Myles Allen first thought about the need for large
climate ensembles in 1997, but was only introduced to the success of
SETI@home in 1999. The first funding proposal in April 1999 was rejected as utterly unrealistic. Following a presentation at the
World Climate Conference in
Hamburg in September 1999 and a commentary in
Nature in October 1999, thousands signed up to this supposedly imminently available program. The
dot-com bubble bursting did not help and the project realised they would have to do most of the programming themselves rather than outsourcing. It was launched September 12, 2003, and on September 13, 2003, the project exceeded the capacity of the
Earth Simulator to become the world's largest climate modelling facility. The 2003 launch only offered a
Windows "classic" client. On 26 August 2004 a
BOINC client was launched which supported Windows,
Linux and
Mac OS X clients. "Classic" will continue to be available for a number of years in support of the
Open University course. BOINC has stopped distributing classic models in favour of sulfur cycle models. A more user friendly BOINC client and website called GridRepublic, which supports climate
prediction.net and other BOINC projects, was released in beta in 2006. A
thermohaline circulation slowdown experiment was launched in May 2004 under the classic framework to coincide with the film
The Day After Tomorrow. This program can still be run but is no longer downloadable. The scientific analysis has been written up in
Nick Faull's thesis. A paper about the thesis is still to be completed. There is no further planned research with this model. A
sulfur cycle model was launched in August 2005. They took longer to complete than the original models as a result of having five phases instead of three. Each timestep was also more complicated. By November 2005, the number of completed results totalled 45,914 classic models, 3,455 thermohaline models, 85,685 BOINC models and 352 sulfur cycle models. This represented over 6 million model years processed. In February 2006, the project moved on to more realistic climate models. The BBC Climate Change Experiment was launched, attracting around 23,000 participants on the first day. The
transient climate simulation introduced realistic oceans. This allowed the experiment to investigate changes in the climate response as the
climate forcings are changed, rather than an equilibrium response to a significant change like doubling the
carbon dioxide level. Therefore, the experiment has now moved on to doing a hindcast of 1920 to 2000 as well as a forecast of 2000 to 2080. This model takes much longer. The
BBC gave the project publicity with over 120,000 participating computers in the first three weeks. In March 2006, a high resolution model was released as another project, the
Seasonal Attribution Project. In April 2006, the coupled models were found to have a data input problem. The work was useful for a different purpose than advertised. New models had to be handed out. ==Results to date==