Title: Extreme Weather: Climate Change and Variability
1Extreme Weather Climate Change and Variability
Greg Holland
Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division,
ESSL National Center for Atmospheric Research
NCAR is Sponsored by NSF
2Hypothesis
- Weather extremes respond to climate variability
and change at much higher amplitude than the
general weather-system population. - Extreme weather may thus provide a bellwether
for climate change
3Summary
- Extreme Weather Variations with Climate
- Application of Extreme Value Theory
- Example Hurricanes in the North Atlantic
4Extreme Weather Variations
- IPCC
- It is likely that heat waves have become more
frequent over most land areas. WGI 3.8, SPM - It is likely that the frequency of heavy
precipitation events (or proportion of total
rainfall from heavy falls) has increased over
most areas. WGI 3.8, 3.9, SPM - There is observational evidence of an increase in
intense tropical cyclone activity in the North
Atlantic since about 1970, and suggestions of
increased intense tropical cyclone activity in
some other regions where concerns over data
quality are greater.
5Extreme Tropical Cyclone Variations
Developed from a homogeneous satellite data
set Elsner et al (2008)
6Cat 5 Atlantic Hurricanes
Change from Long-Term Mean
Amplitude extends well beyond any reasonable
issues with data errors
7Extreme Value Theory
We utilize the Weibull distribution for which the
CDF and PDF are
Where parameters a and b determine the scale and
the shape, respectively.
8Application to Atlantic Hurricanes
PDF (Normalized, HURDAT Smoothed)
CDF with Weibull fit a35, b1.9
9Scale and Shape Variations
Shape Change b3.5
Original a40, b3
Scale Change a45
Scale, a, is related to the population mean and
variance and shape, b, almost exclusively to the
inverse of the variance (SD a a/b).
10Hazard Rate Function
We define a Hazard (Failure) Rate Function by
(Hillier and Lieberman, 1986) For the Weibull
distribution this becomes For b1 the hazard
rate is independent of x, for bgt1 (lt1) it
increases (decreases) with x. (For Atlantic
cyclones b1.9).
11Excedent Probability
- We are interested in the probability of exceeding
a threshold event, Exgtc, - The excedent likelihood decreases as the event
becomes rarer (c/a increases), and/or the
population less variable (b increases),.
12Excedant Sensitivity
- Following Katz and Brown (1992), we define the
relative sensitivity of P(Exgtc) to the scale
and shape parameters as
13Impact of Changes to the Scale and Shape
Parameters
220
0
230
380
141980-1994 vs 1994-2007
Comparing 1980-1994 with 1994-2007, a mean
intensity change of 3-4 m/s and a SD change of
2-3 m/s leads to an increased probability of Cat
5 hurricanes of 3 times! This is equivalent to
moving from 1 Cat 5 every 3-5 years to 1 every
year.
15Comparisons
Change 1980/1994 to 1995/2007
16Potential Impact of Climate Change
- Assume a mean wind intensity increase of 2-3 m/s
per oC global ocean warming, then - Cat 5 hurricane frequency increases by 70 for
each oC warming - Assume in addition that the variance also
increase, say, by 2-3 m/s in standard deviation,
then - Cat 5 hurricane frequency increases by 150 for
each oC warming! - The mean and SD changes are below the current
observational resolution.
17Relationship a, b with PE69
18Relationship a, b with PE69
Strong hysteresis over 1.5 cycles covering 70
years
19Relationship SSTEA-GM with PE69
20Consistency with Wave Accumulation
Decreased Shear
Strengthened Easterlies
Weakened Easterlies
Max SST Anomaly
East Pacific warming generates local Walker
Circulation
21Summary
- Extreme value theory predicts that changes in
extremes will be gtgtgt than those in the mean or
variance (Hypothesis 1 is confirmed) - The expected changes can be determined with some
objectivity, given a knowledge of the current
climate distribution and of the expected mean and
variance changes - Some interesting features of N. Atlantic changes
emerge - Hypothesis 2 is worthy of serious consideration
in climate-change analysis - Extreme weather may thus provide a bellwether
for climate change