TipESM brings together scientists from different disciplines to advance our understanding of climate tipping points (TPs), their impacts on ecosystems and society, and to develop a set of early warning indicators and safe emission pathways that reduce the risk of crossing them. TipESM assembles the latest Earth System Models (ESMs), including recent improvements to ice sheets, vegetation and land use, permafrost, and marine and terrestrial biogeochemistry. In cooperation with Tipping Points Modelling Intercomparison Project (TIPMIP), TipESM develops and executes an ESM experiment protocol to analyze the likelihood of occurrence and potential reversibility of tipping elements at different levels and duration of global warming. Additional targeted experiments investigate interactions and feedbacks across the Earth system. TipESM combines expertise in climate science and impacts to study how climate change drives ecosystem tipping and how crossing TPs affects society (e.g. poverty, displacement), ecosystems (e.g. marine ecosystems), and biodiversity (e.g. great ape populations). This information will be synthesised into a TP risk register, aligned with the broader efforts for such a tool in the climate science community.
New knowledge and data from TipESM are regularly shared with research communities, policymakers and the public, contributing to a prepared and resilient society.
There are large uncertainties in the current understanding of TPs and their simulation in ESMs is needed for further investigation. TipESM develops a shared protocol for sets of ESM experiments to investigate the occurrence of tipping elements at different levels of global warming. This work builds on the EU-Horizon project OptimESM and is closely linked to the World Climate Research Programme - specifically with its Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP) and TIPMIP. The enhanced ensemble ESM simulations provide climate and impact modelling researchers with tools to investigate how TPs affect climate, ecosystems and society. Based on these simulations, TipESM investigates TPs and their driving processes, early warning signals and cascading effects within the climate system. TipESM also assesses how incremental climate change influences TPs and what crossing them would mean for societies and ecosystems, supporting improved adaptation strategies. Finally, TipESM aims at advancing the Adaptive Emission Reduction Approach (AERA) in ESMs, enabling the delivery of safe mitigation pathways.