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UN ECA - CILSS – ACMAD - IRI Conference on Reduction of vulnerability of West Africa to climate change Ouagadougou, January 24-27 2007 A climate scientist's perspective on recent environmental trends in the Sahel: a model for future change? Alessandra Giannini IRI for Climate and Society (IRI) The Earth Institute at Columbia University
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Outline – past, present and future of climate in the Sahel 1. oceanic forcing dominant in late 20 th century droughts - what role for land-atmosphere interaction? 2. late 20 th century response to anthropogenic forcings - roles of GreenHouse Gases and (sulfate) aerosols 3. why the uncertainty in projections of future change? - mechanisms of monsoon change under climate change
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r = 0.60 A. Giannini, R. Saravanan and P. Chang, 2003. Science, 302, 1027-1030 Also see e.g. Bader and Latif, 2003 (GRL); Lu and Delworth, 2005 (GRL);Tippett, 2006 (GRL)
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land-atmosphere interaction: is it a positive feedback? (soil moisture, vegetation, dust..., evaporation, cloud cover...)
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NASA/GISS analysis of surface temp – linear trend 1950-2000 Hansen et al. 1999 (J. Geophys. Res.) regression of NASA/NSIPP1 Sahel PC and sfc temp Giannini et al. 2003, 2005 IPCC 4AR: end 20 th century – PreIndustrial sfc temp difference Biasutti and Giannini 2006 (GRL) late 20 th century surface temperature changes
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19 Coupled GCMs XX-PI Changes Biasutti and Giannini, GRL 2006 IPCC 4AR simulations – late 20th century climate change
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Biasutti and Giannini, 2006 (GRL) Sahel climate change 20th century21st century
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19 Coupled GCM (IPCC 4AR): recent and future temperature changes A1B (end 21st) - end 20th end 20th - PreInd
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CONCLUSIONS (climate science) ● African climate variability and change are inextricably tied to variations and trends in the global climate system: -->> recent trends in the global oceans and in continental precipitation can in part be ascribed to anthropogenic forcings -->> drought in the Sahel was forced by a warming of the oceans, in no negligible part due to GHG and aerosol forcing “Farmers freed of blame for Sahel drought” in http://www.scidev.net/
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CONCLUSIONS (climate science informing policy) ● Climate change is already here - the recent climate shift in the Sahel is a prime example of potential changes to come, as the global climate system responds to anthropogenic forcings -->> regional institutions/CILSS have an opportunity to take advantage of the lessons learned from managing the climate shift of the last ~30 years -->> harmonization of desertification and climate change issues is overdue!
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CONCLUSIONS (climate science informing practice - climate risk management) ● collaborate on climate science ● improve (two-way) communication -->> between climate scientists and policymakers -->> between climate scientists and stakeholders in sectors vulnerable to climate
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http://iridl.ldeo.columbia.edu/index.html http://www-pcmdi.llnl.gov/ipcc/about_ipcc.php
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West Africa: 0-20N, 20W-20E Eastern eq Africa: 10S-10N, 20-50E Southern Africa: 25-10S, 20-40E
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West Africa: 0-20N, 20W-20E Eastern eq Africa: 10S-10N, 20-50E Southern Africa: 25-10S, 20-40E
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Courtesy of Todd Mitchell, UW/JISAO
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Giannini et al., 2005 (Clim. Dyn.)
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Lu and Delworth, 2005 (Geophys. Res. Lett.) The relative roles of Atlantic, Indian and Pacific SSTs
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Held et al., PNAS 2005 GFDL CM2.0GMAO(NSIPP1)NCAR CAM3
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surface air temperature (minus global mean) precipitation Haarsma et al., GRL 2005 2050-2080 minus 1950-1980
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