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Predictability of spring cold spells in Europe. M. E. Shongwe, G. J. van Oldenborgh, C. Ferro and C. A. S. Coelho. Outline. Motivation Model verification Possible source of model skill Skill scores relative to a simple statistical model The KNMI Climate Explorer Summary.
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Predictability of spring cold spells in Europe M. E. Shongwe, G. J. van Oldenborgh, C. Ferro and C. A. S. Coelho
Outline Motivation Model verification Possible source of model skill Skill scores relative to a simple statistical model The KNMI Climate Explorer Summary
2006 Spring 2m temperature • Whereas global warming is a topical issue world wide, there is still a need to investigate the predictability of cold extremes in e.g Europe (spring 2006 a good illustration)
Model ROC scores normal seasons • All three models show some skill in predicting near-average seasons in Eastern Europe, but……..
Model ROC scores coldest seasons • The skill is even much higher over the same area for the coldest springs…..suggesting that there is some physical mechanism responsible. Models verified against NCEP-NCAR Reanalysis
Amongst other candidate land surface processes influencing cold spells in NE Europe is the presence or absence of snow and its effect on the albedo and sensible heat exchange Snow Cover Climatology • Snow cover climatology expresses the fraction of time with snow on the ground. • Interannual standard deviations of the probability of the presence of snow on the ground early in March-April Data source: NCEP-CPC Monitoring and data
Spatial averaged early February snow water equivalent (mm) versus boreal spring near-surface (2m) temperature. • The three coldest MAMs were characterised by high snow-depth on the ground. • The effect of snow on the center of the temperature distribution is smaller Scatter plots
Verification of Principal Regression model? • Using the regression model the area of highest skill shifts is more southward?
There is an obvious incentive for investigating the predictability of cold outbreaks in Europe as demonstrated during last spring. • The GCMs verified seem to be predicting these extremes skillfully over Eastern Europe. • Snow-related feedbacks are in part responsible for colder spring seasons. • More accurate analysis of snow is expected to improve colder temperature predictions. • To do....Methods of improving GCM prediction (e.g. statistical recalibration). Summary