1 / 31

Climate Variability & Change - Past & Future Decades

Climate Variability & Change - Past & Future Decades. Brian Hoskins Director, Grantham Institute for Climate Change, Imperial College London Professor of Meteorology, University of Reading. Observed climate system Projections for 21 st century Uncertainties in projections

gamada
Download Presentation

Climate Variability & Change - Past & Future Decades

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Climate Variability & Change- Past & Future Decades Brian Hoskins Director, Grantham Institute for Climate Change, Imperial College London Professor of Meteorology, University of Reading

  2. Observed climate system • Projections for 21st century • Uncertainties in projections • Targets for climate related policy • Concluding comments

  3. Some measurements of the climate system x .

  4. Comparison of Observed T since 1990 with IPCC projections 19 point filter on Observations Observed variability added to IPCC

  5. Mean Central England T 1772 to 22 July 2012

  6. Some measurements of the climate system Arctic sea ice Global sea level . Sept min in Arctic sea ice area

  7. Projections: globally averaged surface warming Different scenarios IPCC 2007

  8. Surface T projections for different periods and scenarios IPCC 2003 2011-30 2046-65 2080-99 B1 A1B A2

  9. Change in average maximum number of dry days in year, 2081-2100 IPCC 2011

  10. Normalised PDFs for 2100 Decadal T (A1B) Ed Hawkins

  11. UNEP Emissions Gap Report Nov 2010 Cumulative carbon – Allen et al 2009

  12. Impact of post 2100 global emissions level Matsuno & Maruyama, 2012 CO2 emissions CO2 concentration Zero emissions floor 450ppm CO2 stabilisation T SL Atm CO2 T SL Atm CO2

  13. Contributors to uncertainty in trends in decadal T Hawkins 2011 Global UK

  14. T % Contributions to uncertainty in different decades

  15. Policy makers could do with a ceiling on ΔT or GHGs “Dangerous Climate Change” e.g. 2C Is 1.9C fine and 2.1C disastrous? Atmospheric CO2 level e.g. 450ppm Cumulative emissions e.g. 1trillion t of carbon

  16. Thresholds (“Tipping Points”)

  17. Are extremes increasing at a surprising/damaging rate? Coumu & Rahmtorf 2012

  18. Attribution of extremes • Basic physics/theory • More heat waves & less cold periods: shift of distribution & change in local T/D balance • More heavy rainfall events can be expected – Clausius-Clapeyron • More intense storms? Latent heating+, baroclinicity +/- Analogues of synoptic situations e.g. Cattiaux et al 2010 for extreme cold European winter 2009/10 Model attribution studies

  19. Summer 2010 Model estimates of Return periods for T/Z Barriopedro 2011 Otto et al 2012 6 day rainfall in July - ECMWF analysis

  20. 20th Century Blocking in CMIP5 Models: NH Winter ERA40 Mean of models SD of models

  21. Concluding Comments • Very strong evidence that we are performing a very dangerous experiment with our planet • Very long time-scales of atmospheric CO2 & the ocean imply a climate commitment, but also imply some very long term sensitivity to GHG emission floor next century • Current models suggest emissions reductions in next few decades important only after 2050 • Thresholds will probably exist in the climate system but we do not know where they are. • For societies thresholds will certainly exist. • Extreme weather events may be increasing more than simple shifts of distributions suggest but this has not yet been shown conclusively • Uncertainties in climate models & their prediction of natural variability will be reducible to some extent • Hard targets are not based on scientific evidence but softer ones to guide policy can be posed • e.g. CCC 50% chance of not exceeding 2C by much & very small chance of reaching 4C

  22. Fractional uncertainty & Fraction of Variance Globe British Isles

  23. precip

  24. S/N (b) & (d) assuming model uncertainty zero

  25. Matsuno & Maruyama, 2012 CO2 emissions CO2 concentration

  26. Global temperatures and 10, 20 & 30 year running averages

  27. Number of Monthly Record High Temperatures Coumu & Rahmtorf 2012 from Benestad (2004) 17 stations, decadal smoothing

  28. 21st Century Blocking in CMIP5 Models: NH Winter 2056-99 for RCP8.5

  29. Date at which signal emerges from “noise”

More Related