Title: Climate Change Modeling: An overview
1 Climate Change Modeling An overview
Climate Change Training for Water Professionals
2Presentation outline
- Overview of climatic system
- Green house effect
- Global warming
- Ice melt and rise of sea level
- Climate model and predictions
- General Climate Model - GCM
- Regional Climate Model RCM
- Climate modeling at BUET
3D models
3Climate Systems
- The complicated system consisting of various
components, including the dynamics and
composition of the atmosphere, the ocean, the ice
and snow cover, the land surface and its
features, the many mutual interactions between
them, and the large variety of physical, chemical
and biological processes taking place in and
among these components. - Climate refers to the state of the climate
system as a whole, including a statistical
description of its variations. - Atmosphere
- 78 nitrogen, 21 oxygen, and 1 other gases.
- Carbon dioxide accounts for just 0.03 - 0.04.
- Water vapor 0 to 2
4Components of Climate System
5Green house gases
- CO2 and some other minor gases
- Absorb some of the thermal radiation leaving the
surface of the earth. - Emit radiation from much higher and colder levels
out to space. - These radiatively active gases are known as
greenhouse gases. - They act as a partial blanket for the thermal
radiation from the surface which enables it to be
substantially warmer than it would otherwise be,
analogous to the effect of a greenhouse.
6Green house effect
7Green house effect
8Human induced climate variation
- Perturbations of the atmospheric composition
the enhanced greenhouse effect - Effect of aerosols
- direct effect (scattering of incoming solar
radiation) - indirect effect (affecting the radiative
properties of clouds) - Land-use change (agriculture, deforestation,
reforestation, afforestation, urbanisation,
traffic, )
9Increasing trends of CO2
10Human induced changes of green house gases
11Sector wise Green house gas emission
12Country wise emission of CO2
- Per capita emissions of CO2 is less than 0.2 ton
annually in Bangladesh, compared to 1.6 tons in
the developing countries
13Global temperature and Greenhouse gases
14Temperature variation past 1,000 years
15Increase of Temperature past 140 year
16Trends of increase of Temperature
17Surface Air temperature (1960-1990)
18Antarctic Ozone hole
- The Antarctic ozone hole forms in the southern
hemispheres spring (Sept.-Nov) following the
bitterly cold and dark Antarctic winter when
stratospheric ice clouds promote production of
chemically active chlorine and bromine. - This, in turn, leads to ozone destruction when
sunlight returns in the Antarctic spring. - The serious thinning of the stratospheric ozone
layer is caused by anthropogenic emissions of
ozone depleting substances, such as
chlorofluorocarbons (CFC) and halons. The
atmospheric concentrations of these compounds
have increased during the last several decades as
a consequence of human activity.
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20Ice melting
- Images from gathered from the Defense
Meteorological Satellite Program of NASA show the
minimum Arctic sea ice concentration 1979 (left)
and 2003 (right).
1979
2003
21Cracks in Ice bars
22Sea Level Rise (1980-2000)
23Climate Models
- Climate models are computer-based simulations
that use mathematical formulas to re-create the
chemical and physical processes that drive
Earths climate. - To run a model, scientists divide the planet
into a 3-dimensional grid, apply the basic
equations, and evaluate the results. - Atmospheric models calculate winds, heat
transfer, radiation, relative humidity, and
surface hydrology within each grid and evaluate
interactions with neighboring points. - Climate models use quantitative methods to
simulate the interactions of the atmosphere,
oceans, land surface, and ice.
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25Hardware Behind the Climate Model
- Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory
26General Circulation Model (GCM)
- General Circulation Models (GCMs) are a class of
computer-driven models for weather forecasting,
understanding climate and projecting climate
change, where they are commonly called Global
Climate Models. - Three dimensional GCM's discretise the equations
for fluid motion and energy transfer and
integrate these forward in time. They also
contain parametrisations for processes - such as
convection - that occur on scales too small to be
resolved directly. - Atmospheric GCMs (AGCMs) model the atmosphere and
impose sea surface temperatures. - Coupled atmosphere-ocean GCMs (AOGCMs, e.g.
HadCM3, EdGCM, GFDL CM2.X, ARPEGE-Climate)
combine the two models.
27GCM typical horizontal resolution of between 250
and 600 km, 10 to 20 vertical layers in the
atmosphere and sometimes as many as 30 layers in
the oceans.
28Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (SRES)
- The Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (SRES)
was a report prepared by the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) for the Third
Assessment Report (TAR) in 2001, on future
emission scenarios to be used for driving global
circulation models to develop climate change
scenarios. - It was used to replace the IS92 scenarios used
for the IPCC Second Assessment Report of 1995.
The SRES Scenarios were also used for the Fourth
Assessment Report (AR4) in 2007.
29SERS Emission Scenarios
- A1 - a future world of very rapid economic
growth, global population that peaks in
mid-century and declines thereafter, and the
rapid introduction of new and more efficient
technologies. Three sub groups fossil intensive
(A1FI), non-fossil energy sources (A1T), or a
balance across all sources (A1B). - A2 - A very heterogeneous world. The underlying
theme is that of strengthening regional cultural
identities, with an emphasis on family values and
local traditions, high population growth, and
less concern for rapid economic development. - B1 - a convergent world with the same global
population, that peaks in mid-century and
declines thereafter, as in the A1 storyline. - B2 - a world in which the emphasis is on local
solutions to economic, social and environmental
sustainability.
30Non SRES Scenarios
- Non-SRES Scenario PICTL
- Experiments run with constant pre-industrial
levels of greenhouse gasses. - Non-SRES Scenario 20C3M
- Experiments run with greenhouse gasses increasing
as observed through the 20th century. - Non-SRES Scenario COMMIT
- An idealised scenario in which the atmospheric
burdens of long-lived greenhouse gasses are held
fixed at AD2000 levels. - Non-SRES Scenario 1PTO2X (1 to double)
- Experiments run with greenhouse gasses increasing
from pre-industrial levels at a rate of 1 per
year until the concentration has doubled and held
constant thereafter. - Non-SRES Scenario 1PTO4X (1 to quadruple)
- Experiments run with greenhouse gasses increasing
from pre-industrial levels at a rate of 1 per
year until the concentration has quadrupled and
held constant thereafter.
31GCM output described in the 2007 IPCC Fourth
Assessment Report (SRES scenarios), multilayer
mean
32GCM
- BCC-CM1
- AgencyBeijing Climate Center, National Climate
Center, China Meteorological Administration,
No.46, S.Road, Zhongguancun Str., Beijing 100081,
China - BCCR
- Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research (BCCR),
Univ. of Bergen, Norway - CGCM3
- Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and
Analysis (CCCma) - CNRM-CM3
- Centre National de Recherches Meteorologiques,
Meteo France, France
33GCM
- CONS-ECHO-G
- Meteorological Institute of the University of
Bonn (Germany), Institute of KMA (Korea), and
Model and Data Group. - CSIRO, Australia
- INMCM3.0
- Institute of Numerical Mathematics, Russian
Academy of Science, Russia. - GFDL
- Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, NOAA
- NASA-GISS-AOM
- NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies
(NASA/GISS), USA
34GCM
- MRI-CGCM2_3_2
- Meteorological Research Institute, Japan
Meteorological Agency, Japan - NCAR-PCM
- National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR),
NSF (a primary sponsor), DOE (a primary sponsor),
NASA, and NOAA - Model NIES-MIROC3_2-MED
- CCSR/NIES/FRCGC, Japan
- UKMO-HADCM3
- Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and
Research, Met Office, United Kingdom
35Prediction of Global Warming
- Figure shows the distribution of warming during
the late 21st century predicted by the HadCM3
climate model. The average warming predicted by
this model is 3.0 C.
36Predicted Changes of Temperature
37Temperature increase versus SRES
38Predicted Sea Level Rise
39Sea level rise versus SRES
40Regional Climate modeling
- An RCM is a tool to add small-scale detailed
information of future climate change to the
large-scale projections of a GCM. RCMs are full
climate models and as such are physically based
and represent most or all of the processes,
interactions and feedbacks between the climate
system components that are represented in GCMs. - They take coarse resolution information from a
GCM and then develop temporally and spatially
fine-scale information consistent with this using
their higher resolution representation of the
climate system. - The typical resolution of an RCM is about 50 km
in the horizontal and GCMs are typically 500300
km
41RCM - more realistically simulation
42RCM can simulate cyclones and hurricanes
43Steps of assessing impact of climate change
44Climate change modeling in Bangladesh
- PRECIS regional climate modeling is now running
in Climate change study cell at IWFM,BUET. - It takes more than 2 months to completely run an
experiment of 30 years. - Currently running baseline (1960-1990) and A1B
(1949-2100) scenarios over the Bangladesh region.
45Bangladesh region for PRECIS
- Grids 88 x 88
- Predict up to 3 hourly
- Needs more than 100 GB free space.
- Intel Pentium take one day to simulate 6 month.
- Uses LBC data from GCM (e.g. HadCM3)
- Data available for A2, B2, A1B scenarios.
46Predicting Rainfall
Output of PRECIS model using SRES A2 scenario
47Predicting Maximum Temperature
Output of PRECIS model using SRES A2 scenario
48Predicting Minimum Temperature
Output of PRECIS model using SRES A2 scenario
49Thank you