CDIAC Data Activities and Projects: Climate Database Compilation and Analysis Dale Kaiser CDIAC User Working Group Meeting September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
2010 update of GCOS IP in support of UNFCCC Paul Mason and Stephan Bojinski GCOS Steering Committee September 2010.
Advertisements

Michael B. McElroy ACS August 23rd, 2010.
CHG Station Climatology Database (CSCD)
Literature Review Kathryn Westerman Oliver Smith Enrique Hernandez Megan Fowler.
A Look At The Research Perspective Assessed in IPCC Third Assessment Report (TAR) Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis (Working Group 1; Sir John.
Climate Change: Science and Modeling John Paul Gonzales Project GUTS Teacher PD 6 January 2011.
Presented by: Prof. G.V. Gruza, Institute of Global Climate and Ecology (IGCE, Roshydromet and RAS) Institute of Global Climate and Ecology (IGCE, Roshydromet.
Climate Change Science
PROJECT TO INTERCOMPARE REGIONAL CLIMATE SIMULATIONS Climate Change: How did we get here and what do we do now? Eugene S. Takle, PhD, CCM Professor of.
The influence of extra-tropical, atmospheric zonal wave three on the regional variation of Antarctic sea ice Marilyn Raphael UCLA Department of Geography.
Stratospheric Temperature Variations and Trends: Recent Radiosonde Results Dian Seidel, Melissa Free NOAA Air Resources Laboratory Silver Spring, MD SPARC.
The Role of Aerosols in Climate Change Eleanor J. Highwood Department of Meteorology, With thanks to all the IPCC scientists, Keith Shine (Reading) and.
INTRODUCTION Weather and climate remain among the most important variables involved in crop production in the U.S. Great Lakes region states of Michigan,
Development of global 0.5 ˚ hourly land surface air temperature data Xubin Zeng Department of Atmospheric Sciences University of Arizona
StateDivision Mean Winter Temperature CT 1 - Northwest26.9 +/ Central29.5 +/ Coastal31.9 +/ MA 1 - Western24.9.
Improvement of extreme climate predictions from dynamical climate downscaling Yang Gao 1, Joshua S. Fu 1, John B. Drake 1, Yang Liu 2, Jean-Francois Lamarque.
Climate Change Impacts & Resource Management Stephen T. Gray Water Resources Data System WY State Climate Office University of Wyoming.
Scientific benefits from undertaking data rescue activities: some examples of what can be achieved with long records Phil Jones Climatic Research Unit.
1 Observed Changes in Heavy Precipitation Events and Extratropical Cyclones David R. Easterling 1, Kenneth E. Kunkel 2, David Kristovitch 3, Scott Applequist.
1 Status of NERON/HCN-M for The Committee for Climate Analysis, Monitoring, and Services (CCAMS) John Hahn NWS Office of Science and Technology.
ISCCP at 30, April 2013 Concurrent Study of a) 22 – year reanalysis and extension of global water vapor over both land and ocean (NVAP–M) and b) the matching.
Citizens Climate Lobby Mid-Atlantic Regional Conference March, 15, Lancaster, PA OBSERVED AND MODELED GLOBAL AND REGIONAL (MID-ATLANTIC STATES) CLIMATE.
Lecture 8 The Holocene and Recent Climate Change.
CDC Cover. NOAA Lab roles in CCSP Strategic Plan for the U.S. Climate Change Science Program: Research Elements Element 3. Atmospheric Composition Aeronomy.
Climate Change and Global Warming Michael E. Mann Department of Environmental Sciences University of Virginia Symposium on Energy for the 21 st Century.
A Comparison of the Northern American Regional Reanalysis (NARR) to an Ensemble of Analyses Including CFSR Wesley Ebisuzaki 1, Fedor Mesinger 2, Li Zhang.
“Effects of Pacific Sea Surface Temperature (SST) Anomalies on the Climate of Southern South Carolina and Northern Coastal Georgia ” Whitney Albright Joseph.
Managing the Impacts of Change on Archiving Research Data A Presentation for “International Workshop on Strategies for Preservation of and Open Access.
Large-Scale Temperature Changes During the Past Millennium Michael E. Mann, Department of Environmental Sciences University of Virginia Smithsonian Environmental.
Modern Era Retrospective-analysis for Research and Applications: Introduction to NASA’s Modern Era Retrospective-analysis for Research and Applications:
Initiative overview 30 November 2011 Jay Lawrimore Chief, Ingest and Analysis Branch, NCDC.
An analysis of Russian Sea Ice Charts for A. Mahoney, R.G. Barry and F. Fetterer National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado Boulder,
- Vendredi 27 mars PRODIGUER un nœud de distribution des données CMIP5 GIEC/IPCC Sébastien Denvil Pôle de Modélisation, IPSL.
ISCCP at 30, April 2013 Backup Slides. ISCCP at 30, April 2013 NVAP-M Climate Monthly Average TPW Animation Less data before 1993.
Thomas R. Karl Director, National Climatic Data Center, NOAA Editor, Journal of Climate, Climatic Change & IPCC Climate Monitoring Panel Paul D. Try, Moderator.
Climate Change: Past, Present, and Future Dr. Cameron Wake Climate Change Research Center Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space (EOS) University.
Center for Satellite Applications and Research (STAR) Review 09 – 11 March 2010 Image: MODIS Land Group, NASA GSFC March 2000 The Influences of Changes.
September Advertisement: CM SAF Data freely available in netcdf-format User-friendly data access via the Web User Interface:
Instrumental Surface Temperature Record Current Weather Data Sources Land vs. Ocean Patterns Instrument Siting Concerns Return Exam II For Next Class:
Kim M. Cobb Sustainable Atlanta Roundtable September 8, 2006 The science of global warming.
Climate tendencies in the South Shetlands: was 1998 a climate divider ? Alberto Setzer, Francisco E. Aquino and Marcelo Romao O. CPTEC - INPE - Brazil.
NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center Climate Service Partnership Activities At NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center Tim Owen Climate Prediction Applications.
NIWA Water Resources Archive and Climate Database - An Overview David Wratt & Charles Pearson.
Global Climate Change: Past and Future Le Moyne College Syracuse, New York February 3, 2006 Department of Meteorology and Earth and Environmental Systems.
Cooperation Program in the field of meteorology between Roshydromet and NOAA Cooperation Program in the field of meteorology between Roshydromet and NOAA.
Global Climate Change: Past and Future 2006 Scott Margolin Lecture in Environmental Affairs Middlebury College Middlebury VT March 7, 2006 Michael E. Mann.
CE 401 Climate Change Science and Engineering evolution of climate change since the industrial revolution 9 February 2012
1Managed by UT-Battelle for the Department of Energy RIHMI-WDC and CDIAC Climate Data Activities Dale Kaiser Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center*
Homogenization of Chinese daily surface air temperatures:An update for CHHT1.0 Li Qingxiang, Xu Wenhui, Xiaolan Wang, and coauthors (National Meteorological.
Observed Recent Changes in the Tropopause Dian Seidel NOAA Air Resources Laboratory ~ Silver Spring, Maryland USA Bill Randel NCAR Atmospheric Chemistry.
Of what use is a statistician in climate modeling? Peter Guttorp University of Washington Norwegian Computing Center
PROJECT TO INTERCOMPARE REGIONAL CLIMATE SIMULATIONS Climate Change: Global Causes and Midwest Consequences Eugene S. Takle, PhD, CCM Professor of Atmospheric.
Regional Patterns of Climate Change Kenneth Hunu & Bali White EESC W4400 Dynamics of Climate Variability and Climate Change December 5, 2006.
BACC II progress Anders Omstedt. BALTEX-BACC-HELCOM assessment Department of Earth Sciences.
Goals of the work: (1)A review publication on the major developments in historical global and regional anthropogenic emissions during the past decades,
Climate Change and Global Warming Michael E. Mann Department of Environmental Sciences University of Virginia Waxter Environmental Forum Sweet Briar College.
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE TEACHERS’ CONFERENCE ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE TEACHERS’ CONFERENCE, Borki Molo, Poland, 7-10 February 2007 Extreme Climatic and atmospheric.
Global Warming The heat is on!. What do you know about global warming? Did you know: Did you know: –the earth on average has warmed up? –some places have.
Climate Change and Impact on Corn and Grain Quality Eugene S. Takle Professor of Agricultural Meteorology, Department of Agronomy Professor of Atmospheric.
88 th Annual American Meteorological Society Meeting New Orleans, LA January 20-25, The Integrated Surface Database: Partnerships and Progress Neal.
Global Climate Change: Past and Future
Drought Research and Outreach at CIG
Instrumental Surface Temperature Record
Observing Climate Variability and Change
IPCC Working Group I Chapter 1 FINAL FIGURES
Instrumental Surface Temperature Record
Current global and regional changes in atmospheric water vapour
Instrumental Surface Temperature Record
PROVIDING THE UPPER-AIR DATA RELEVANT TO STUDIES OF THE NORTHERN POLAR CLIMATE CHANGES Alexander M. Sterin (Russian Research Institute for Hydrometeorological.
Presentation transcript:

CDIAC Data Activities and Projects: Climate Database Compilation and Analysis Dale Kaiser CDIAC User Working Group Meeting September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tenn.

2Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee Presentation Outline Nature of CDIAC climate work Key CDIAC climate databases Examples of CDIAC value-added climate database work CDIAC climate change research Collaboration with other institutions Requests for climate information in the wake of the climate s controversy Future plans

3Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee Nature of CDIAC climate work CDIAC climate work is a combination of: Dataset assessment, acquisition, documentation, quality assurance, publication, distribution, and archival Creating value-added products from these datasets Regional-scale climate change analysis using instrumental data from the past 50 to 100 years

4Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee Nature of CDIAC climate work Smaller-scale projects focusing largely on high- visibility/impact regional and global datasets of interest to many types of users Emphasis on high quality data and documentation that is user-friendly Many data holdings have roots in long-standing DOE and NOAA projects, some with international ties (examples to be shown) Evolving to support climate modeling, carbon cycle, and ecosystem modeling communities where possible

5Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee Key CDIAC climate databases U.S. Historical Climatology Network (supporting NOAA’s NCDC) Global cloudiness database of Hahn and Warren Historical Russia and China monthly and daily data Global and hemispheric near-surface and upper air temperature time series (Jones-CRU; Hansen- NASA/GISS; Angell-NOAA) Isotopic temperature reconstructions from Antarctic ice cores

6Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee Examples of CDIAC value-added climate database work

7Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee A Day-of-Year Temperature Records Atlas for USHCN Stations (in progress) Temporal distribution of record high temperatures at Hendersonville, NC DJFMAM JJASON Examples of CDIAC value-added climate database work “Record High Temperatures Far Outpace Record Lows Across U.S.”

8Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee CDIAC climate change research “False Spring” study conducted in wake of Spring 2007 “Easter Freeze” in much of eastern U.S. (Marino et al.) Analysis of cloud amount trends over China [several Kaiser (ORNL) and Qian (PNNL) papers in recent years with another coming soon] Assessment of re-analysis daily extreme temperatures with China’s homogenized historical dataset during 1979 to 2001 using Probability Density Functions, by Jiafu Mao, Xiaoying Shi, Lijuan Ma, Dale P. Kaiser, Qingxiang Li, and Peter E. Thornton. Accepted by J. Climate, June 2009.

9Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee CDIAC climate change research “False Spring” study

10Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee CDIAC climate change research China cloud amount trends About 5 papers published – many with Y. Qian of PNNL - since data first obtained from China Met. Admin. Cited often, including in last two IPCC reports. Evidence of strong decreases in cloud amount at same time that direct solar radiation has also been decreasing. (Explained by huge anthropogenic aerosol loading; many papers, including ours.) Current study looks more closely at whether decreasing cloud amount trend is “real” – see following slides from recent Amer. Met. Soc. presentation This work submitted to Geophys. Res. Lett.

Decreasing Trends in Surface-observed Total Cloud Amount over China: Another Effect of Anthropogenic Aerosol Loading? Dale Kaiser Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center Environmental Sciences Division Oak Ridge National Laboratory Yun Qian Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 22 nd Conference on Climate Variability and Change 90 th Annual Meeting of the American Meteorological Society Atlanta, Georgia 17–21 January 2010 NASA SeaWIFS image 11/20/1999

12Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee Decreasing Trends in Surface-observed Total Cloud Amount over China: Another Effect of Anthropogenic Aerosol Loading? Trends in annual mean foo (0 to 10 tenths) over all hours, (percent occurrence per decade) ANN

13Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee CDIAC climate change research China cloud amount trends

14Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee Collaboration with other institutions NOAA/NCDC (Menne et al., USHCN) NOAA/Air Resources Lab. (J. Angell) PNNL (Qian, China cloud analysis) All-Russian Research Institute for Hydrometeorological Information (RIHMI) Russian climate databases quality assured, documented, and distributed by CDIAC; probably will continue Meeting in Obninsk in 2008, with U.S. False Spring presentation given at Roshydromet Headquarters in Moscow China Meteorological Administration Did not attend last two meetings in China; reassessing our involvement due to slowdown/difficulties in acquiring updated China data that CDIAC can freely distribute Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, UK (Phil Jones) NASA/GISS (Jim Hansen)

15Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee Requests for climate information in the wake of the climate s controversy Many questions regarding: Greenhouse effect of water vapor vs. carbon dioxide Magnitude of recent temperature trends compared to those derived from ice cores - “Climate has always been changing, so what’s the big deal lately?” How can we trust the “hockey stick”? Discussions with Phil Jones of CRU regarding what underlying station climate data CDIAC might have from analyses we published and distributed for Phil in 1980s and early 1990s. Tom Karl called us to see if we had any additional information regarding details on Chinese urban/rural stations and changing thermometer heights over time. The famous Karl et al. (1993) BAMS paper on decreasing diurnal temperature range apparently made a few claims that climate change skeptics wanted more info. on

16Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CDIAC User Working Group Meeting, September 27-28, 2010, Oak Ridge, Tennessee Future Plans Databases Global cloudiness database data formats are difficult to work with; convert at least gridded cloud fraction to netCDF to assist modelers Update cloudiness database as additional data provided by Hahn and Warren. Potentially host their online atlas at CDIAC (now at U. Wash.) Resume conversion of USHCN daily data to netCDF Contribute cloudiness and USHCN netCDF data to ESG? Attend U.S.-Russia meeting at NCDC in May 2011 and also acquire updates to Russian monthly and daily databases Annual updates to key databases, e.g., USHCN monthly/daily data and global temperature trend time series Research Leverage the U.S. day-of-year temperature records atlas for an analysis to be submitted to a journal Expand the China cloud amount analysis by bringing in the best satellite to further sort out trends questions Ad hoc climate data assistance to other ORNL research staff