The Department of Energy (DOE) supported Parallel Climate Model (PCM) makes use of the NCAR Community Climate Model (CCM3)
and Land Surface Model (LSM) for the atmospheric and land surface components, respectively, the DOE Los Alamos National Laboratory
Parallel Ocean Program (POP) for the ocean component, and the Naval Postgraduate School sea-ice model. The PCM executes on
several distributed and shared memory computer systems. The coupling method is similar to that used in the NCAR Climate System
Model (CSM) in that a flux coupler ties the components together, with interpolations between the different grids of the component
models. Flux adjustments are not used in the PCM. The ocean component has 2/3° average horizontal grid spacing with 32 vertical
levels and a free surface that allows calculation of sea level changes. Near the equator, the grid spacing is approximately
1/2° in latitude to better capture the ocean equatorial dynamics. The North Pole is rotated over northern North America thus
producing resolution smaller than 2/3° in the North Atlantic where the sinking part of the world conveyor circulation largely
takes place. Because this ocean model component does not have a computational point at the North Pole, the Arctic Ocean circulation
systems are more realistic and similar to the observed. The elastic viscous plastic sea ice model has a grid spacing of 27 km
to represent small-scale features such as ice transport through the Canadian Archipelago and the East Greenland current region.
Results from a 300 year present-day coupled climate control simulation are presented, as well as for a transient 1% per year
compound CO
2 increase experiment which shows a global warming of 1.27 °C for a 10 year average at the doubling point of CO
2 and 2.89 °C at the quadrupling point. There is a gradual warming beyond the doubling and quadrupling points with CO
2 held constant. Globally averaged sea level rise at the time of CO
2 doubling is approximately 7 cm and at the time of quadrupling it is 23 cm. Some of the regional sea level changes are larger
and reflect the adjustments in the temperature, salinity, internal ocean dynamics, surface heat flux, and wind stress on the
ocean. A 0.5% per year CO
2 increase experiment also was performed showing a global warming of 1.5 °C around the time of CO
2 doubling and a similar warming pattern to the 1% CO
2 per year increase experiment. El Niño and La Niña events in the tropical Pacific show approximately the observed frequency
distribution and amplitude, which leads to near observed levels of variability on interannual time scales.
Received: 19 August 1999 / Accepted: 29 February 2000