Mediterranean drying by a positive North Atlantic Oscillation trend over the last 65 years is an extreme outlier in the CMIP6 multimodel ensemble

Seager, Richard, Liu, Haibo, Osborn, Tim J., Kushnir, Yochanan, Nakamura, Jennifer and Wu, Yutian (2025) Mediterranean drying by a positive North Atlantic Oscillation trend over the last 65 years is an extreme outlier in the CMIP6 multimodel ensemble. Journal of Climate. ISSN 0894-8755

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Abstract

The Mediterranean region has experienced declining precipitation during the cool season since the 1950s which is broadly consistent with climate model future projections. The observed drying is focused on mid-winter and the central to western Mediterranean. Observed winter drying in the western Mediterranean is at the very edge of the CMIP6 ensemble range of historical simulations for the same time period and, in the central to eastern Mediterranean, is in the lowest percentiles of model ensemble distributions. Moisture budget analysis shows the drying to be dynamic, driven by changes in circulation, rather than thermodynamically related to changes in humidity. An observed positive trend in the North Atlantic Oscillation drives the drying by placing subsiding air over the Mediterranean augmented by dry northerly advection. The more modest radiatively-forced drying in the CMIP6 multimodel ensemble is also dynamic but related to a high pressure anomaly over the eastern North Atlantic with a different pattern to the North Atlantic Oscillation. A small number of individual runs of some CMIP6 models do show trends in Mediterranean drying, the North Atlantic Oscillation and moisture budget similar to that observed. However, the observed Mediterranean drying and North Atlantic Oscillation trends are at the very limit of what climate model simulations can do from the combination of variability and forced response over this time period. The observed drying is either (i) an extremely rare manifestation of natural multidecadal variability akin to that in models, (ii) a result of variability not captured in models or (iii) includes a forced response that models are missing.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: Data availability statement. The CRU data are available at https://crudata.uea.ac.uk/ cru/data/hrg/index.htm#current, the EObs v29.0e data are available at https://surfobs.climate.copernicus.eu/dataaccess/access_eobs.php#datafiles and the ERA5 data at https://www.ecmwf.int/en/forecasts/dataset/ecmwf-reanalysis-v5. The CMIP6 model data were obtained from /urlhttps://esgfnode.llnl.gov/projects/cmip6. The North Atlantic Oscillation Index was obtained from https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/precip/CWlink/pna/nao.shtml.
Faculty \ School: Faculty of Science > School of Environmental Sciences
University of East Anglia Research Groups/Centres > Theme - ClimateUEA
UEA Research Groups: Faculty of Science > Research Groups > Climatic Research Unit
Faculty of Science > Research Groups > Centre for Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences
Faculty of Social Sciences > Research Centres > Water Security Research Centre
Depositing User: LivePure Connector
Date Deposited: 05 Dec 2025 12:30
Last Modified: 05 Dec 2025 12:30
URI: https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/101271
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-25-0359.1

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