PRIMAVERA produced a new CMIP6 simulation design, HighResMIP, shared our data and code for joint analysis on a common platform (JASMIN), and published the data to the CMIP ESGF archive for community use (about 12,000 years of simulation, 1.7 PB, comparable to the whole of the CMIP5 archive). New functions (14) were developed and integrated into the ESMValTool community analysis package. We developed new model components suited to higher resolution that will become standard in next generation of climate models: aerosol-microphysics, ocean mixing, sea ice melt ponds, land surface physics, stochastic physics schemes. We developed a new generation of models, using the eddy-rich ocean, and sub-10km atmosphere (and further in DYAMOND, at 5km resolution), and an unstructured mesh ocean-sea ice model FESOM.
We have so far published 91+ peer-reviewed articles, with 54+ submitted or in preparation. We found robust changes across the multi-model ensemble for a range of important climate processes, and several chains of mechanisms were better represented at higher resolution (for example an improved Gulf Stream influencing the jet stream, storm track and blocking). For our range of resolutions, the ocean provided the bigger impact, and we showed that some changes with model resolution could lead to impacts which have implications for future change over Europe. This suggests that non-eddy resolving simulations like those uniformly used in CMIP6 are missing key processes, which may have a significant impact on climate projections and derived risk assessments.
In addition to the peer-reviewed articles produced for fellow scientists, we have contributed to and been widely cited in the draft IPCC AR6 report where the CMIP6 HighResMIP is one of the exciting new sources of information which is also being used in national climate change assessments. We have used our website, User Interface Platform and associated Data Viewer, factsheets, webinars and storymaps to engage with our end-users and others. We have actively engaged with other European projects, sharing data, analyses and insights, with several new projects predicated on use of our data, code or the models we have developed. We have made strong links with many international communities (e.g. CLIVAR), and we have ongoing collaborative analyses with many other groups (20-30 scientists given access to JASMIN) spanning aspects such as climate extremes, storm and surge modelling.
We organised sessions, town halls and side events at major conferences. Many masters, PhD and post-doc studies have been started during PRIMAVERA, and these will continue after the project. There will be a legacy in the number of young researchers who have been engaged with the project and whose research paths will be influenced by it. For example, a climate modelling summer school was run in 2019.