450 likes | 587 Views
Citizens Climate Lobby Mid-Atlantic Regional Conference March, 15, 2014. Lancaster, PA. OBSERVED AND MODELED GLOBAL AND REGIONAL (MID-ATLANTIC STATES) CLIMATE CHANGE. Konstantin Y. Vinnikov (University of Maryland) .
E N D
Citizens Climate Lobby Mid-Atlantic Regional Conference March, 15, 2014. Lancaster, PA OBSERVED AND MODELED GLOBAL AND REGIONAL (MID-ATLANTIC STATES) CLIMATE CHANGE Konstantin Y. Vinnikov (University of Maryland)
MY RELATED CLIMATE CHANGE ANALYSES USING SURFACE, SATELLITE, & ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATIONS • Global Warming (1976) • Arctic Sea Ice Extent is decreasing (1999) • Climate Variability is not increasing (2002) • Global Tropospheric Air is warming (2003) • Sea level rise – Accelerated Antarctic melting (2004)
MID-ATLANTIC STATES: OBSERVED CHANGEIN TEMPERATURE & PRECIPITATION KNOWN GLOBAL WARMING SIGNATURE (FOOTPRINT) IN CLIMATIC RECORDS: . Warming trend YES . Polar amplification YES . Winter (Cold Season) amplification YES . Diurnal asymmetry NO . Increase ofprecipitation YES . Summer desiccation ?
OBSERVED WARMING TREND 1895-2013 Trend = 0.76oC/100 yr
Compare to: Northern Hemisphere Warming 1895-2013 Trend=0.76oC/100 yr
East Coast States: Observed Seasonal Variation of Mean Air Temperature Trends
A century-scale warming trend can be clearly seen in observations of Tmax & Tmin at 5 of 9 chosen meteorological stationsinMaryland. • An expected asymmetryofTrend(Tmin)>Trend(Tmax) is found in observations of 3 of 9 chosen stations. Five other stations displaytheopposite Trend(Tmin)<Trend(Tmax). • Century-scale decreasing trends in variance of Tmaxare found in observations at 8 of 9 chosen meteorological stations.
East Coast States: Observed Seasonal Variation of Mean Precipitation and Trend
East Coast Rivers: Observed Seasonal Variations of Runoff Trends R. Delaware at Trenton, NJ, 1912-2010 R. Potomac at Point of Rocks, MD, 1895-2010 R. James at Cartersville, VA, 1899-2010 R. Roanoke at Roanoke Rapids, NC, 1912-2010 R. Wateree at Camden, SC, 1929-2010 R. Savannah at Augusta, GA, 1883-2010 R. Altamaha at Doctortown, GA, 1931-2010 R. Delaware at Trenton, NJ, 1912-2010 R. Potomac at Point of Rocks, MD, 1895-2010 R. James at Cartersville, VA, 1899-2010 R. Roanoke at Roanoke Rapids, NC, 1912-2010 R. Wateree at Camden, SC, 1929-2010 R. Savannah at Augusta, GA, 1883-2010 R. Altamaha at Doctortown, GA, 1931-2010
Annual Cycle of PrecipitationinMD and VA has MAX in the Summer and MIN in the Autumn. This makes our climate so nice.
The most important observed century scale climatic trends inMaryland and Virginia
Observed Increases in Very Heavy Summer Precipitation during the 1958 to 2011 period (archive of USGCRP 2009 updated) Summer Percent increases in the amount falling in very heavy rain events defined as the heaviest 1 percent of all daily events from 1958 to 2011 in the summer season for each region Groisman et al., 2013 Changes over the northcentral and northeastern parts of the nation are statistically significant at the 0.01 and 0.05 levels respectively; all other trends are insignificant
MODELED GLOBAL WARMING TEMPERATURE AND PRECIPITATION
IPCC AR5. RCP-Representative Concentration Pathways. (Wikipedia, March 2014)
NJ PA DE MD WV WV VA
NJ PA DE MD WV WV VA
Occurrence of Tropical Cyclones & SEA LEVEL RISE
OBSERVED SEA LEVEL VARIATIONS NEAR MID-ATLANTIC STATES OF THE USA (2009 Technical report NOS CO-OPS 053) 1957-2006 Trend=44.7 cm/100 yr 1957-2006 Trend=34.4 cm/100 yr 1957-2006 Trend=29.0 cm/100 yr
Report: Global Climate Change Impact in the United States. 2009, US GCRP
AR5. IPCC WG1 REPORT 2013. Sea Level Change: Paleo, Observed and Model Predicted Estimates.
Greenhouse Global Warming. Observed datafor CARBON DIOXIDE and METHANE
1995-2012 TREND 19.46 ppm/10yr 19.68 ppm/10yr 19.31 ppm/10yr 19.57 ppm/10yr 19.07 ppm/10yr 19.12 ppm/10yr 18.78 ppm/10yr
THESE USA CO2 HOURLY RECORDS ARE OBTAINED FROM EPA AQS DATA ARCHIVE Trend=11.9 ppm/10 yr Trend=10.3 ppm/10 yr Trend=14.1 ppm/10 yr
MEAN TREND 1995-2012 14.06 ppm/10yr
THESE ARETHE FIVE LONGEST HOURLY METHANE RECORDS IN EPA DATA ARCHIVE. ONLY THREE OF THEM ARE VALID. ALL OTHER RECORDS ARE TOO SHORT.
Observed century-scale climatic variations in the Mid-Atlantic States of the USA correspond well to the scenario of greenhouse anthropogenic global warming based on climate change modeling studies. We should expect that many further model predicted changes in our regional climatic conditions are inevitable. Unlimited global warming is going to make our climates very uncomfortable. In any case, regional climatic studies are often underfunded or not funded at all. Monitoring of the main greenhouse gases, Carbon Dioxide and Methane, in the Mid Atlantic States is not sufficient or nonexistent. Due to the absence of funds, the most talented students are moving towards remote sensing or other well funded research paths. The Climate Change problem needs your attention.
100 yr Averages (ºC) & Trends (ºC)/100 yr Mean Variances (ºC)2& Trends (ºC)2/100 yr • What we are looking for: • Asymmetry in trends of Tmax & Tmin. We expect that: Trend(Tmin)>Trend(Tmax). • 2. Trends in Variances. • What we see here: • 1. An Asymmetry does depend on station. • 2. All these three stations display a century scale decreasing trend in variances of Tmax. Trends in variances of Tmin are uncertain. Tmax Variances Tmin Trends Trends
Observed Increases in Very Heavy Precipitation during the 1958 to 2010 period (USGCRP 2009) Annual Percent increases in the amount falling in very heavy rain events defined as the heaviest 1 percent of all daily events from 1958 to 2010 for each region Changes in the Eastern half of the nation are statistically significant at the 0.05 or higher levels and over the Great Plains, at the 0.1 level
SEA LEVEL RISE and ANTARCTIC ICE SHEET MELTING ETKINS & VINNIKOV, not yet published
Russia, 1976: DETECTION OF GLOBAL WARMING Arctic N.H. Budyko & Vinnikov, 1976
OBSERVED AND MODELED NORTHERN HEMISPHERE SEA ICE EXTENT Vinnikov et al., 1999