23Previous studies have linked the slowdown in global surface temperature warming 24 since 2000 to a negative Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO) phase. Here, we investigate the 25 changes in ocean heat content (OHC) during this period. We compare two ensembles of 26 coupled model experiments with either zero or observed prescribed tropical Pacific wind 27 stress interannual anomalies. This successfully constrains the global surface temperature, sea 28 level pressure and OHC patterns associated with the IPO phase transition around 1998. The 29 negative IPO phase (1998 to 2012) is associated with a global ocean heat redistribution. The 30 anomalously cold tropical Pacific Ocean leads to an increased oceanic uptake in this region, 31 and a global OHC increase of 4x10 22 J. The cold equatorial Pacific also forces mid-latitude 32 wind changes through atmospheric teleconnections, leading to an enhanced wind-driven heat 33 transport convergence at 40°N and 40°S. Enhanced Pacific easterlies also yield an enhanced 34 heat transport to the Indian Ocean via the Indonesian throughflow. As a result, the anomalous 35Pacific heat uptake is entirely exported towards the North Pacific (~50%), Indian (~30%) and 36 Southern (~20%) Oceans. A significant fraction of this heat is released back to the 37 atmosphere in the North Pacific and Indian basins, and transported across 31°S in the Indian 38Ocean. Overall, OHC increases most in the Southern Ocean (~60% of global changes) and 39 northern Pacific (~40%), with negligible changes in the Indian and Atlantic basins. These 40 results point to the major importance of oceanic circulation in re-distributing the Pacific heat 41 uptake globally during negative IPO phases. 42 43 Keywords: Decadal climate variability, Pacific Ocean, global warming, ocean heat content, 44 air-sea interactions 45 low-frequency tail of ENSO variations is associated with decadal-scale SST anomalies in the 71 tropical Pacific, and the associated global SST pattern is called the Interdecadal Pacific 72Oscillation (IPO; Zhang et al., 1997; Power et al., 1999). 73The IPO shifted from a warm to a cold phase around 1998, yielding a cooling trend of 74 central and eastern Pacific SST, associated with an unprecedented intensification of the 75 Pacific Walker circulation (Kociuba and Power, 2015;Choi et al., 2016) and strengthening of 76 setup results in more realistic global SST patterns due to the remote impacts of Pacific SST 96 anomalies through teleconnections, and a reduced rate of global surface temperature warming 97 over the last two decades (e.g. Kosaka and Xie, 2013). 98 A burning question is thus: where did the extra heat pumped into the Pacific during the 99 hiatus decade go? This question is not easy to tackle from observations alone. Deep ocean 100 observations are indeed too sparse to track the OHC changes, even with improved recent 101 estimates (Cheng et al., 2017). The deployment of Argo floats in the early 2000s greatly 102 improved the sampling (Lyman, 2012; Abraham et al., 2013), but the current ...