Title: NOAA Climate Research: Climate Variability
1NOAA Climate Research Climate Variability
NOAA Research Overview
Climate Variability
California floods during 1998 El Nino
Drought in Great Plains, ca. 1935
2Mission-critical research
Mission-critical research
- Climate variability research is central to NOAAs
mission - to provide
- Environmental assessments
- and predictions
- Stewardship of marine resources
- Questions public and decision-makers ask NOAA
- Are we likely to see more or fewer storms with
El Niño? - How unusual is this drought, and what are its
causes? - What is the precipitation outlook for next
season?
3Support for Observing Systems
NOAAs global and regional observing systems are
crucial in supporting monitoring,
interpretations, and predictions of climate
variability.
4Relationships to USGCRP/CCRI
Relationships to USGCRP and CCRI
- USGCRP Draft Strategic Plan Objectives
- Climate Variability and Change
- Improve detection, attribution, and projections
of climate change. - Extend and improve predictions of major modes of
climate variability. - Assess the potential for changes in extreme
events at regional and local scales. - Characterize the mechanisms and estimate the
likelihood of abrupt climate change and expected
global and regional manifestations. - Improve effectiveness of interactions between
producers and users of climate information. - NOAA Research contributes to all five major
objectives.
5Relationships to USGCRP/CCRI
- CCRI some suggested key products
- Improved knowledge of natural vs. human caused
climate change. - Increased understanding of the potential for
extreme weather events as a result of climate
change. - New tools for integrated assessment and risk
management. -
Increased understanding of natural variability is
essential for reducing climate science
uncertainties, e.g. in key climate forcing
mechanisms, improving climate predictions,
attributing the causes for observed variations,
and assessing the potential for abrupt climate
change.
6Primary Research Foci
NOAA Climate Variability Priorities
- Major areas for near-term emphasis (next 2-5
years) - Improve predictions of major modes of climate
variability. - Increase understanding and capabilities to
predict short-term climate variability,
decadal-to-centennial variability, and their
inter-relationships. - Develop climate prediction capabilities for
high-impact events. - Establish quantitative estimates for risks of
abrupt change. - Develop monitoring/forecast products for regional
applications and risk reduction. -
7Core Activities
NOAA Core Components Climate Variability
Research
- Office of Global Programs
-
- Climate Dynamics and Experimental Prediction
(CDEP) - Climate Variability and Predictability Programs
(CLIVAR) - Global Water Cycle Program/GAPP
- Climate Change Data and Detection Program (CCDD)
- Climate Observations and Services Program (COSP)
- Weather-Climate Connection
- Study of Environmental Arctic Change (SEARCH)
- NOAA Research Laboratories
- NWS Climate Prediction Center - routine
monitoring/predictions
8CDEP
Climate Dynamics and Experimental Prediction
(CDEP)
- Objectives
- Contribute to the development and implementation
of a coupled ocean-land-atmosphere forecast
system based on dynamical models - Foster the development of new prediction and
application techniques - Focus
- Seasonal-to-interannual (S-I) prediction research
and applications - Method
- Sponsor a sustained critical mass of focused
applied research and development at a few
institutions - the Applied Research Centers
(ARCs). - Support the International Research Institute for
Climate Prediction (IRI), which provides
international climate assessments and predictions.
9CDEP
CDEP Product example
JAS
OND
Web tool enabling real-time comparisons of Sea
Surface Temperature (SST) anomaly forecasts by
different methods for three month seasons
July-September (JAS) October-December (OND)
10CDEP Deliverables
CDEP Deliverables
- Improved seasonal forecast systems through
advances in ocean data assimilation, seasonal
diagnostics and regional modeling capabilities. - Model-based approaches for developing climate
forecast products for regional applications and
risk reduction. - Decision support tools to enable quantitative
assessments of regional implications of global
climate variability on time scales from seasonal
to centennial. - International climate assessments and predictions
through the IRI.
11CLIVAR
Climate Variability and Predictability (CLIVAR)
- Objectives
- Understand mechanisms producing different
patterns of natural climate variations and their
global and regional manifestations. - Assess predictability of these climate modes
through observational and modeling studies. - Foci
- El Niño - Southern Oscillation (ENSO), Pacific
Decadal Oscillation (PDO), Arctic Oscillation
(AO), North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), Tropical
Atlantic Variability, and North American monsoon
system. - Abrupt climate change (Atlantic thermohaline
circulation). - Method
- Sponsor investigator research/observational
experiments in key regions CLIVAR-Pacific,
CLIVAR-Atlantic, CLIVAR-Americas. - Support interagency national (USCLIVAR) and
international programs. - Implement Climate Model Process Teams (CPTs) to
develop and improve climate model representations
of physical processes.
12Indian Ocean warming
Research example CLIVAR
Wintertime Response of Climate Model to warm
Indian Ocean
Temperature
Precipitation
Models responses to warm Indian Ocean reinforces
La Niña tendency for dry, warm conditions in SE
and along east coast, as well as part of the
northern plains. Probable contributing factor to
U.S. and SW Asia (Afghan) droughts.
13CLIVAR deliverables
CLIVAR Deliverables
- Improved climate prediction and projection
capability for global climate variability and
change on seasonal, interannual, decadal, and
centennial time scales. - Assessments of decadal predictability of climate
modes. - Accelerated improvements in modeling of physical
processes through the CPTs. Initial efforts
will focus on high priority areas cloud - water
vapor feedbacks, and Arctic snow and ice
feedbacks.
14Water Cycle Program
Global Water Cycle Program/GAPP
- Objectives
- Develop a capability to predict water cycle
variables - on monthly-to-seasonal time scales.
- Interpret climate predictions for water
management. - Assess risks to water systems through improved
- climate projections.
- Foci
- Impact of land surface processes (vegetation and
soil moisture) on predictability of summer
precipitation. - Initial focus on Americas, GEWEX Americas
Prediction Project (GAPP). - Method
- Sponsor investigator research/ modeling/
observational experiments. - Coordinated with larger national and
international programs in the Global Water and
Energy Cycle Experiment (GEWEX).
15Research example Water Cycle Program
Research Example Water Cycle Program
Impact of Land Surface Processes (Vegetation and
Soil Moisture) on predictability of summer
precipitation
16Water cycle Products/deliverables
Global Water Cycle/GAPP Deliverables
- Assessment of risks and vulnerabilities for river
basins arising from variations and changes in
the water cycle. - Improved experimental forecasts of precipitation
and water cycle extremes on seasonal time scales. - Reduced uncertainty in climate model projections
of long-term changes in the water cycle
components. - Closure of the water budget globally and
regionally over all time scales. - Integrated water cycle data products (satellite,
in-situ) such as an integrated water vapor
product. - Surface water cycle in-situ data sets and
assimilation products for the validation of
regional and globalclimate models.
17Climate Change Data and Detection
Climate Change Data and Detection (CCDD)
- Objectives
- Data set development and enhancement
- Detection and attribution (NOAA-DOE)
- Paleoclimatology (NOAA-NSF)
- Foci
- Produce time series for trends and variability.
- Characterize the range of natural variability.
- Establish linkages between paleo and instrumental
records. - Method
- Sponsor data set development.
- Support data recovery/data archeology efforts.