Extratropical shortwave cloud feedbacks in the context of the global
circulation and hydrological cycle
Abstract
Shortwave (SW) cloud feedback (SWFB) is the primary driver of
uncertainty in the effective climate sensitivity (ECS) predicted by
global climate models (GCMs). ECS for several GCMs in the Sixth Coupled
Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6) exceed 5K, above the fifth
assessment report (AR5) ‘likely’ maximum (4.5K) due to extratropical
SWFB’s that are more positive than those simulated in previous
generation CMIP5 GCMs. Here we show that across 57 GCMs Southern Ocean
SW_FB; can be predicted from the sensitivity of column-integrated
liquid water mass (LWP) to moisture convergence and to surface
temperature. The response of LWP to moisture convergence and the
response of albedo to LWP anti-correlate across GCMs. This is because
GCMs that simulate a larger response of LWP to moisture convergence tend
to have higher mean-state LWPs, which reduces the impact of additional
LWP on albedo. Observational constraints suggest a modestly negative
Southern Ocean SWFB— inconsistent with extreme ECS.