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Transcript
CSIRO OCEANS AND ATMOSPHERE
High-resolution climate
projections for the
Philippines: Methodology
Jack Katzfey
14 December 2015
GEF Grant No. TF096649
Citation
Katzfey JJ (2015) High-resolution projections for the Philippines: Methodology. CSIRO, Australia.
Copyright and disclaimer
© 2015 CSIRO To the extent permitted by law, all rights are reserved and no part of this publication
covered by copyright may be reproduced or copied in any form or by any means except with the written
permission of CSIRO.
Important disclaimer
CSIRO advises that the information contained in this publication comprises general statements based on
scientific research. The reader is advised and needs to be aware that such information may be incomplete
or unable to be used in any specific situation. No reliance or actions must therefore be made on that
information without seeking prior expert professional, scientific and technical advice. To the extent
permitted by law, CSIRO (including its employees and consultants) excludes all liability to any person for
any consequences, including but not limited to all losses, damages, costs, expenses and any other
compensation, arising directly or indirectly from using this publication (in part or in whole) and any
information or material contained in it.
Acknowledgment
GEF Grant No TF096649 of the Philippine Climate Change Adaptation Project (PhilCCAP) funded this
workshop.
1
Introduction
Climate change has been recognized as one of the greatest challenges facing our planet, not only for the
environment, but also for economic development, with changes occurring in the physical, ecological and socioeconomic systems. Likely outcomes are changes to weather patterns and sea-level rise, with impacts on ecosystems,
water resources, agriculture, forests, fisheries, industries, urban and rural settlements, energy usage, tourism and
health (IPCC, 2013).
The Philippines are located in South East Asia, with a tropical monsoon climate and a coastline of more than 35000
km. It is one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world, with most of the disasters related to weather and
climate. Consequently, climate change and climate variability are likely to pose increasing threats to its inhabitants
in the near and long-term future.
Regional climate models (RCMs) have become important tools for the prediction of climate variability and change in
the regions of southern and eastern Asia. In a study using the Conformal Cubic Atmospheric Model (CCAM) nested
within the 2.5 degree NCEP reanalyses, Nguyen and McGregor (2009) demonstrated that the model could simulate
the main features of the Asian monsoon, a major influence on weather and climate in the Philippines, including
seasonal shifts of the precipitation throughout the year.
To assist the Philippines in its efforts to better understand the impacts of climate change and prioritise its adaptation
measures, the detailed climate change projections at 10 km resolution produced for the High-resolution Climate
Projections for Vietnam (HCPV) project (Katzfey et al., 20141) were extracted for the Philippine region. The
stretched-grid of the downscaling model used in the HCPV project allowed for the extraction of the projections over
the Philippines (see section 2.3 for more description of the downscaling process and grid).
To address the inherent uncertainty in future climate change projections, a range of global climate models (GCMs)
and emission scenarios were used for the downscaled simulations, as well as analysis techniques such as ensemble
statistics to ensure that a broad range of plausible changes to the climate was evaluated.
The aims of this project were to:






Incorporate new climate science information released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Improve understanding of potential future climate changes in the region with reduced uncertainty.
Integrate past and current research for a more complete assessment of the potential effects of climate
change.
Produce regional climate change projections to help identify the people and sectors at risk at the local
level, where most impacts are felt.
Further climate science research and build capacity in the Philippines.
Provide information necessary for appropriate planning and investment to adapt to climate change.
Data analysed for the project were based on output from six of the latest available GCMs from the Coupled Model
Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) that were selected on the basis of their ability to realistically capture
current climate and climate features such as El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) that have a large influence on the
region. The global data was dynamically downscaled using a stretched-grid RCM to produce high-resolution
simulations for current and future climate. Simulations were performed for historical (1970-2005) and future (to
2099) time periods using two representative concentration pathways: RCP4.5 and RCP 8.5 (Meinshausen et al. 2011).
1
Project data and reports can be accessed at www.vnclimate.vn. The HPCV project was funded by Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT)
and carried out by partners from the Institute of Meteorology, Hydrology and Climate Change (IMHEN) and the Hanoi University of Science – Vietnam National
University (HUS) in Vietnam and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Australia.
Section 2 gives details of the downscaling methodology for the ensemble simulations of future climate for the
Philippines. Section 2.1 gives describes the procedures used for selection of the six GCMs to be dynamically
downscaled to finer resolution. Section 2.2 describes the methodology used to correct the biases of the GCM Sea
Surface Temperatures (SSTs) before they are used to drive the RCMs, followed by a description of the two-step
downscaling procedure in Section 2.3. A summary is presented in Section 3.
2
Methodology
This section describes the methods used to provide high-resolution climate projection information for the
Philippines. GCMs provide the best available tools for simulating large-scale future climates based on various
greenhouse gas and aerosol emission scenarios, since they are able to couple atmosphere and ocean systems and
incorporate their complex linked interactions over the entire Earth system. However, their resolution (approximately
100-200 km) is too coarse to capture regional impacts of climate change, especially in areas of complex topography,
coastline and land use, and for areas that are smaller than the grid box size of the models, such as islands, where
local effects and land-sea interactions are of great importance. For this reason, the GCM data was dynamically
downscaled to higher resolution using CCAM.
The two approaches to downscale GCM data are dynamical or statistical. Dynamical downscaling, sometimes called
regional climate modelling, uses an atmospheric model forced with inputs from the global model to simulate the
regional climate. Statistical downscaling typically applies relationships between large-scale variables and the local
climate, derived from the current climate, to downscale from the global models. Using dynamical downscaling, all
variables are consistent with each other. With statistical downscaling, the relationship between variables may not
be preserved and the approach assumes that the statistical relationships used do not change in the future. In this
project only the dynamical downscaling approach is used.
In order to capture the range of possible futures, multiple GCMs are downscaled to provide ensemble climate
simulations. This attempts to address the variations in climate simulations due to variations in each model’s internal
dynamics and parameterisations and helps to capture a broader range of plausible climate futures.
The process of producing the high-resolution simulations for the Philippines is outlined below. All the global and
regional climate simulations were driven by observed changes in greenhouse gases and aerosols until 2005 and then
a range of possible scenarios were used until 2099. Some GCM simulations included direct and indirect effects of
aerosols, some included ozone depletion, and some included volcanic aerosols and solar forcing (IPCC, 2013).
2.1 GCM selection for downscaling
Downscaling the results of all available CMIP5 GCMs is computationally too expensive at present. However, to
address the inherent uncertainty in climate projects due to differing model physics and parameterisations, as well as
assumptions made about climate and human behaviour and to capture a plausible range of the climate projections,
ensemble simulations are needed. For this project, data from a subset of six different GCMs provide a compromise
between computational costs and the provision of a range of different climate change signals that arise from modelto-model variations. To determine which of the 24 GCMs available from CMIP5 at the time of this study to
downscale, their performance at simulating current climate was ranked, based on three criteria:



Ability to capture observed spatial patterns and trends of atmospheric variables such as mean sea level
pressure, temperature and precipitation;
Ability to simulate oceanic features such as ENSO, which have a large impact on climate variability;
Preference for models that capture the most probable/realistic range of changes in climate variables such as
temperature and precipitation, to address the uncertainty inherent in climate modelling. Since only the change
signal is used in these simulations, it is desirable to have different amounts and patterns of warming in the SSTs
from the GCMs chosen. A sample of the warming patterns projected by the GCMs chosen for the end of the
century with RCP 8.5 is presented in Figure. 1.
The six GCMs chosen to be downscaled to fine resolution for this project, along with an assessment of their
strengths and limitations, can be found in Table 1.
2.2 Correction of GCM SSTs
GCMs simulate the global climate reasonably well, but still have biases and do not simulate inter-annual variability in
the atmospheric and oceanic system (e.g. ENSO) realistically (IPCC, 2013). To improve the dynamical downscaling
results, the SSTs from the GCMs can be corrected before being used by RCMs. CCAM, which requires only input of
SSTs and sea ice concentrations (SIC) from the host GCM can use this technique. Limited area models cannot easily
use this approach since they require lateral boundary atmospheric data from GCMs. The deficiencies or biases of
GCMs, due to differing model configurations and physics, if not corrected before downscaling can cause unrealistic
behaviour of the RCM simulations and thereby affect the reliability of the climate projections.
In previous downscaling simulations with CCAM, a simple correction of the climatological monthly means was
applied to GCM SSTs (Katzfey et al., 2009; Nguyen et al., 2012). This method preserved the inter-annual (year-toyear) variation of GCM SSTs, and therefore any errors in variability of SSTs from GCMs, such as those related to
ENSO, were also imposed upon the downscaled simulations. Therefore, a newly-developed method that corrects
both the mean and interannual variability of monthly GCM SSTs was applied in this project. As a result, the regional
model will have SSTs with no climatological bias for the current climate and with more realistic amplitude and spatial
pattern of the interannual variability. Consequently, while the climate change signals of the GCMs are preserved in
the downscaled simulations, the location of the ENSO variability, particularly over the tropical Pacific, is more
realistic. However, it should be noted that the frequency of the ENSO variability simulated by the GCMs was not
adjusted.
The GCM SSTs are corrected to match the Optimum Interpolation SST dataset Version 2 (Reynolds et al., 2007),
which contains daily SST and SIC data on a 0.25 longitude by 0.25 latitude grid for the period 1982 (September) to
2011. The dataset is based on measurements conducted by NOAA’s polar orbiting Advanced Very High Resolution
Radiometer (AVHRR) meteorological satellites2 in combination with buoy data and ship measurements. Since the
GCM data are available as monthly averages, both SST and SIC daily data are averaged monthly for the computation
of the bias correction. Additionally, prior to correction the model SSTs and SIC are interpolated to match the
observation grid.
In the bias correction method, the following steps are conducted for each month of the year separately (see Katzfey
et al., 2009, Katzfey et al., 2014 and Hoffmann et al., 2015 for more details of the bias correction procedure):
1. The SST data are de-trended for 30-year backward running trends.
2. The standard deviation (SD), which is a measure of the year-to-year variability of the de-trended 30year period, is calculated.
3. The monthly anomalies are corrected using the ratio of the observed SD to the model SD.
4. Monthly biases are then calculated and subtracted, giving the bias- and variance-corrected SSTs.
Problems due to differences between SIC distribution in the GCMs and in the observations are avoided in the bias
correction by reducing the correction near the ice edges as a function of SIC. In addition, the correction is linearly
reduced from the equator to 50N and 50S. This means that the full variance correction is applied at the equator,
but no variance correction is applied north of 50N or south of 50S. This step is necessary to avoid problems arising
from the possible shift of strong ocean currents such as the Gulf Stream in a future climate. When omitting this step,
the change signal can be quite different between corrected and uncorrected SSTs for those regions.
As an example, Figure 2 shows the uncorrected and corrected July SSTs from the ACCESS1.0 GCM as well as the
observed SSTs in the tropical Pacific for the period 1982-2011. As intended, the GCM SSTs are very close to the
observed SSTs after the correction. Also the SD is very similar to the observations, especially close to the equator.
2.3 Dynamical downscaling methodology
A range of possible methodologies can be used to downscale global climate information (see for example McGregor,
1997 and Katzfey, 2013). In this study, one regional model was used to dynamically downscale global climate model
2
See http://noaasis.noaa.gov/NOAASIS/ml/avhrr.html for more information on AVHRR satellites.
information. The following section describes the method used to produce the dynamically-downscaled simulations.
The process had two steps:
1.
Global simulations with initial input from six CMIP5 GCMs (see section 2.1 for details of the selection process)
were completed using CCAM with a uniform grid.
2.
These global simulations were dynamically downscaled to fine resolution, using the RCM CCAM with variableresolution in order to produce simulations of the current climate or future climate at regional scale.
The process is known as dynamical downscaling, because the equations on which the model is based explicitly
simulate atmospheric dynamical and thermodynamical processes. This is in contrast to other methods, such as
statistical ones, that are based on statistical relationships between large-scale and small-scale variables.
CCAM, a global model, requires only SST and SIC data from the GCMs as inputs to drive the model.
The resolutions of the GCM and RCM grids, emission scenarios used, and time periods for the various simulations
varied due to technical and computer resource constraints. For details of the set-up of the downscaled simulations,
see the following sections and Error! Reference source not found..
2.3.1 CONFORMAL CUBIC ATMOSPHERIC MODEL (CCAM)
CCAM is a variable-resolution global atmospheric model that has been developed at CSIRO (McGregor 2005b;
McGregor and Dix 2001, 2008). It includes a fairly comprehensive set of physical parameterisations to represent subgrid scale atmospheric processes that are not directly simulated by the model. The updated GFDL parameterisations
for long-wave and short-wave radiation (Schwarzkopf and Ramaswamy 1999; Freidenreich and Ramaswamy, 1999)
are employed, with interactive cloud distributions determined by the liquid- and ice-water scheme of Rotstayn
(1997). The simulations also include the scheme of Rotstayn and Lohmann (2002) for the direct and indirect effects
of sulphate aerosols. The model employs a stability-dependent boundary-layer scheme based on Monin–Obukhov
similarity theory (McGregor et al., 1993). The CABLE biosphere-atmosphere exchange model is included, as
described by Kowalczyk et al. (2006), having six layers for soil temperatures, six layers for soil moisture (solving the
Richards equation), and three layers for snow. The cumulus convection scheme uses mass-flux closure as described
by McGregor (2003), and includes downdrafts and detrainment. CCAM also includes a simple parameterisation to
enhance SSTs under conditions of low wind speed and large downward solar radiation, affecting the calculation of
surface fluxes.
The dynamical formulation of CCAM includes a number of distinctive features. The model is non-hydrostatic, with
two-time-level semi-implicit time differencing. It employs semi-Lagrangian horizontal advection with bi-cubic
horizontal interpolation (McGregor, 1993; McGregor, 1996), in conjunction with total-variation-diminishing vertical
advection. The grid is un-staggered, but the winds are transformed reversibly to/from C-staggered locations
before/after the gravity wave calculations, providing improved dispersion characteristics (McGregor, 2005a). Threedimensional Cartesian representation is used during the calculation of departure points, and also for the advection
or diffusion of vector quantities. CCAM may be employed in quasi-uniform mode or in stretched mode by utilising
the Schmidt (1977) transformation. Further details of the model dynamical formulation are provided by McGregor
(2005b).
Step 1: CCAM at 50 km resolution
For these simulations, CCAM was first set up on a C192 grid (with six panels each of 192 x 192 grid points) having a
quasi-uniform horizontal resolution of about 50 km over the whole globe (Fig. 3, top) and 27 vertical levels. It was
run for 130 model years (1970–2099) forced by the bias- and variance-corrected SSTs (as described in Section 2.2)
from each of the six selected CMIP5 GCMs. From 1970 to 2005, historical values of greenhouse gases and aerosols
were used. From 2006 to 2099, two sets of simulation were completed using the greenhouse gases and aerosol
emissions specified by both the RCP 4.5 (moderate) and RCP 8.5 (high) emission scenarios.
Step 2: CCAM at 10 km resolution
The outputs from Step 1 were further downscaled using CCAM to 10 km resolution over Vietnam, utilizing the C96
stretched grid shown in Fig. 3 (lower plot) and Fig. 4. The land-sea mask, terrain and soil type are also shown in Fig.
4. To provide a further degree of consistency with the host CCAM simulation, a scale-selective digital filter (Thatcher
and McGregor, 2009) was applied every 6 hours to replace selected broad-scale (with length-scale of about 8000 km)
fields of the high-resolution CCAM simulation with the corresponding fields of the 50 km CCAM simulation. The filter
was applied to the MSLP, moisture, temperature, and wind components above pressure-sigma level 0.9 (about 1 km
above the surface).
The model output was saved four times per day at 00, 06, 12 and 18 GMT. These data have been post-processed by
interpolating them onto a 0.5 grid for the 50 km simulations, and a 0.1 grid for the 10 km simulations for easier
interpretation. Many prognostic and diagnostic fields are available for impact assessment studies at local to regional
scales.
3
Conclusions
Six CMIP5 GCMs were dynamically downscaled using the stretched-grid RCM CCAM to about 25 km resolution over
the Philippines from 1970-2099. Two representational concentration pathways were used: RCP 4.5 (moderate) and
RCP8.5 (high). Results from these high-resolution downscaled simulations were used to produce the ensemble
climate projections presented in Katzfey, 2015.
The downscaling methodology used in this study is different to that typically used by other downscaling groups in
that no atmospheric information from the GCMs was used. Instead, the SSTs from the GCMs were corrected so that
the monthly mean SSTs match the observed SSTs. In addition, the interannual variance of SSTs in the GCMs was
corrected to match the observed variance. These corrected SSTs and the SIC were then used to drive CCAM globally
with an even resolution at 50 km resolution. The 50 km global simulation data were then used to spectrally nudge
the atmosphere of a stretched-grid version of CCAM at high resolution. Simulations were performed from 19702005 using historical values of greenhouse gases and aerosol emissions. From 2005 to 2099, greenhouse gases and
aerosol emissions as specified by both the moderate (RCP 4.5) and high RCP 8.5) representational concentration
pathways.
The downscaling approach used in this study has several advantages. First, by correcting the biases in the SSTs from
the GCMs for the current climate, the downscaled simulations will provide a more realistic current climate.
Secondly, by using a stretched grid RCM, issues related to the specification of lateral boundaries was avoided.
Finally, by using a range of GCMs and two emission scenarios (RCPs), an ensemble of projections were produced in
order to provide a range of possible futures.
As with all climate projection, the uncertainty related to future greenhouse and aerosol concentrations is an
important concern. Changes in technology, legislation, and human behaviour may have large impacts on future
climate.. Since large ensemble projections capture a broader range of climate change signals, using only a limited
set (six) of GCMs to downscale may limit the range of possible futures in the simulations. Use of only one RCM, with
its inherent biases, may also limit the full range of possible futures to be considered. For this reason, the results of
this study must be interpreted with understanding of the assumptions made in producing them.
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Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA, 1535 pp
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______, H.B. Gordon, I.G. Watterson, M.R. Dix and L.D Rotstayn, 1993: The CSIRO 9-level atmospheric general
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Table 1. Summary of the strengths and limitations of the six GCMs selected for downscaling. See Katzfey
et al., 2014 for more discussion of the selection process.
GCM
CCSM4
CNRM-CM5
Strengths
-
Good agreement with precipitation
and temperature observations over
South East Asia
-
ENSO pattern well reproduced
-
Limitations
-
Observed temperature trends poorly
reproduced
-
Less realistic SST pattern in the
tropical Pacific
ENSO pattern well reproduced
-
Good agreement with precipitation
observations over South East Asia
Observed trends poorly reproduced
over South East Asia
-
Too few ENSO events
-
Good agreement with observations
globally and over Asia
NorESM1-M
-
ENSO pattern and tropical Pacific
SSTs well reproduced
-
Poor agreement with precipitation
patterns over South East Asia
ACCESS1.0
-
SSTs in the Pacific well reproduced
-
-
Observed temperature trends well
reproduced
Poor agreement with precipitation
patterns over South East Asia
-
Good agreement with observations
globally
-
ENSO pattern and SSTs in the Pacific
well reproduced
-
ENSO variability not well reproduced
-
Good agreement with temperature
observations over South East Asia
-
Good agreement with precipitation
observations over South East Asia
-
Poor agreement with temperature
patterns over South East Asia
MPI-ESM-LR
GFDL-CM3
Table 2. Details of the CCAM simulations used in this project, including resolution, number of levels, and
years simulated.
Model
Resolution/
vertical levels
CCAM50
50 km/L27
GCM data
used
Input data
CNRM-CM5
Sea ice and variance
and bias-corrected
SSTs
CCSM4
ACCESS1.0
NorESM1-M
(IC: Initial condition)
Years
simulated
Emission scenarios
1970-2099
Historical for 1970-2005
RCP 4.5 and 8.5 for 20062099
IC: 01 Jan 1979
ERA-Interim
MPI-ESM-LR
GFDL-CM3
CCAM10
10 km/L27
CNRM-CM5
CCSM4
ACCESS1.0
NorESM1-M
MPI-ESM-LR
GFDL-CM3
CCAM 50 km
1970-2099
Historical for 1970-2005
RCP 4.5 and 8.5 for 20062099
Figure. 1. SST changes in the tropical Pacific (°C) from the best-performing models for the months July-August
by 2071-2099 compared with 1971-2000, based on the RCP 8.5 emission scenario. Starred GCMs are the
ones chosen to downscale in this study.
Figure 2. Long-term mean (top panel) and standard deviation (bottom panel) of July SSTs (°C) for the period
1982-2011 from (a, d; left) uncorrected ACCESS1.0 results, (b, e; middle) corrected ACCESS1.0 results and (c,
f; right) observed data from the Optimum Interpolation SST dataset version 2 (Reynolds et al., 2007).
Figure 3. CCAM grids used for the 50 km global (C192 grid; top) and 10 km (C96 grid; bottom) downscaled
simulations over Vietnam (plotting every 2nd grid point).
Figure 4. CCAM high-resolution model grid resolution (upper left), land-sea mask (upper right), terrain (lower left)
and soil type index (lower right).
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