Articles | Volume 18, issue 4
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-18-905-2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-18-905-2025
Development and technical paper
 | 
18 Feb 2025
Development and technical paper |  | 18 Feb 2025

The real challenges for climate and weather modelling on its way to sustained exascale performance: a case study using ICON (v2.6.6)

Panagiotis Adamidis, Erik Pfister, Hendryk Bockelmann, Dominik Zobel, Jens-Olaf Beismann, and Marek Jacob

Data sets

ICON NWP Experiment (R02B06N07 and R02B07N08 grids) Marek Jacob https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10838768

Model code and software

ICON release 2024.01 ICON partnership https://doi.org/10.35089/WDCC/IconRelease01

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Short summary
In this paper, we investigated performance indicators of the climate model ICON (ICOsahedral Nonhydrostatic) on different compute architectures to answer the question of how to generate high-resolution climate simulations. Evidently, it is not enough to use more computing units of the conventionally used architectures; higher memory throughput is the most promising approach. More potential can be gained from single-node optimization rather than simply increasing the number of compute nodes.
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