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Climate Change: The Move to Action (AOSS 480 // NRE 480) Kevin Reed 2133 Space Research Building (North Campus)

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Presentation on theme: "Climate Change: The Move to Action (AOSS 480 // NRE 480) Kevin Reed 2133 Space Research Building (North Campus)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Climate Change: The Move to Action (AOSS 480 // NRE 480) Kevin Reed 2133 Space Research Building (North Campus) kareed@umich.edu http://www-personal.umich.edu/~kareed/ Winter 2012 February 21, 2012

2 Class News Ctools site: AOSS_SNRE_480_001_W12AOSS_SNRE_480_001_W12 2008 and 2010 Class On Line:2008 and 2010 Class –http://climateknowledge.org/classes/index.ph p/Climate_Change:_The_Move_to_Actionhttp://climateknowledge.org/classes/index.ph p/Climate_Change:_The_Move_to_Action

3 Today What Are Extreme Events? Are They Changing? Will Extremes Differ With ‘Climate Change’? Communication

4 Extreme Weather Events

5 What is an Extreme? Categorizing an event as “extreme” is a somewhat arbitrary procedure. –What is extreme at one space and time may be typical at another. –Extremes are at the tails of the distribution. How is “tail” defined? –Does extreme mean “rare” or simply high impact? Generalized Extreme Value Theory US CCSP Report 3.3 - 2008

6 Extremes are a natural component of a stable climate. However, there are costs! What is an Extreme? US CCSP Report 3.3 - 2008

7 Trends Temperature Precipitation NCDC/NOAA – State of the Climate

8 Trends – Tornadoes? NCDC/NOAA – State of the Climate

9 Trends – Snow? NCDC/NOAA – State of the Climate

10 Trends – Tropical Cyclones? NCDC/NOAA – State of the Climate

11 Trends – Tropical Cyclones? NCDC/NOAA – State of the Climate

12 Trends - Issues Data reliability –Technology, Coverage Natural Variability Regional Distributions Is there an anthropogenic signature?

13 Trends 2011 was a record-breaking year for Climate Extremes

14 2011 Extremes 14 Events of >$1 Billion in Damage Effective Communication? NOAA News

15 2011 Extremes NCDC/NOAA – State of the Climate

16 2011 Extremes - Ranks NCDC/NOAA – State of the Climate

17 U.S. Climate Extreme Index NCDC/NOAA – State of the Climate CEI

18 Communication This is one agency’s (NOAA) at communicating extreme events and trends to the public? Is one of the figures particularly effective? As a whole? Other sources: –NOAA – Extreme Weather 2011NOAA – Extreme Weather 2011 –Natural Resources Defense CouncilNatural Resources Defense Council –Wunderground – Expert BlogsWunderground

19 How Might Extremes Change? US CCSP Report 3.3 - 2008

20 How Might Extremes Change? Changes may be more complex! IPCC SREX

21 Weather and Climate Extremes in a Changing Climate US CCSP Report 3.3 - 2008

22 Projected Precipitation Changes US CCSP Report 3.3 - 2008

23 Possible Changes in Hurricanes Emanuel (2007)Holland and Webster (2007) Can be basin specific!

24 Weather and Climate Extremes in a Changing Climate In general, similar to IPCC AR4 and IPCC SREX results. Specific to North America. US CCSP Report 3.3 - 2008

25 Importance? For U.S. Cost are increasing for many reasons: –Population growth –Where people live –Changes in extremes (as shown) –Vulnerability (building codes) US CCSP Report 3.3 - 2008

26 IPCC Special Report on Extremes

27 Are These Reports Effective? There are differences in the presentation of information. Is one more effective than another? What are the strengths? Room for improvement? How is it different when compared to IPCC AR4?

28 Example: Hurricanes Strong storms, but less globally. Zhao et al. (2009) Fractional Change

29 Example: Hurricanes This is important because: Meyer et al. (1997)

30 Example: Hurricanes Also… adaptation… US CCSP Report 3.3 - 2008

31 Example: Heat Waves Barriopedro et al., Russian Heat Wave, Science, 2011Barriopedro et al., Russian Heat Wave, Science, 2011 Dole et al., Russian Heat Wave, GRL, 2011Dole et al., Russian Heat Wave, GRL, 2011 Rahmstorf, Increase of Extreme Events, PNAS, 2011Rahmstorf, Increase of Extreme Events, PNAS, 2011 Shearer and Rood, Earthzine, 2011

32 Example: Heat Waves Dole et al. 2011 They see no signal of the role anthropogenic sources 2010 Russian Heat Wave

33 Example: Heat Waves Potential for Future Russian Heat Waves Dole et al. 2011 Scientific Debates

34 Example: Heat Waves Barriopedro et al. 2011 European Heat Waves (1500-2100) 2 500-year events in last decade!

35 Example: Heat Waves

36 More Communication These case studies demonstrate that there is an attempt to ‘simplify’, or communicate the science to the public, in the reports that we have read in class. NCAR – AtmosNews –http://www2.ucar.edu/atmosnews/attributi on/steroids-baseball-climate-changehttp://www2.ucar.edu/atmosnews/attributi on/steroids-baseball-climate-change –Deliberate attempt to increase communication with public.

37 “It’s not the right question to ask if this storm or that storm is due to global warming, or is it natural variability. Nowadays, there’s always an element of both.” Kevin Trenberth – NCAR

38 Shearer and Rood (2011) Scientist are part of the conversation… should help frame better questions. Two different realities, natural and the anthropogenically changed… this does not exist. “The result is that scientific debates that were historically carried out in the slow deliberations of peer-reviewed journals are now on public display and can be misrepresented.”


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