(indices for) climate extremes

55
(Indices for) Climate Extremes RA VI CLIPS workshop Erfurt, Germany, 12-18 June 2003 Albert Klein Tank KNMI, the Netherlands Acknowledgement: ECA&D-participants

Upload: adonia

Post on 13-Jan-2016

73 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

(Indices for) Climate Extremes. RA VI CLIPS workshop Erfurt, Germany, 12-18 June 2003 Albert Klein Tank KNMI, the Netherlands Acknowledgement: ECA&D-participants. Guide. How to define extremes and analyse changes in extremes? Indices for daily T and R extremes in ECA&D - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

(Indices for) Climate Extremes

RA VI CLIPS workshopErfurt, Germany, 12-18 June 2003

Albert Klein TankKNMI, the Netherlands

Acknowledgement: ECA&D-participants

Page 2: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Guide

1. How to define extremes and analyse changes in extremes?

2. Indices for daily T and R extremes in ECA&D

3. Observed trends in Europe, 1946-now

4. Indices and applications / climate services

5. Hands-on training using ClimDex (NCDC/NOAA)

[thanks Volker(H), Patricia &

Stefan]

Page 3: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Guide

1. How to define extremes and analyse changes in extremes?

2. Indices for daily T and R extremes in ECA&D

3. Observed trends in Europe, 1946-now

4. Indices and applications / climate services

5. Hands-on training using ClimDex (NCDC/NOAA)

Page 4: (Indices for) Climate Extremes
Page 5: (Indices for) Climate Extremes
Page 6: (Indices for) Climate Extremes
Page 7: (Indices for) Climate Extremes
Page 8: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

!

www.cred.be

Page 9: (Indices for) Climate Extremes
Page 10: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

WMO status of global climate in 2002

www.wmo.ch

Page 11: (Indices for) Climate Extremes
Page 12: (Indices for) Climate Extremes
Page 13: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.dwd.de/research/gpcc/

Page 14: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Guide

1. How to define extremes and analyse changes in extremes?

2. Indices for daily T and R extremes in ECA&D

3. Observed trends in Europe, 1946-now

4. Indices and applications / climate services

5. Hands-on training using ClimDex (NCDC/NOAA)

Page 15: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Recall from yesterday: ECA&D

Initiated by ECSN/EUMETNET Co-ordinated by KNMI (Voluntary) participation of RA VI countries Report and papers issued in 2002 New start in January 2003; next report in 2006 Now is the time to join!

Page 16: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

ECA&D website: www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca

Page 17: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

If you want your free copy,just send an e-mail to: [email protected]

Page 18: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Concept of ECA&D

Copies of daily data series collated at KNMI Core set of indices for extremes calculated using

fixed definitions (CCL/CLIVAR ETCCMD) Results presented at website and discussed with

participants Results are European input to worldwide analyses

(e.g. in preparation for IPCC 4AR) Results are also used by e.g. EEA

Page 19: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Data QC & Homogeneity

Participants perform QC on daily data submitted 4 common statistical tests applied on derived

monthly and annual series Only confident station series kept for further analyses Use of MASH for homogenisation of monthly series

explored in co-operation with HMS (Szentimrey) How to homogenize daily series is still an open

question

Page 20: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Temperature

Wijngaard et al., Int. J. of Climatol., 2003

Page 21: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Day-count indices of extremes

Page 22: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Day-count indices of extremes

Page 23: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Page 24: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Page 25: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Relation between relative trend bq/X required for 80% detection probability (5% level) and series length Nfor extreme events with average return period Tret

Klein Tank and Können, J. Climate (accepted)

21365~ retTXbq

6x

23~ NXbq

3x

Day-count indices of extremes

Page 26: (Indices for) Climate Extremes
Page 27: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

IPCC-TAR, Ch.2, Folland and Karl

Page 28: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

upper 10-ptile 1961-1990

the year 1996

lower 10-ptile1961-1990

Page 29: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

upper 10-ptile 1961-1990

the year 1996

lower 10-ptile1961-1990

“cold nights”

Page 30: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

upper 10-ptile 1961-1990

the year 1996

lower 10-ptile1961-1990

“cold nights”

“warm nights”

Page 31: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Page 32: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Page 33: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Page 34: (Indices for) Climate Extremes
Page 35: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Easterling et al. (BAMS, 2000) in IPCC-TAR

Linear trends in rainy season, last ~50 years

“Amplified” response of very wet days

Page 36: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Precipitation fraction due to very wet days “R95%tot”

1) Identify very wet days using a site specific threshold = 95th percentile at wet days in the 1961-90 period

2) Determine fraction of total precipitation in each year that is due to these days

3) Trend analysis in series of fractions

Page 37: (Indices for) Climate Extremes
Page 38: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Page 39: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Page 40: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Page 41: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Guide

1. How to define extremes and analyse changes in extremes?

2. Indices for daily T and R extremes in ECA&D

3. Observed trends in Europe, 1946-now

4. Indices and applications / climate services

5. Hands-on training using ClimDex (NCDC/NOAA)

Page 42: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

European temperature trends

Recent trends (1946-1999) in temperature extremes reflect the general warming: fewer cold extremes, more warm extremes

Averaged over all stations, the first decades of slight cooling saw narrowing of temperature distributions, whereas the last decades of strong warming saw widening of temperature distributions

IPCC-TAR: “lengthening of the freeze-free season in most

mid- and high latitude regions” “reduction in frequency of extreme low monthly

and seasonal average temperatures and smaller increase in frequency of extreme high average temperatures”

Page 43: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

European precipitation trends

Averaged over Europe, all indices of wet extremes saw increases between 1946-1999, although spatial trend coherence is low and many station trends are not significant

The index that represents the fraction of the annual amount due to very wet days gives a signal of disproportionate large changes in the extremes

IPCC-TAR: “2 to 4% increase in frequency of heavy events in

mid- and high latitudes of the NH” “in regions where total precipitation has

increased ... even more pronounced increases in heavy precipitation events”

Page 44: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

www.knmi.nl/samenw/eca/

Page 45: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Frich et al. (Clim. Res., 2002) in IPCC-TAR

Page 46: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

APN 2002 (Della-Marta, Haylock et al.) www.bom.gov.au/bmrc/csr/apn/

Trends 1961-2001

Page 47: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Caribbean workshop, Jamaica 2001 (Peterson et al., 2002, JGR)

Page 48: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Trends in 5-day rainfall total 1961-1990

Africa workshop, Casablanca 2001

Page 49: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

WMO/CCL

1. OPAG2: Monitor. and Anal. of Clim. Var. and Change

2.3 ETCCDMI; indices of daily to seasonal extremes in

observations and models

2. OPAG3: CLIPS

3.8 ET on Health-related climate indices and their use in early

warning systems (Jendritzky)

3.10 Rapporteur(s) on use of climate indices in various

application areas (Akentyeva/Khlebnikova)

Page 50: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Guide

1. How to define extremes and analyse changes in extremes?

2. Indices for daily T and R extremes in ECA&D

3. Observed trends in Europe, 1946-now

4. Indices and applications / climate services

5. Hands-on training using ClimDex (NCDC/NOAA)

Page 51: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Indices and applications/climate services

Indices give no answer to the question of the ‘return period’ concept under climate change conditions

Core set of indices designed for research (CCD), but clear impact relevance:

Physical limits like in “Fd” index: no. of frost days Growing season length, heating degree days, no.

of consecutive dry days Percentile thresholds -> local infrastructure is

designed to withstand local climate Indices for more common events can be regarded as

indicative for more extreme events causing disasters

Page 52: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Some final comments

ECA&D needs to include few ‘missing’ countries and consider more elements

ECA&D has to address the cause of observed changes/trends in subregions/countries, e.g. by studying the relation with variability in atmospheric circulation (NAO)

Need to consider more advanced analysis to supplement the ‘simple’ descriptive indices

For climate services:need to consider multi-element/complex indices and user/application-specific indices

Page 53: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Guide

1. How to define extremes and analyse changes in extremes?

2. Indices for daily T and R extremes in ECA&D

3. Observed trends in Europe, 1946-now

4. Indices and applications / climate services

5. Hands-on training using ClimDex (NCDC/NOAA)

Page 54: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

Hands-on training ClimDex

Need for standardized procedures and software ECA&D website lists internationally agreed definitions

of a basic set of core indices for extremes ClimDex software for calculating subset of core

indices written by Gleason/Peterson (NCDC/NOAA) ClimDex was used in WMO sponsored APN, Carribean

& African workshops on extremes Still recognize the need for more complete guide on

indices and software

Page 55: (Indices for) Climate Extremes

ClimDex: www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/wmo/ccl