Representing dynamic urban land change in the Community Earth System
Model (CESM)
Abstract
Urbanization (urban land change) alters local and regional climate
through biophysical and biogeochemical processes and has broader climate
impacts through atmospheric feedbacks. Despite its critical climate
impacts, urban areas have rarely been explicitly represented in
global-scale Earth system models, and physically-based transient urban
representations are missing as well. The Community Earth System Model
(CESM) has a physically based urban land parameterization – Community
Land Model Urban (CLMU) – that is sufficiently detailed to represent
the properties and processes in the urban environment. We improve this
model by implementing a dynamic urban scheme to represent transient land
use due to urbanization. Leveraging existing urbanization projection
datasets, the new scheme allows urban extent to be updated annually
during a climate simulation while conserving energy and mass balance
during the transition. Land-only simulation results confirm the
robustness of the new dynamic urban scheme and demonstrate the direct
local climate effects induced by urban land expansion. In the appendix
of this paper, we also document two recent improvements to the building
energy scheme of CLMU.