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Warren M. Washington National Center for Atmospheric Research April 2006 Climate Change Simulations of the 20 th and 21 st Century: Present and Future.

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Presentation on theme: "Warren M. Washington National Center for Atmospheric Research April 2006 Climate Change Simulations of the 20 th and 21 st Century: Present and Future."— Presentation transcript:

1 Warren M. Washington National Center for Atmospheric Research April 2006 Climate Change Simulations of the 20 th and 21 st Century: Present and Future

2 Overview Is our climate changing? What is in climate models? How do we run the models on supercomputers? Verification of climate models Model projections of past and future climates Mitigation versus adaptation Future model developments on the path to a Earth System Model (ESM)

3 Global Mean Surface Temperatures Have Increased

4 The Land and Oceans Have Warmed

5 2005 Warmest or Tied for Record Year From GISS/NASA

6 Present and Future Sea Ice Change

7 What is the status of state-of-the-art climate models and their transition to earth system models?

8 Timeline of Climate Model Development

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10 R15T42 T85 T170 Model Resolutions

11 (300 km) (150 km) (75) km (37 km)

12 CCSM method Parallel Climate Model Method (PCM)

13 Global Atmosphere

14 Global Sea Surface Temperature

15 POP/LANL

16 Global and Regional Climate Aspects Using a Climate Model ●El Niño/La Niña ●Monsoons ●North Atlantic Oscillation ●Arctic Oscillation

17 Sea-ice Concentration: Climatology (1979-1999)… Mixture of Improved Physics and Resolution

18 Title slide Mt Pinatubo eruption in the Philippines, June 15, 1991. Gases and solids injected 20 km into the stratosphere. From Church, White, & Arblaster

19 Source: World Resources 2000-2001 Time Magazine – 9 April 2001

20 Natural Variations Do Not Explain Observed Climatic Change Climate models with natural forcing (including volcanic and solar) do not reproduce warming When increase in greenhouse gases is included, models do reproduce warming Addition of increase in aerosols (cooling) improves agreement

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22 Climate Change Scenarios : At any point in time, we are committed to additional warming and sea level rise from the radiative forcing already in the system. Warming stabilizes after several decades, but sea level from thermal expansion continues to rise for centuries. Each emission scenario has a warming impact. (Meehl et al., 2005: How much more warming and sea level rise? Science, 307, 1769-1772)

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25 Heat Waves Impacts on human health and mortality, economic impacts, ecosystem and wildlife impacts (Meehl and Tebaldi, 2004: More intense, more frequent and longer lasting heat waves in the 21 st century, Science, 305, 994- 997)

26 Climate models can be used to provide information on changes in extreme events such as heat waves Heat wave severity defined as the mean annual 3-day warmest nighttime minima event Model compares favorably with present-day heat wave severity In a future warmer climate, heat waves become more severe in southern and western North America, and in the western European and Mediterranean region Observed Model Future From Meehl and Tebaldi 2005

27 Tropospheric temperature increase Stratospheric temperature decrease Surface temperature increase Tropical troposphere warms more than surface What do observations show? Since 1960 surface and troposphere warm about same rate Strong decreases in stratospheric temperature and increases in tropopause height since 1979 With more greenhouse gases climate models project Controversy (mostly) Settled in 2005! From T. Karl of NOAA

28 Sea-ice Extent in Both NH and SH

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30 Figures based on Tebaldi et al. 2006: Climatic Change, Going to the extremes; An intercomparison of model-simulated historical and future changes in extreme events, in press Five indices describe temperature-related extremes: Total number of frost days (days with absolute minimum temperature below 0 degrees Celsius) frost days Intra-annual extreme temperature range (difference between the highest temperature observation of the year and the lowest) xtemp range Growing season length (length of the period between the first stretch of five consecutive days with mean temperature above 5 degrees Celsius and the last such stretch of the year) growing season Heat wave duration index (maximum period of at least 5 consecutive days with maximum temperature higher by at least 5 degrees Celsius with respect to the climatological norm for the same calendar day) heat waves Warm nights (percent of times when minimum temperature is above the 90th percentile of the climatological distribution for that calendar day) warm nights

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37 20,000 years ago2200? ( + 5 meters) Past and Future Rise in Sea Level

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39 Changes in hurricane and tropical cyclone climatology Most models have 100 km grids this study has 20 km. Eye and eye walls in the simulations Winds speeds increase by 8.8 m/sec, more intense storms Less frequent formation of storms by 30% Significant increase in intense storms Oouchi, K., J. Yoshimura, H. Yoshimura, R. Mizuta, S. Kusunoki and A. Noda, 2005: Tropical cyclone climatology in a global-warming climate as simulated in a 20km-mesh global atmospheric model: Frequency and wind intensity analyses. J. Meteor. Soc. Japan, Accepted.

40 Fewer Cyclones and Hurricanes But More Intense Oouchi et al. 2005

41 Ongoing and Future Climate Change Developments ●Higher resolution, especially important near mountains, river flow, and coast lines ●Full hydrological coupling including ice sheets…important for sea level changes ●Continued improvement in clouds and aerosol effects ●Better vegetation and land surface treatments with ecological interactions ●Carbon and other biogeochemical cycles

42 Changes That Affect Renewal Resources ●Warmer, more moist, heavier rainfall events ●Jet stream move further poleward and weaker ●Storm systems moving slower but more intense rainfall events ●Cloudiness change is largely unknown but expected to be small. Closely tied to relative humidity upper limit.

43 Modeling and Observational Consensus “An increasing body of observations gives a collective picture of a warming world and other changes in the climate system” - IPCC Global average surface temperature has increased over the 20th century by about 0.6°C The last decade of the 20 th century was the warmest decade of the past millennium Temperatures have risen during the past four decades in the lowest 8 kilometers of the atmosphere Snow cover and ice extent have decreased Global average sea level has risen and ocean heat content has increased

44 Climate Change Policy Debate NASA

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46 Science Challenges, Uncertainties, Issues Physics Models –Terrestrial biochemistry –Atmospheric chemistry –New ice-sheet component Methods/Algorithms –Finite-volume atmospheric dynamics Longitude-lattitude grid with FFTs at poles Implement cubed-sphere grid –Decoupled parallelism for scalability and load balance Atmospheric physics and dynamics Ocean barotropic and baroclinic on generalized grids –Parallel I/O Software –Large, distributed development team –Aggressive schedule for improving science and performance –New coupling that allows multiple- executable concurrent and single- executable sequential –Regression testing with changing compiler, library, and OS versions –Earth System Grid and analysis framework for data dissemination Uncertainties –Correction of model biases –Validation against observations for terrestrial carbon models –Scalability of algorithms –Reliability of simulation environment

47 The End


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