July 27, 2021
Journal Article

The Climate Response to Emissions Reductions due to COVID-19: Initial Results from CovidMIP

Abstract

Many nations responded to the COVID-19 pandemic by restricting travel and other activities during 2020, resulting in temporarily reduced emissions of CO2, other greenhouse gases and ozone and aerosol precursors. We perform a coordinated Intercomparison, CovidMIP, of Earth System model simulations to assess the impact on climate of these emissions reductions. Eleven models performed multiple initial-condition ensembles to produce over 280 simulations spanning both initial condition and model structural uncertainty. We find model consensus on reduced aerosol amounts (particularly over East Asia) and associated increases in surface shortwave radiation levels. However, any impact on near-surface temperature or rainfall during 2020-2024 is extremely small and is not detectable in this initial analysis. Regional analyses on a finer scale, and closer attention to extremes (especially linked to changes in atmospheric composition and air quality) are required to test the impact of COVID-19-related emission reductions on near-term climate.

Published: July 27, 2021

Citation

Jones C.D., J. Hickman, S. Rumbold, J. Walton, R. Lamboll, R.B. Skeie, and S. Fiedler, et al. 2021. The Climate Response to Emissions Reductions due to COVID-19: Initial Results from CovidMIP. Geophysical Research Letters 48, no. 8:e2020GL091883. PNNL-SA-158380. doi:10.1029/2020GL091883