Creating Standards for Climate Experiments
Eco-ICE studies whether making Arctic sea ice thicker could harm ocean life and creates tools to help decision-makers work out if climate projects are safe.
Max is a climate model developer adding sea-ice tracers to the UK Earth System Model (UKESM) as part of the Aria funded ECO-Ice project.
Max uses and develops a range of modelling techniques to study polar climate. The main focus of his research involves modifying, running, and analysing climate models to project large scale changes in climate. He also uses process models to investigate sea ice on smaller scales.
Max joined the Ice Dynamics and Paleoclimate team at BAS in 2025. Previously, he was a Senior Scientist in the Polar Climate group at the Met Office (climate model development); a Research Fellow at the University of Otago (projecting future Antarctic climate); and a Senior Research Associate at the University of East Anglia (combining novel laboratory sea-ice studies and process modelling). He also contributes to the CMIP6/7 Southern Ocean Freshwater Input from Antarctica (SOFIA) Initiative model intercomparison.
For a full list of Max’s publications see https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2327-3664
Eco-ICE studies whether making Arctic sea ice thicker could harm ocean life and creates tools to help decision-makers work out if climate projects are safe.
The project adds water tracers, including stable isotopes, to the UK Earth system model (UKESM2). These tracers follow water through the model’s hydrological cycle.