Title: European regional climate change and the PRUDENCE project
1European regional climate change and the PRUDENCE
project
Ole Bøssing Christensen DMI
2IPCC AR4 CH. 11 structure Jens H. Christensen
(CLA)
3Chapter 11 structure Regional Climate
ProjectionsLength60 printed pages including all
refs and figures, excl. FAQCLAs Christensen and
HewitsonLAs Busuioc, Chen, Gao, Held, Jones,
Kwon, Laprise, Magana, Mearns, Menendez,
Räisänen, Rinke, Kumar, Sarr, Whetton
Executive summary (1-2 pages) 11.1 Introduction
(3 pages) 11.1.1 The importance of regional
projections 11.1.2 Summary of the TAR 11.1.3
Developments since the TAR 11.2 Assessment of
Methods 11.2.1 Generating regional information (5
pages) 11.2.1.1 AOGCM results 11.2.1.2 High
resolution AGCMs 11.2.1.3 Nested RCMs 11.2.1.4
Statistical downscaling 11.2.1.5 Pattern scaling
of climate model simulations 11.2.1.6 Other
methods 11.2.1.7 Inter-comparison of
methods 11.2.2 Quantifying uncertainties (3-4
pages) 11.2.2.1 Sources of regional
uncertainty 11.2.2.2 Methodological
developments 11.3 Regional Projections (30
pages) Details on following slides 11.4
Conclusions and discussion (1 page)
4Chapter 11 structure Regional Climate
Projections
11.3 Regional Projections (30 pages) 11.3.1
Introduction to regions and relationship to WGII
regions (1 page) (Any sub-regions listed below
may be further sub-divided if authors feel this
is appropriate) (Length nominally 3-4 pages
each) 11.3.2 Africa Sahelian Africa Horn of
Africa / Arabian peninsula Equatorial
Africa Southern Africa 11.3.3 Mediterranean and
Europe Mediterranean Central and northern
Europe 11.3.4 Asia Central Asia South Asia East
Asia South east Asia / Maritime continent 11.3.5
North America North America 11.3.6 Latin
America Central America / Caribbean Northern
South America Southern South America 11.3.7
Australia and New Zealand Australia/New
Zealand 11.3.8 Polar Arctic Antarctic 11.3.9
Small Islands
5Chapter 11 structure Regional Climate
Projections
BOX 11.1 Summary of AOGCM regional projections
(2 pages) Consistent method across regions, to
include uncertainty Probabilistic statements
based on AOGCMs, in coordination with Ch 10 BOX
11.2 Common aspects of small scale climate
change High altitude (1 page) BOX 11.3 Common
aspects of small scale climate change Coastal
(1 page) Table 11.1 Extremes (1 page) Summary
table in collaboration with Ch 3,4,5,9,10
WGII FAQ
Proposed FAQ a) Does this report say anything
about what will happen in my back yard? b) Will
the weather become more extreme? c) How can I use
regional information that is uncertain? (Why are
regional projections useful?) d) Whats
downscaling? e) Whats wrong with extending
recent regional trends?
6IPCC WG1 schedule
7PRUDENCE participants
- Danish Meteorological Institute, Copenhagen, DK
- CINECA, Bologna, IT
- Météo-France/CNRM, Toulouse, FRA
- Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V.,
Weßling, GER - Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and
Research, Met Office, Bracknell, UK - Climate Research ETH (Eidsgenössische Technische
Hochschule), Zürich, CH - GKSS Research Center (Institute for Coastal
Research), Geesthacht, GER - Max-Planck-Institut für Meteorologie, Hamburg,
GER - Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological
Institute, Rossby Centre, Norrköping, SWE - Universidad Complutense, Madrid, SP
- Universidad Politecnica, Madrid, SP
- International Centre for Theoretical Physics,
Trieste, IT - Danish Institute of Agricultural Sciences,
Foulum, DK - Risø National Laboratory, System Analysis Dept.,
DK - University of Fribourg, CH
- Finnish Environmental Institute, Helsinki, FIN
- University of Reading, UK
- University of Lund, SWE
- Centre International de Recherche sur
lEnvironnement et le Développement, SMASH,
Paris, FRA
8PRUDENCE objectives
- A series of high resolution climate change
scenarios for 2071-2100 for Europe - Characterize level of confidence and variability
related to model formulations and climate
natural/internal variability - Assess the uncertainty in European regional
scenarios resulting from model formulation - Quantitatively assess the risks arising from
changes in regional climate over Europe, and
estimate changes in extremes like heat waves,
flooding and wind storms, by providing a robust
estimation of the likelihood and magnitude of the
changes - Demonstrate the value of the wide-ranging
scenarios by applying them to impacts models
focusing on effects on adaptation and mitigation
strategies - Assess socio-economic and policy related
decisions for which such improved scenarios could
be beneficial - Disseminate the results of PRUDENCE widely
9A modelling system for detailed regional
scenarios the PRUDENCE method
Coupled GCM (300km atmosphere)
SST/sea-ice change from coupled GCM
Observed SST/sea-ice
150km global atmospheric GCM
12-50km RCM for relevant region
10Quasi-ensemble probabilities
11Precipitation change sources of uncertainty
C. Frei, ETH
95-confidence internal variability
12Precipitation change sources of uncertainty
OBS Slightly different values since the changes
in precipitation have been scaled to a 3 K change
of the global mean temperature
13Probabilistic precipitation change
14Variability sources in sub-areas
1 British Isles
M. Déqué, Météo-France
2 Iberian peninsula
3 France
4 Central Europe
5 Scandinavia
6 Alps
7 Mediterranean
8 Eastern Europe
15Temperature change sources of uncertainty
DJF
Depends on driving model
Also on RCM and scenario
16Precipitation change sources of uncertainty
DJF
Driving GCM and RCM
RCM quite important
17Baltic water balance
187 RCMs 50 km - 2 RCMs 25 km A2
199 RCMs (2 GCMs) 50 km - 2 RCMs 25 km A2
209 RCMs (2 GCMs) 50 km - 2 RCMs 25 km A2
- 3 RCMs 50 km B2
21PRUDENCE work on extremes
- Better understanding of how European weather and
climate extremes are likely to change - Heat waves
-
- Precipitation heavy and low
- Wind storms and storm surges
-
22Precipitation extremes
23Changes in HIRHAM 5-year return levels
5-day Winter precipitation
Summer 1-day precipitation
HIRHAM
? Increases over Europe except for decreases in
south in summer
24 Sensitivity due to GCM and RCM resolution
ECHAM
HC 50km
HC 25km
25JAS precipitation mm/day Resolution 50km
26JAS precipitation mm/day Resolution 25km
27JAS precipitation mm/day Resolution 12km
28Wind extremes
29 change in 90th percentile of 10-metre wind speed
RCAO
? Increased wind speed intensity in core of
Europe north of Alps
30A2 changes in max winter surge heights
HIRHAM
Changes (meters) in max surge heights from
HadAM3H / HIRHAM.
? Largest change of 0.3 metres on coasts near
German bight
31Conclusions
- Warming of near-surface temperatures
- DJF west/east gradient with strongest warming in
the east - JJA north/south gradient with strongest warming
in the south - Changes in precipitation
- DJF mainly due to driving GCM but also due to
RCM - JJA dryer conditions in all but northern Europe
- Large ensemble of simulations allows for the
generation of probabilistic regional climate
scenarios - Uncertainty of temperature changes
- DJF mainly due to driving GCM
- JJA also due to RCM and scenario
- Uncertainty of changes in precipitation
- DJF mainly due to driving GCM but also due to
RCM - JJA to a large extent due to RCM
32Conclusions
- Significant changes of the discharge into the
Baltic - Increased magnitude due to enhanced winter
precipitation - Earlier peak due to earlier snow melt
33Conclusions
- Heat waves increased frequency, intensity, and
duration of summer heat waves - Increase in interannual variability of
temperature Summer 2003 could become more likely - Heavy precipitation general increase except
over S. Europe in summer. Central Europe will
have less rainy days, but probably larger
intensities - Wind storms increased intensity and frequency
of high wind speed events in winter - Storm surges increase in maximum storm surge
level of up to 0.3 metres especially near the
German Bight.
34(No Transcript)
35Sensitivity of response to RCM
Winter precipitation
Summer precipitation
- More consistent 10 increase in winter
- Strong sensitivity to RCM formulation in summer
HC models have so much drying that intensity
increase is overshadowed
36Mean fields
37Precipitation change - DJF
38Precipitation change - JJA
39Near-surface temperature change - DJF
40Near-surface temperature change - JJA
417 RCMs 50 km A2
42Methodologies
43Temperature extremes
44Number of days/yr gt 30C
1961-90 HIRHAM CTL
2071-2100 HIRHAM A2
? Northward shift of heat waves e.g. Paris 9
days/yr ? 50 days/yr
45Percentage change in 99th percentile
Fraction of change left after correcting for the
change in the location (median)
HIRHAM
After correcting for the change in the location
and scale (median and IQR)
? Changes in variance have a big impact on high
extremes
46Schär et al. (2003)
47Schär et al. (2003)
48Uncertainty due to emission scenario
Winter 5-day maxima increase related but smaller
increases in means similar differences between
RCMs, GCMs, scenarios, natural variability. Summer
1-day maxima increase related decrease in
means largest differences due to RCM. Smaller
changes for B2 than for A2.
49Change in mean sea-level pressure
CHRM
? More cyclonic low pressure conditions in winter
50Schär et al. (2003)
51Relative changes in heat wave indices
Duration
Intensity
Frequency
Number
HIRHAM
? Increased frequency, intensity and duration of
heat waves
52- Regional Template
- Extremes, thresholds, land cover change, air
quality (as there will be global projections in
Ch7), and other effects to be folded into the
discussion (coordinate with Ch 8,10 WGII) - Coordination with WGII time frames
(2020,2050,2080) where possible - Key regional processes (current climate, with
schematic) - Regional simulation skill (Ch 8 coordination)
- Projections (begin with synthesis of PCMDI
results regional map, followed by downscaled
information where available) - Cross-reference projections to context of Ch
3,4,5,6 WGII Ch 1. - Uncertainties (consistent terminology)