560 likes | 572 Views
This article explores the effects of climate change in the Pacific Northwest, discussing the impacts on temperature, precipitation, flooding, wildfires, and more. It provides insights from climate prediction science and addresses uncertainties and misconceptions.
E N D
Future Climate Change in the Pacific Northwest Cliff Mass, Atmospheric Sciences University of Washington
There has been a great deal of contradictory information about global warming and its influence on the Northwest
What can climate prediction science tell us? What do we know for sure? What are the uncertainties? Can you true the media?
Human-forced (anthropogenic) climate change has already affected our region Even without any effects from increasing greenhouse gases like CO2
Seattle’s urban core is 2-10F warmer due to concrete and buildings
Bottom Line Humans have already changed the weather and climate due to changes at the surface
Natural Variability • Even without humans, weather and climate would vary in time, and records would be broken. • To understand anthropogenic global warming, one must start with a knowledge of natural variations.
NOAA observations over the NW Natural & Anthropogenic Mainly Natural
The Pacific Decadal Oscillation: A Mode of Natural Variability Less Snow More snow
Climate Change in the Northwest • Past climate change in the NW was mainly the result of natural variability and human impacts on surface conditions • But there is now a new player, whose impacts will increase in time.
Anthropogenic Climate Change Resulting from Increasing GreenhouseGases
Greenhouse gases warm the planet • Carbon Dioxide • Water Vapor • Methane • Nitrous Oxide • … and others Greenhouse Gas Emissions
The basic physics has been known for a long timeSvante Arrhenius, 1896
We understand the greenhouse effect Graphic courtesy of the National Park Service
Greenhouse gases act like a blanketThicker blankets (or more of them) make you warmer
We can predict the impacts of increasing greenhouse gases using global climate models • Sophisticated computer simulations based on the physics of the atmosphere and ocean. • Atmospheric parts are nearly identical to weather prediction models, but with atmospheric gases varying in time.
Climate Prediction Technology • We run global atmosphere-ocean models for decades or centuries. • Use the most powerful supercomputers. • Have to make assumptions about greenhouse gas emissions. How will they change in time? • There about two-dozen international groups doing such simulations.
Global Warming is NOT Uniform • Arctic warms quickly for a number of reasons, including the melting of sea ice. • Continents warm up more than oceans. • Eastern oceans up less than western oceans. • In general, the dry areas (e.g., the SW U.S.) get drier and wet areas (e.g., British Columbia) get wetter.
Problem: Global climate models are too coarse to simulate the effects of critical Northwest terrain Climate Model Terrain
A new technology to solve the resolution issue:Regional Climate ModelingWhere we run high-resolution local models driven by global climate simulations.
TemperatureNorthwest warming delayed and slowed by the Pacific Ocean Observed Winter Surface Temperature Change (1975-2014)
Without Pacific warming, our mountain snowpack has not changed much over the past 30 years
Good news for average precipitation Unlike some areas, we will still have plenty of precipitation, just more rain and less snow
But warming will result in more precipitation falling as rain rather than snow Change in Snowpack from 1990 to 2090 Lower 0% Higher
But there is a dark side to the our future warmth: more extreme precipitation and flooding
When atmospheric rivers hit our terrain, intense precipitation falls Precipitationon extreme atmospheric river days increases by 15-39%
Flooding Potential Increases • Snow absorbs rain. • With less snow, there will be less “protection.” • Thus, heavier rainfall could lead to greater flooding on major rivers.
And Greater Risk of Slope Failures and Landslides Oso Washington
Northwest Windstorms • Will there be more of them? • Will they become more intense? The Inauguration Day Storm 1993
Northwest Windstorms • The answer appears to be no. No increasing trend in observations and none suggested by climate models. • UW investigated this issue for Seattle City Light
Sea Level Rise Best estimates are 1-2 feet between 2000 and 2100, assuming continued greenhouse gas increases.
Relatively minor impacts overall because our land rises rapidly from the water in most locations
Northwest Wildfires and Climate Recent increase in large wildfires, but the small increase in temperature does not explain it.
More fires in the early 20th century followed by suppression
Increasing Risk of Major Wildfires • Climate change is a small part of this. • Suppression has produce unhealthy forests with lots of fuels ready to burn. Now Original