Articles | Volume 19, issue 4
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-19-1429-2026
© Author(s) 2026. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
FRIDA-Clim v1.0.1: a simple climate model with process-based carbon cycle used in the integrated assessment model FRIDAv2.1
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- Final revised paper (published on 17 Feb 2026)
- Supplement to the final revised paper
- Preprint (discussion started on 04 Nov 2025)
- Supplement to the preprint
Interactive discussion
Status: closed
Comment types: AC – author | RC – referee | CC – community | EC – editor | CEC – chief editor
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RC1: 'Comment on egusphere-2025-4766', Anonymous Referee #1, 09 Dec 2025
- AC1: 'Reply on RC1', Chris Wells, 19 Jan 2026
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RC2: 'Comment on egusphere-2025-4766', Anonymous Referee #2, 12 Dec 2025
- AC1: 'Reply on RC1', Chris Wells, 19 Jan 2026
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AR – Author's response | RR – Referee report | ED – Editor decision | EF – Editorial file upload
AR by Chris Wells on behalf of the Authors (19 Jan 2026)
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ED: Referee Nomination & Report Request started (20 Jan 2026) by Volker Grewe
RR by Anonymous Referee #1 (02 Feb 2026)
ED: Publish subject to minor revisions (review by editor) (04 Feb 2026) by Volker Grewe
AR by Chris Wells on behalf of the Authors (04 Feb 2026)
Author's response
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ED: Publish as is (11 Feb 2026) by Volker Grewe
AR by Chris Wells on behalf of the Authors (11 Feb 2026)
Manuscript
1. General comments
The authors present relevant extensions to the FRIDA framework. The climate impact of Green House Gases such as CO2, CH4, N2O, aerosols, stratospheric water vapor can be simulated, and together with the FRIDA IAM, the dynamics of the coupled human-Earth system can be modeled. Idealized CO2 emission experiments are performed and detailed calibration routines and explained in this work. The paper is very comprehensive and detailed which probably is due to the complexity of the involved models and quantity of implemented functionalities.
The authors try to describe the uniqueness of FRIDA-Clim, however, these arguments should be further elaborated: In which key aspects differs FRIDA-Clim from other/previous models? What are the unique selling points? Furthermore, the philosophy of the model should be better motivated: Why do the authors choose a "minimal required climate" approach?
The authors try to explain the interplay and interfaces of the different modules. A major issue is that the used terminology is not always well defined nor used within the text. Important key words such as external, internal, endogenous, coupled, uncoupled, integrated should be well defined and not mixed within the text. This would better describe the boundaries and interfaces of the different modules and the reader would better understand which component is meant.
2. Specific comments
### Title
- Use of abbreviation "IAM" in the title not recommended, better write the full wording "Integrated Assessment Model".
- In the beginning, it is not clear to the reader, that these are two software modules: FRIDA-Clim and FRIDA IAM. This is later explained in the abstract, but the title should be more self-explanatory, otherwise it is confusing to the reader having two version numbers.
- Maybe a different terminology would help, such as FRIDA framework or FRIDA "core" for the overall framework, and FRIDA-Clim as extension/module to that framework?
### Abstract
- What is the other part of the *two-way feedback*?
- Add definition of *coupled* and *uncoupled* . Otherwise, it is unclear to the reader which software module couples to what other module.
### Introduction
- Both FRIDA-Clim and the integrated Climate Module are documented here
- What it meant by the *integrated* Climate Module? Is it related to *coupled* mode as stated in the abstract?
### Model description
- In the text, the terms *external*, *internal*, *endogenous* should be better explained. How do these modes relate to coupled/uncoupled/integrated ?
- Philosophy should be better motivated
minimum level of detail in the climate system required in order to adequately reproduce historical and future expected global climate dynamics should be represented.
- Why should climate functionality minimized? e.g. Model performance reasons?
- Table 1 give a very good overview of anthropogenic climate drivers
- Section 2.2 Effective Radiative Forcing: Motivate why ERF concept is used instead of RF concept.
- Section 2.2.4 Aerosols: FRIDA or FRIDA IAM?
- Section 2.2.5 Ozone: Is FRIDA and FRIDA-Clim focusing on effects within troposphere/stratosphere or both? Which of the anthropocentric emissions have the largest contribution to ozone increase or decrease?
- Section 2.2.9 No reference given for stated approach of linear relation between CH4 and stratospheric water forcing
- Section 2.2.11 Volcanic: Which are the concrete emissions linked to volcanic activity driving the resulting forcing?
- Section 2.4: between FRIDA-Clim and the Climate Module
- Are these different modules? To my understanding, FRIDA-Clim is the climate module. Do you mean the "core" climate module of FRIDA IAM?
- Section 2.4.1 Units GtC Mha-1 yr-1
- Hectar is a non-SI unit. Unless this a very common unit in this research field or context, I would suggest to convert into SI-units, e.g. km² or m²
- Section 2.4.2 Soil Carbon, equation (9) mix of units °C and K in same equation should be avoided!
### Calibration and Initialization
Section 3.1 FRIDA-Clim calibration
- Missing motivation for relevance of ensemble sizes, members. see also given numbers in Figure 4. What does it mean to have an ensemble size of 30,000? Is this a large or small number? How does this number compare to?
### Experiments using FRIDA-Clim
- Section 4.1 Idealized CO2 Experiments
- Figure 5. panels i,j,k,l missing description/units of y-axis
- Better explain and motivate used metrics ZEC, TNZ, T0 etc. Consider putting definitions of and motivations for used metrics into a table for a better overview.
- Last paragraph concludes: *FRIDA-Clim thus simulates approximate linearity in the land carbon response under idealised removal, with hysteresis in the ocean sink and consequent over-compensation in the atmospheric response.... Generally, these results are consistent with the findings across flat10MIP (Sanderson et al., 2025)*
- Explain better in the individual graphs, how authors came to these conclusions.
3. Technical corrections
- Consider introducing abbreviations of other models as well: FaIR, DICE, LPJmL, LOSCAR, iLOSCAR, CICERO, ...
- Introduce abbreviation AFOLU
- Section 2.2.7 Introduce abbreviation GHG
- Section 2.3: Introduce abbreviation GMST
- Figure 1 gives a very good overview of the dependencies of the different software modules. However, the chosen colors of the lines are not ideal for people with red-green deficit. Consider use of different line styles, e.g. continuous and dashed. Abbreviation *EBM* in the figure caption is not introduced.
- Figure 2: revise colors of lines, especially orange/red-green lines
- Figure 3: revise orange/red - green colors. Colors might be hard to distinguish for some people. The arrows under the "fast soil" and "slow soil" boxes are confusing. Is there a way to summarize/aggregate/abstract the exchanges between the different components for a clearer visual representation?
- What is meant by (t-PW; k) Is this a reference to one of the figure panels? Then, it is better to explicitly write "see Fig. 5, panel (k) ...", same comment applies to similar used abbreviations in this section.