Stratospheric climate has changed significantly during the last decade
s. The causes of these changes are discussed on the basis of two diffe
rent general circulation model experiments forced by observed greenhou
se gas and ozone concentration. There is a clear and significant respo
nse of the lower stratosphere temperature and geopotential in the me d
el simulations forced by observed ozone changes that is in accord with
observed trends in summer in middle and high latitudes of the norther
n hemisphere. Little effect is seen in the tropics. In spring there oc
cur the strongest anomalies/trends in both hemispheres at polar latitu
des; however, the model response is late by 1 to 2 months and is much
weaker than the observed effects. The ozone-forced model in winter of
both hemispheres produces slight warming or no change instead of the s
light cooling observed. The effects of enhanced greenhouse gases as ta
ken from a transient IPCC scenario AGCM run do enhance the cooling in
high latitudes in spring, but the effect is much smaller than observed
. Hence neither of the two forcings (reduced ozone and increased, gree
nhouse gases) in the cold seasons is able to produce the recent strato
spheric and tropospheric trend patterns alone. These trends clearly re
semble a natural mode of variability both in the model and in the real
world. This mode associates a strengthened polar night vortex with an
enhanced North Atlantic oscillation. The excitation of this mode cann
ot yet be attributed to anthropogenic forcing.