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Met Office Science Review Meetings 2014 MOSAC 19.19 SRG 11.19 Winter 2013/14 flooding and implications for Met Office science Julia Slingo, Met Office Chief Scientist © Crown copyright Met Office A reminder of the weather and its impacts © Crown copyright Met Office Exceptional rainfall Winter 2013/14 was the UK’s wettest since records began, with 544.9mm of rain: 165% of the average winter rainfall. It was also the wettest in the England and Wales Precipitation series, dating back to 1766 Rainfall (mm) The country also saw the highest number of rain days (62.3) since records began In a series from 1883, flow rates on the River Thames remained exceptionally high for longer than in any previous flood episode. © Crown copyright Met Office Days with >1mm of rain Flood Forecasting Centre: Flood Risk Warnings 26 consecutive days at Red © Crown copyright Met Office • Estimated £200bn value of property in Thames floodplain, 1.1 million employees, 55000 properties • Thames Barrier was closed 4 times in the 1980s, 35 times in the 1990s, and 135 times since 2000. © Crown copyright Met Office UK Floods 7th February 2014 © Crown copyright Met Office Heavy rain December 2013 deterministic model © Crown copyright Met Office ensemble Reliability Diagram for 3-hour accumulations exceeding 10mm © Crown copyright Met Office Huge Waves 6/7th January 2014 Met Office Wave Forecasts using WAVEWATCH III Global Significant Wave Height (m) © Crown copyright Met Office UK Peak Period (seconds) High Winds 12th February 2014 UKV (1.5 km) Forecasts of 10m Wind Speed (knots) 92 mph winds forecast 105 mph recorded in Aberdaron in north-west Wales © Crown copyright Met Office Global Context of UK’s severe weather Winds in the upper troposphere (250 hPa) Climatology © Crown copyright Met Office La Nina impacts on the jet stream January 2014 Energy from West Pacific rainfall driving UK extremes Rainfall anomalies (mm/day) December 2013 SST anomalies © Crown copyright Met Office La Nina impacts on the jet stream January 2014 Strong North Atlantic Storm Track Winds in the lower troposphere (850 hPa) Climatology January 2014 Linked to strong polar vortex, positive Arctic Oscillation and westerly phase of the QBO © Crown copyright Met Office Contribution of climate change Clausius Clapeyron 2x Clausius Clapeyron De Bilt rain gauge data: Change in hourly rainfall intensity with temperature Lenderink & Van Meigaard 2008 © Crown copyright Met Office Contribution of climate change Latest results from climateprediction. net attribution study © Crown copyright Met Office Summary • The weather experienced by the UK last winter was exceptional • This was partially driven by convection in the tropical west Pacific • The conditions were also enhanced by a westerly QBO and strong polar vortex which strengthened the North Atlantic jet • There isn’t yet any definitive evidence that climate change played a role in the conditions: but all the evidence suggests there is a link to climate change “Colleagues across the House can argue about whether that is linked to climate change or not. I very much suspect that it is” David Cameron © Crown copyright Met Office Implications for Science • Is the jet stream changing its behaviour? • Are Atlantic storms becoming more intense? • How well do we capture the interactions between the tropics and the extratropics? • What resolution do we need in our atmosphere and ocean models to answer these questions? • Can we detect changes in rainfall intensity/duration at the sub-daily timescale? © Crown copyright Met Office Questions and answers © Crown copyright Met Office