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Published byBerenice Renouf Modified over 9 years ago
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Comparison of Recent European Climate Trends and Extremes with RegCM3 Future Projections
Jeremy Pal Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics Trieste, Italy Contributors: Xunqiang Bi, Elfatih Eltahir, Raquel Francisco, Xuejie Gao, Filippo Giorgi
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Premises/Objectives of the study
Climate variability and extremes are of fundamental importance for an assessment of the impacts of climate change. Because of their relatively high spatial and temporal resolution Regional Climate Models (RCMs) can be especially useful in the study of climate variability and extremes. Carry out climate change simulations over the European region for different emission scenarios using an RCM driven by boundary conditions from time-slice GCM simulations
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PART I: Regional Climate Modeling PART II: Reference Simulation
Brief Overview PART II: Reference Simulation Mean Climate PART III: A2 & B2 Scenario Simulations Mean Interannual Variability Extreme Events
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PART I: Regional Climate Modeling
Brief Overview
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Global Climate Model (GCM)
RCM Nesting GCM forces RCM at the lateral boundaries and the sea surface. Global Climate Model (GCM)
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Added Value of using a Regional Climate Model for Climate Change Studies.
Increased resolution compared to the driving GCM. Fine scale forcing (e.g. topography, landuse, coastlines, lakes, aerosol sources). Mesoscale circulations (e.g. North American Monsoon System). Improved representation of physical processes. Clouds and precipitation, biosphere, boundary layer, radiation, etc. Increased confidence for impacts studies. Can include additional processes not present in the driving GCM. Landuse changes, aerosol effects, lake desiccation, etc.
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Summary of RegCM3 Core Dynamics: Radiation:
MM5 Hydrostatic (Grell et al 1994) Non-hydrostatic (in the works) Radiation: CCM3 (Kiehl 1996) Large-Scale Clouds & Precipitation: SUBEX (Pal et al 2000) Cumulus convection: Grell (1993); AS74 & FC80 closure Anthes-Kuo (1977) Betts-Miller (1993) Emanuel (1991) Boundary Layer: Holtslag (1990) Dynamics: MM5 Hydrostatic (Grell et al 1994) Non-hydrostatic (in the works) Radiation: CCM3 (Kiehl 1996) Large-Scale Clouds & Precipitation: SUBEX (Pal et al 2000) Cumulus convection: Grell (1993); AS74 & FC80 closure Anthes-Kuo (1977) Betts-Miller (1993) Emanuel (1991) Boundary Layer: Holtslag (1990) Tracers/Aerosols: Qian et al (2001); Solmon Land Surface: BATS (Dickinson et al 1993) SUB-BATS (Giorgi et al 2003) CLM0 (Dai et al 2003) Ocean Fluxes Zeng et al (1998) BATS (Dickinson et al. 1986) Computations Parallel Code (Yeh & Gao) User friendly Multiple platforms Tracers/Aerosols: Qian et al (2001); Solmon Land Surface: BATS (Dickinson et al 1993) SUB-BATS (Giorgi et al 2003) CLM0 (Dai et al 2003) Ocean Fluxes Zeng et al (1998) BATS (Dickinson et al. 1986) Computations Parallel Code (Yeh & Gao) User friendly Multiple platforms (Giorgi et al 1993ab, Pal et al 2005ab)
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1993 Midwest Summer Flood Record high rainfall (>200 year event)
Thousands homeless 48 deaths $15-20 billion in Damage USHCN Observations Ancient Nilometer (Mississippimeter) Date back 1800 B.C. This one calibrated in subjective terms by Pliny the Elder (Dooge 1988) Disaster Abundance Security Happiness Suffering Hunger 1993 1988 RegCM3
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1988 Great North American Drought
Driest/warmest since 1936 ~10,000 deaths $30 billion in Agricultural Damage CRU Observations RegCM Ancient Nilometer (Mississippimeter) Date back 1800 B.C. This one calibrated in subjective terms by Pliny the Elder (Dooge 1988) Disaster Abundance Security Happiness Suffering Hunger 1993 1988
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Precipitation over East Asia:
CRU Observations RegCM3 September 1994 thru August 1995
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Design of Numerical Experiments
Scenario Simulations Design of Numerical Experiments
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Cascade of Uncertainties in Climate Change Prediction
Socio-Economic Assumptions Emissions Scenarios Concentration Calculations Biogeochemical/Chemistry Models Interactions and Feedbacks Land Use Change Policy Responses: Adaptation and Mitigation Global Climate Change Simulation AOGCMs, Radiative Forcing Biggest uncertainties are in the Emissions scenarios and the climate projections (I.e., climate model sensitivity). Natural Forcings Regional Climate Change Simulations Regionalization Techniques Impacts Impact Models
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Model Configuration ICTP RegCM3 Simulations Mediterranean Focused
50 km 121 x 100 x 14 HadAMH SST, GHG & Sulfate Aerosol effects (direct & indirect) Simulations Reference run A2 & B2 Scenario runs Mediterranean Focused
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Regional Climate Model Schematic
GLCC Vegetation Hadley & OI Sea Surface Temperatures HadAMH3 Initial and Boundary Conditions HadAMH3 Aerosols Rotated Mercator Projection USGS Topography
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SCENARIOS CO2 Emissions (Gt C) CO2 Concentrations (ppm) A2 A2 B2 B2
These figures are not cumulative, but show emissions/year. Note big difference in the sulphate emissions from the IS92a scenario of SAR. IN SRES scenarios for all scenarios sulfates start declining by about 2040 or before. B2 B2
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PART II: Reference Simulation
Comparison to Observations Giorgi, Bi, Pal, Clim. Dynamics 2004a
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Winter Means Reference Period
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Surface Air Temperature: Reference Simulation
Winter Observations Winter RegCM3
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Precipitation: Reference Simulation
Winter Observations Winter RegCM3
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Summer Means Reference Period
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Surface Air Temperature: Reference Simulation
Summer Observations Summer RegCM3
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Precipitation: Reference Simulation
Summer Observations Summer RegCM3
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PART III: A2 & B2 Scenario Simulations
Comparison to the Reference Simulation Giorgi, Bi, Pal, Clim. Dynamics 2004b Pal, Giorgi, Bi, GRL 2004
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Winter Means Scenarios
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Temperature Change: Future-Reference
WARM B2-REF Winter RegCM3 A2-REF Winter RegCM3 HOT WARM
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Precipitation Change: Future-Reference
WET B2-REF Winter RegCM3 DRY WET A2-REF Winter RegCM3 WET DRY
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Sea Level Pressure Change: Future-Reference
B2-REF Winter RegCM3 H L H A2-REF Winter RegCM3
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Winter Sea Level Pressure Change: B2 & A2 Scenarios
DJF HadAMH: B2 DJF RegCM: B2 L L H H H H DJF HadAMH: A2 DJF RegCM: A2 L L H H
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Summer Means Scenarios
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Temperature Change: Future-Reference
B2-REF Summer RegCM3 WARM A2-REF Summer RegCM3 WARM HOT
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Precipitation Change: Future-Reference
WET B2-REF Summer RegCM3 DRY A2-REF Summer RegCM3 WET DRY
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Sea Level Pressure Change: Future-Reference
B2-REF Summer RegCM3 H L A2-REF Summer RegCM3
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Winter Sea Level Pressure Change: B2 & A2 Scenarios
JJA HadAMH: B2 JJA RegCM: B2 L L H H JJA HadAMH: A2 JJA RegCM: A2 H L H L
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Interannual Variability
Scenarios
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Map of Domain & Topography
SEM
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Surface Air Temperature: Interannual Variability Changes
RegCM3: Future-REF DJF, A2 DJF, B2 JJA, A2 JJA, B2 SEM Sub-region Averages
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Interannual Variability Changes
Precipitation: Interannual Variability Changes RegCM3: Future-REF DJF, A2 DJF, B2 JJA, A2 JJA, B2 SEM Sub-region Averages
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How do recent climatic changes compare to scenarios?
Extremes How do recent climatic changes compare to scenarios? Pal, Giorgi, Bi, GRL 2004
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Recent European Extreme Summers
The western European summer drought of 2003 is considered one of the severest on record. 20,000 heat related casualties in Western Europe. Worst harvest since World War II. In contrast, during 2002, many European countries experienced one of their wettest summers on record. Weather systems brought widespread heavy rainfall to central Europe, causing severe flooding along all the major rivers. The Elbe River reached its highest level in over 500 years of record Both of these contrasting events resulted in severe damages and losses. This study addresses whether these seemingly opposites in extremes are consistent the current climate change projections.
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Changes in Summer 500 hPa Geopotential Heights
NCEP Reanalysis ( ) minus ( ) ( meters) B2-Reference ( ) minus ( ) ( meters)
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Changes in Summer Temperature
CRU Observations ( ) minus ( ) B2-Reference ( ) minus ( ) (C) (C)
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Changes in Summer Precipitation
CRU Observations ( ) minus ( ) B2-Reference ( ) minus ( ) (% change) (% change)
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Changes in Summer Temperature: B2-Reference
Mean Surface ( ) minus ( ) Interannual Variability ( ) minus ( ) (C) (C)
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Changes in Summer Extremes: B2-Reference
Dry Spell Length ( ) minus ( ) Max 5-Day Precipitation ( ) minus ( ) ( Days) (% change)
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Precipitation Distribution (Hypothetical)
REF ref ref B2 B2 B2 More Droughts Floods Drier Summers
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Summary & Conclusions The RegCM3 reproduces the main features of observed temperature and precipitation. A general consistency of change patterns is found between the A2 and B2 scenarios. Warming: 2-7 oC in the A2 scenario is found over land areas. The B2 scenario is 1-2 oC lower. Precipitation: Increases in Northern Europe during summer and winter Increases in the Mediterranean in DJF and decreases in JJA. Interannual variability: Mostly increases in JJA Little change in DJF. Extremes: Increases flooding in Northern Europe Increased summer flood and drought in the Mediterranean. Projected changes of mean summer European climate are broadly consistent with the observed changes.
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谢谢
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