.
- Solar irradiance: Repeat the last cycle with values from 1996 to 2008 inclusive mapping to 2009-2021, 2022-2034 etc (see historical RCP data file above).
- Aerosols: Follow the protocol for CMIP5 RCPs (from 2005 to 2100). Only the direct effects of anthropogenic SOX emissions, SO4 concentrations or SOX equivalent radiative forcing should be applied. Emissions and concentration data are available from the RCP download page. This page may require registering to gain access.
- Vegetation: Historical RCP land use data file (2005-2100). Hold fixed at 2100 values, after 2100.
As for historical RCP with:
- Trace Gases: Trace gas data file. Note this file has been truncated at 2300.
- Solar irradiance: Repeat the last cycle with values from 1996 to 2008 inclusive mapping to 2009-2021, 2022-2034 etc (see historical RCP data file above).
- Aerosols: Follow the protocol for CMIP5 RCPs (from 2005 to 2100). Only the direct effects of anthropogenic SOX emissions, SO4 concentrations or SOX equivalent radiative forcing should be applied. Emissions and concentration data are available from the RCP download page. This page may require registering to gain access.
- Vegetation: Historical RCP land use data file (2005-2100). Hold fixed at 2100 values, after 2100.
As for historical RCP with:
- Trace Gases: Trace gas data file. Note this file has been truncated at 2300.
- Solar irradiance: Repeat the last cycle with values from 1996 to 2008 inclusive mapping into 2009 to 2021, 2022 to 2034, etc (see historical RCP data file above).
- Aerosols: Follow the protocol for CMIP5 RCPs (from 2005 to 2100). Only the direct effects of anthropogenic SOX emissions, SO4 concentrations or SOX equivalent radiative forcing should be applied. Emissions and concentration data are available from the RCP download page. This page may require registering to gain access.
- Vegetation: Historical RCP land use data file (2005-2100). Hold fixed at 2100 values, after 2100.
As for historical RCP with:
- Trace Gases: Trace gas data file. Note this file has been truncated at 2300.
- Solar irradiance: Repeat the last cycle with values from 1996 to 2008 inclusive mapping to 2009-2021, 2022-2034 etc (see historical RCP data file above).
- Aerosols: Follow the protocol for CMIP5 RCPs (from 2005 to 2100). Only the direct effects of anthropogenic SOX emissions, SO4 concentrations or SOX equivalent radiative forcing should be applied. Emissions and concentration data are available from the RCP download page. This page may require registering to gain access.
- Vegetation: Historical RCP land use data file (2005-2100). Hold fixed at 2100 values, after 2100.
8. Allowable cumulative emissions (2005 to 2500)
For these simulations, only EMICs coupled to a dynamic carbon cycle component are appropriate. The simulations outlined in this
section require code modifications that allow the model to "track" a specified temperature profile. This is accomplished by diagnosing
emissions that will produce a level of CO2 that is compatible with the desired temperature.
Generating temperature profiles
Temperature profiles should change smoothly from the historical simulation to the idealized profile in order not induce large emissions
near the transition. The slope from the last 10 years of the historical simulation can be used to specify the starting slope for a spline
fit to a final temperature. A simple cubic spline interpolation program that generates a temperature profile from the end of a historical
simulation is available as a Fortran 90 routine (sat_profile.f90) or as an IDL procedure
(sat_profile.pro). Temperature profiles that change smoothly to 1.5, 2, 3, and 4 C above PI are needed.
It may take some experimentation to achieve smooth profiles.
Generating running average temperature
A running annual average of the global average surface air temperature (SAT) needs to be calculated so that it can be compared to the
temperature target. This average needs to be calculated whenever emissions are calculated. This can be done by storing global
average SAT in a temporal array. As an example, in the UVic model emissions are specified every 5 days (coupling time
between model components) so the array holding a years worth of global average SAT has a dimension of 72. If a model has a great deal
of interannual variability the average can be taken over several years by increasing the size of the SAT accumulator array. Every time
emissions are calculated the appropriate global SAT value is updated in the array and the annual (or multi year) average is calculated
by averaging all values in the array. The array index to be updated can be obtained with a simple counter that continuously cycles through
the array. The target air temperature is compared to this average and appropriate emissions are derived. If the model is stopped and
restarted during a "tracking" simulation then the global average SAT array and index counter must be saved when the model stops and read
in again when the model starts. The SAT accumulation array must be full, before emissions can be calculated.
Calculating emissions
Emissions are calculated in order to produce desired changes in SAT. If the global average temperature becomes too high or too low then
emissions are reduced or increased until the desired temperature is achieved. This control can be accomplished by using a simple, heavily
damped proportional control algorithm. emissions = k*(delta SAT) where delta SAT is the desired change in temperature
and k is a constant that relates emissions to temperature change through CO2. This constant is roughly
inversely proportional to the model's climate sensitivity per unit of CO2 emission. For levels of
CO2 near present day this might be something like 2.13*280/3/timestep for a model with a climate
sensitivity of 3C, for a doubling of PI CO2, and a ppmv to Pg emissions conversion of 2.13. This constant
is usually reduced considerably from this idealized value to ensure an over damped system.
Timing considerations
The time associated with the annual average temperature profile is usually reduced by half of the
averaging time that is being used to calculate the model's running average temperature (see above). For example, if the model is simulating
the start of 2011 and the model is calculating a running average over just one year, then the running average represents the temperature for
the middle of 2010 and any calculated emissions should be calculated from the difference in temperature (target-model) for the middle of 2010
but applied at the beginning of 2011. In other words there is a delay of 6 months from when emissions are calculated and when they are applied.
This does not significantly affect the ability of the model to "track" global annual temperature as long as the SAT profiles are relatively
smooth but it is one of the reasons why the minimum averaging time, that removes most of the model's natural interannual variability, should be
used. Changing from specified emissions or concentrations, to emissions calculated from lagged temperature change can cause some small
discontinuities in emissions. This is why some care should be taken to match the slope at the end of the simulated portion of the temperature
profile to the slope at the beginning of the specified portion. Usually these are discontinuities are small but if they are large it may be best
to construct a temperature time series that includes both the historical period and the future smooth profile, and perform temperature "tracking"
from PI though to 2500.
Other forcing
This experiment calculates the radiative forcing required to follow a specific temperature profile. The radiative forcing is assumed to come
from emissions of CO2, however, changes in other forcing would also change the calculated amount of
CO2 required to meet a specific temperature target. Here it is assumed that other forcing either remains
constant (such as natural forcing from changes in solar irradiance or volcanic activity) or decreases to zero by 2300. Best estimates of
other anthropogenic forcing such as sulphates and additional greenhouse gases nearly cancel giving a near net zero contribution to the
radiative forcing at present day. An assumption is that this will continue into the future so changes in radiative forcing can be expressed
in terms of CO2 alone. Although the radiative forcing from sulphates and other greenhouse gases nearly cancel,
these should be linearly reduced from their levels at 2005 to those at PI, by 2300. All other forcing should be held constant at 2005 levels.
Beyond 2005, solar irradiance should be held fixed at the average of the last solar cycle (years 1996 to 2008 inclusive).
Code changes
The details of how to implement temperature "tracking" will depend on specifics of the model but the following code details how this is done in
the UVic model. Search for variables with "track_sat" in them to find the appropriate code.
- cembm.h (include file): itrack_sat (index for averaging sat array) and ntrack_sat (number to be points for average sat) are declared as integer and added to a common block.
- atm.h (include file): track_sat (array of global average sat values) is declared as a real array of length mtrack (maximum number in the average) and added to a common block.
- embm_rest.f (subroutine file): itrack_sat, ntrack_sat and track_sat are all written to, or read from, the restart file
- setembm.f (subroutine file): initializes itrack_sat, ntrack_sat and track_sat if they are not defined in the restart file.
- co2data.f (subroutine file): This routine contains the majority of the code required to calculate emissions. It sets the proportionality constant pk (line 50) and if necessary, it reads the temperature profile to track (lines 53 to 94). It calculates the appropriate time (96 to 97), finds the corresponding temperatures and linearly interpolates between points if necessary (lines 99 to 119). It then calculates global average model SAT (lines 121 to 124) and updates the SAT accumulator index and array (lines 126 to 128). Finally it calculates a running annual mean of global SAT (lines 130 to 135) and if the accumulator array is completely filled it calculates the emissions needed for the required change in SAT (lines 137 to 140).
UVic Forcing Data
This data has been converted into a form that can be used by the UVic ESCM. Other models may require different conversions. No spatial interpolation has been performed. All data is in netcdf with the time variable specified in years. The time variable is referenced to year 0, which technically does not exist and although some netcdf browsers that interpret calendars may be confused by this, it allows calendar years to be specified which may be less confusing for modellers. The calendar is for a constant 365 day year (no leap years).The data is compressed with the gnu gzip utility. Fortran extraction and conversion routines are available upon request. Any questions or concerns about this data should be addressed to the contact person given on the UVic model page. A single gzipped tar file containing all of the following data can be downloaded here: UVic_forcing_data.tgz (719 MB). The file can be uncompressed into a UVic_forcing_data subdirectory with the command "untar -xvzf UVic_forcing_data.tgz".- volcrf_850-1998.nc.gz: This netcdf file contains the recommended Crowley volcanic forcing data where aerosol optical depth (AOD) has been converted to radiative forcing (RF). This can be applied as a reduction of incoming shortwave. The data has ~10 day temporal resolution from the start of 850 to the start of 1998. This has been made into an anomaly with a positive forcing of approximately 0.207 W m-2 when there is no negative volcanic forcing. Forcing at the beginning of years 850 and 1998 are set to zero anomaly. When using this data spin up at year 850 with zero anomalous volcanic forcing. A simple linear conversion constant (AOD => RF) of -20 is used to convert AOD to RF for negative forcing less than 1.5 W m-2 and 2/3 of this conversion constant for the portion of the negative forcing greater than 1.5 W m-2. The smaller conversion constant effectively reduces the radiative forcing for large eruptions. Peak forcing for the Tambora eruption is reduced to about 6 W m-2 as in Crowley (Science 2000) but peak forcing for Krakatoa and Pinatubo is kept near the 3 W m-2 estimated in the AR4. Unfortunately the conversion between AOD and RF is poorly constrained and this represents at best, a best guess.
- irrad_850-4000.nc.gz: This netcdf file contains the recommended PMIP3 solar forcing of Delaygue and Bard (850 to 1609) and the CMIP5 forcing of Wang, Lean and Shelly (1610 to 2008). The data used includes variation from both the solar cycle and background solar irradiance. The data is annual mean centred in the middle of the year. The CMIP5 time series of Wang et al. is nearly identical to to the PMIP3 Wang et al. data. Since the Wang et al. data lines up well with Delaygue and Bard at 1610, it was spliced at this point. In order to transition smoothly between the recommended initial condition and data that includes a solar cycle, the data was linearly bended between the constant solar cycle average of 1365.763 W m-2 at year 850.5 and full variation at 861.5. After 2008, a repeating solar cycle 23 was added up to the year 4000.
- landuse_850-2005.nc.gz: This netcdf file contains the recommended PMIP3 land use change of Pongratz et al. (850 to 1699) and the CMIP5 historical RCP land use data (1500-2005). Only the area fraction of crop and pasture is included. The data is annual mean centred in the middle of the year. The data sets were linearly blended between 1500 and 1699.
- landuse_RCP2.6.nc.gz, landuse_RCP4.5.nc.gz, landuse_RCP6.0.nc.gz, and landuse_RCP8.5.nc.gz: These netcdf files contain the recommended CMIP5 RCP land use data (2006-2100). Only the area fraction of crop and pasture is included. The data is annual mean centred in the middle of the year.
- so4od_1855-2005.nc.gz: This netcdf file contains the CMIP5 historical RCP SO4 concentration data converted to optical depth (1855-2005). SO4 concentrations are vertically integrated to determine the atmospheric sulphate aerosol burden (g m-2). The burden is then multiplied by a constant specific extinction cross-section factor of 8 m2 g-1 to obtain the optical depth. The data is monthly, centred in the middle of the month. The first month is January 1855 and the last December 2105. Data can be converted into an annual mean by weighting each 12 consecutive monthly values by the days per month over a 365 day year.
- so4od_RCP2.6.nc.gz, so4od_RCP4.5.nc.gz, so4od_RCP6.0.nc.gz, and so4od_RCP8.5.nc.gz: These netcdf files contain the CMIP5 RCP SO4 concentration data converted to optical depth (2006-2100). The data is monthly centred in the middle of the month.
- aggrf_850-2005.nc.gz: This netcdf file contains the recommended PMIP3 non-CO2 greenhouse gas concentrations (850 to 1800) and the CMIP5 historical RCP non-CO2 greenhouse gas concentration (1765 to 2005) converted to an aggregated radiative forcing using formulae from the AR4. The data is annual mean centred in the middle of the year. The data sets were linearly blended between 1765 and 1800.
- aggrf_RCP2.6.nc.gz, aggrf_RCP4.5.nc.gz, aggrf_RCP6.0.nc.gz, and aggrf_RCP8.5.nc.gz: These netcdf files contain the CMIP5 RCP non-CO2 greenhouse gas concentration (2006 to 2300) converted to an aggregated radiative forcing. The data is annual mean centred in the middle of the year.
- co2ccn_850-2005.nc.gz: This netcdf file contains the recommended PMIP3 CO2 concentration (850 to 1800) and the CMIP5 historical CO2 concentration (1765 to 2005). The data is annual mean centred in the middle of the year. The data sets were linearly blended between 1765 and 1800.
- co2ccn_RCP2.6.nc.gz, co2ccn_RCP4.5.nc.gz, co2ccn_RCP6.0.nc.gz, and co2ccn_RCP8.5.nc.gz: These netcdf files contain the CMIP5 RCP CO2 concentrations (2006-2300). The data is annual mean centred in the middle of the year.