Title: Seattle Public Library Talk
1Decadal Trends in Extreme Precipitation, Winds,
and Snowpack over the Northwest. Cliff
Mass University of Washington
2There has been a lot discussion in the media and
in some of the literature suggesting that western
U.S. extreme precipitation events have already
increased in intensity or will soon increase
under anthropogenic global warming
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4Press Advisory National Wildlife
Federation November 17, 2009 Contacts XXXX
(name removed) YYYY (you know her!) Senior
Environmental Policy Specialist Climate
Scientist National Wildlife Federation, Pacific
Region National Wildlife Federation Global
warming is exacerbating extremely heavy rainfall
events, and recent climate change modeling
suggests that these pineapple express storms are
no exception. Heavier rainfall events combined
with significant snowmelt in midwinter is just
what the Pacific Northwest should expect from
global warming, said Dr. YYYY, climate
scientist, National Wildlife Federation. .
Recent data1 suggests that as a result of
climate change, the largest storms (i.e., those
that are most likely to cause flooding) will
trend toward producing increasingly larger
quantities of precipitation.
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6Others Have Suggested We Are Now Experiencing
Extremes in Low Northwest Snowpack and That
Anthropogenic Warming is A Significant Cause
7XXXXXXXXX
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9And some have suggested that cold season storms,
like our big windstorms, will also get stronger
There is also evidence of an increase in the
intensity of storms in both the mid- and
high-latitude areas of the Northern Hemisphere,
State X
10This talk will suggest that some of these claims
are inconsistent with observations and the latest
modeling results.The truth is more complex and
nuanced.
11Our credibility is at stake
- Anthropogenic global warming IS a serious problem
that must be dealt with. - But by claiming excessive impacts on extremes we
undermine our credibility and our ability to
enhance societys efforts to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions and to precede with
adaptation/mitigation.
12Extreme Precipitation over the NWThere are
several studies in the literature
13Trends of 7-day extreme (1 yr or gt) 1931-963
and 1-day extremes were similar
Kunkel, Andsager, and Easterling, J. of Climate,
1999
Little trend in the NW. Suggesting of small
increases in western WA and decreases in western
Oregon (tail indicates significant at 5 level)
14When it Rains it Pours (not reviewed) Used the
Kunkel Approach for 1-day rainfall (1948-2006)
- More over Wa, LESS over Oregon, little trend, N.
CA.
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16Are there trends in major precipitation events?
- Examined top 20, 40, 60 two-day precipitation
events at stations along the coast for 1950-2008.
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18Trends on Unregulated Rivers1950-2009 Max
Annual Daily Discharge
19Most modeling studies are inconclusive about
whether global warming has influenced trends of
extreme precipitation during the past century.
20- They ran contemporary dynamical downscaling
(1970-2007) - Hadley regional model forced by Hadley Center
GCM - WRF forced by ECHAM5 GCM
21The lack of correspondence between observed and
simulated trends for extreme precipitation likely
results from the dominance of natural variability
over anthropogenic trends during the period
1970-2007.
22Nearly are all heavy Northwest precipitation
events are associated with the Pineapple
Express (a.k.a. atmospheric rivers)
- A relatively narrow current of warm, moist
air from the subtropicsoften starting near or
just north of Hawaii.
23Atmospheric Rivers
- Atmospheric rivers are closely associated with
the jet stream (on its southern side) - Most General Circulation Models suggest the jet
stream will move north and weaken under global
warming. - Thus, the atmospheric rivers may well move
northward. - Could our region thus experience a DECREASE in
extreme precipitation?
24Regional and Global Climate Simulations Indicate
Substantial Uncertainty for Extreme Precipitation
over the Northwest Under Global Warming
- Some even suggest a decline in winter
precipitation
25DJF
Simulated seasonal precipitation changes (mm/day)
from 1989-1999 to 2045-2055 from the ECHAM5- MM5
regional model for a) DJF b) MAM c) JJA and d) SON
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27Other Research on Future Precipitation Trends
over the NW No Agreement
- Chen et al. (2003) examined the impacts of
doubling CO2 using MM5 and RegCM2 regional models
to downscale the CCSM GCM simulation. - Found an increase in average precipitation over
central California and a decline over the Pacific
Northwest.
28Studies
- Kim (2005) used the MAS regional model
downscaled from the HadCM2 GCM for 19902000 and
204049. Found the largest increases in extreme
precipitation over northern California and
Oregon, with little trend over Washington and
southern California. - Tebaldi et al. (2006) examined nine general
circulation models found a general increase of
extreme precipitation over the NW, with the
magnitude of the positive trend increasing to the
north, while decreasing or constant intensity was
predicted over central and southern California.
29Studies
- Duffy et al. (2006) used four regional climate
models nested within two global oceanatmosphere
climate models, finding that the spatial
distributions of precipitation vary substantially.
30Extreme Precipitation Bottom Line
- The uncertainty of what will happen over the NW
is huge. - Simplistic talk about warming temperatures,
causing more water vapor resulting in more
extreme precipitation here should be avoided.
31 West Coast Windstorms
- Increasing number of major windstorms from
northern Oregon into southern BC - Decreasing numbers to the south.
32West Coast Windstorms
- Northwest windstorms are closely associated with
the strength and position of the jet stream. - If the jet stream weakens and moves northward,
what will happen to our winter storms? - Will the decline in windstorms over the southern
PNW move northward?
33Snowpack Little Hint of Decline Due to
Anthropogenic Warming
341950-2000
35Washington-wide snowpack since 1950, Relative to
1971-2000 normal
Snowpack in usual maximum month
36 Washington-wide snowpack period of
record, Relative to 1971-2000 normal
Snowpack in usual maximum month
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38April 1 Snowpack
39Remove Natural Variability
Slow steady decline over the past 80 yearsno
indication of anthropogenic global warming signal
40The NW is a location in which AGW temperature
effects will be weaker and delayed
1976-2007 temperature trends
41Conclusions
- Changes in weather extremes over the Northwest
have been highly heterogeneous, increasing some
places and decreasing in others. - Natural variability appears to be dominant.
- There is no compelling evidence that
anthropogenic warming has had any influence on
changes in Northwest weather extremes.
42Conclusions
- The future impact of anthropogenic global warming
on NW extremes is highly uncertain. - It may well be that extremes in precipitation and
winds could decline over the NW under global
warming. - We must be very careful in communicating such
uncertainties to our user communities.
43The End
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4560-yearTrendsfor Top-60Events
Individual Stations
Two-degree bands