4.7 Article

A New Structure for the Sea Ice Essential Climate Variables of the Global Climate Observing System

期刊

BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY
卷 103, 期 6, 页码 E1502-E1521

出版社

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/BAMS-D-21-0227.1

关键词

Sea ice; Climate change; Climatology; Climate records

资金

  1. GCOS/GOOS/WCRP
  2. Australian Government's Antarctic Science Collaboration Initiative program
  3. Australian Antarctic Program Partnership [ASCI000002]
  4. Australian Antarctic Science Projects [4496, 4506]
  5. International Space Science Institute (Bern, Switzerland) [405]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Climate observations provide valuable information about the past and present state of the climate system, supporting climate science, informing adaptation and mitigation policies, and increasing awareness of the impacts of climate change. The Global Climate Observing System assesses the maturity of the required observing system and provides guidance for its development. Essential Climate Variables are central to this system and must be monitored to the highest standards.
Climate observations inform about the past and present state of the climate system. They underpin climate science, feed into policies for adaptation and mitigation, and increase awareness of the impacts of climate change. The Global Climate Observing System (GCOS), a body of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), assesses the maturity of the required observing system and gives guidance for its development. The Essential Climate Variables (ECVs) are central to GCOS, and the global community must monitor them with the highest standards in the form of Climate Data Records (CDR). Today, a single ECV-the sea ice ECV-encapsulates all aspects of the sea ice environment. In the early 1990s it was a single variable (sea ice concentration) but is today an umbrella for four variables (adding thickness, edge/extent, and drift). In this contribution, we argue that GCOS should from now on consider a set of seven ECVs (sea ice concentration, thickness, snow depth, surface temperature, surface albedo, age, and drift). These seven ECVs are critical and cost effective to monitor with existing satellite Earth observation capability. We advise against placing these new variables under the umbrella of the single sea ice ECV. To start a set of distinct ECVs is indeed critical to avoid adding to the suboptimal situation we experience today and to reconcile the sea ice variables with the practice in other ECV domains.

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